It will be doubly harder to recover any of the insider loans now that
Nakumatt is completely shut down. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Nakumatt Holdings had lent its directors more than Ksh1 billion
($10 million) in interest-free soft loans by the time it was placed
under administration on January 22, 2018, according to a review of the
company’s financial statements.
The
related party transactions were recently disclosed in a report for the
year ended February 2018 by Parker Randall Eastern Africa, the
retailer’s independent auditor.
The
auditor did not specify which individuals owe the company money,
underlining the weak governance in the board of the former giant retail
chain that owes banks, landlords and suppliers as much as Ksh20 billion
($200 million).
Nakumatt’s founder
and former chief executive Atul Shah was one of the two individuals
listed as directors of the company as of the report date.
The
amounts owed by insiders, which did not attract interest charges, had
dropped to Ksh948 million ($9.48 million) as of February 2018, the
period for which the latest financial records are available.
“Significant
in this net balance is Ksh948 million ($9.48 million) due from the
directors. These receivables are not supportable based on the available
evidence,” says the report.
“The amounts due from a director are interest-free. They relate to short-term advances through a current account.”
The
loans to the company’s directors are among a series of related party
transactions amounting to Ksh2.8 billion ($28 million), which are
unlikely to be recovered.
Others include amounts claimed from subsidiaries in Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania, which ceased operations.
The
administrator has written off Ksh1.5 billion ($15 million) or 53 per
cent of the receivables, leaving a balance of Ksh1.3 billion ($13
million).
“There are no repayment
plans for these balances; the companies frequently lend and borrow funds
from each other,” the auditor said.
The
report paints a picture of relatively loose governance at Nakumatt
relative to other firms such as banks where insider dealings are more
closely regulated.
There is a limit
on the size of loans directors and employees of a bank can take in
aggregate. The loans also typically attract interest charges, though
sometimes at below market rates.
Revelations
of Nakumatt’s insider loans come at a time when the retailer is closing
most of its remaining branches, making compensation for creditors even
less likely.
Mr Shah faces investigations over the loss of Ksh18 billion ($180 million) worth of stock.
Nakumatt
administrator Peter Kahi said a forensic investigator will probe why Mr
Shah wrote off stock worth Ksh18 billion ($180 million) in May 2018,
before the company ground to a halt.
The
High Court granted Nakumatt Supermarkets protection from its creditors,
allowing the retailer to go into voluntary administration. The company
sought protection using Kenya’s newly enacted company laws, which
provide a path for distressed firms to avoid complete collapse.
At
its height, the company, which began life as Nakuru Mattresses, had
more than 60 outlets across Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda.
But
its financial problems led to empty shelves and store closures, opening
the way for foreign retailers like Carrefour and local rival, Naivas,
to take over space it vacated.
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