A consortium
led by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) is expected to
acquire a 54.23 per cent stake in AAR Healthcare Holdings, the operator
of hospitals and clinics in Uganda and other East Africa countries.
The
acquisition, according Kenya-based Business Daily, has already been
approved by the Kenyan authorities and the transaction is expected to
cost the IFC-led consortium more than Shs54b.
“The,
Authority [Competition Authority of Kenya] approved the proposed
acquisition of 54.23 per cent of issued shares from AAR Health Care
Holdings by Hospital Holding Limited unconditionally,” a notice issued
by Competition Authority of Kenya reads in part.
The
acquisition, according to Competition Authority of Kenya, will see
additional investment in AAR besides retaining its current workforce.
The
acquisition will be conducted under Hospital Holdings Limited by IFC,
Swedfund, Sweden state-owned investment company and other private
entities.
The deal follows IFC’s November 2019
announcement that it had partnered with private investors to raise a
total of Shs414b to buy significant stakes in health facilities in Kenya
and Tanzania.
IFC in 2013 made an individual $4m equity investment in AAR Healthcare when it operated 28 clinics across the three markets.
AAR is an operational holding company which owns and operates 40 primary care clinics in East Africa and a hospital in Uganda.
In a statement, IFC said its investment in AAR had been motivated by the growing trend towards private health care in Africa.
“World
Bank Group studies show that 50 per cent of health expenditure in
sub-Saharan Africa is financed by out-of-pocket payments from
individuals,” the IFC statement reads in part.
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