Mr Shaka Kariuki, Partner, Kuramo Capital. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Kuramo provided the loans between 2017 and 2018 and they were mostly secured by 56.7 million shares of the cables manufacturer with a current market value of Sh124 million.
- The PE firm gave the loans in its capacity as the controlling shareholder of TransCentury where it holds a 25 percent equity.
- The Kuramo loans are priced at an effective interest rate of seven percent.
Private equity firm Kuramo Capital risks losing a total of Sh699 million worth of loans it had advanced to TransCentury
, the parent company of East African Cables
, which is facing a liquidation suit.
Kuramo
provided the loans between 2017 and 2018 and they were mostly secured
by 56.7 million shares of the cables manufacturer with a current market
value of Sh124 million.
The PE firm gave the loans in its capacity as the controlling shareholder of TransCentury where it holds a 25 percent equity.
SBM
Bank (Kenya) Limited last week announced it is seeking court orders to
liquidate the cables manufacturer over an unpaid loan whose size was
last disclosed as Sh285 million.
If successful, the
petition will see creditors including banks, take control of EA Cables
and their claims will rank above those of shareholders.
The cables manufacturer responded to SBM Kenya’s legal action
through a public notice, stating that it remains committed to
restructuring all its debt.
The company, however, did
not give details on the steps it has taken to appease SBM Kenya whose
loan it had planned to replace with a new credit line from its main
lender Equity Bank. “The company has continued to actively engage all
the lenders and has made significance progress to complete the remaining
phase which includes the debt with SBM Bank Kenya Limited,” EA Cables
said in the statement.
“The company’s balance sheet has
also greatly improved following the strides made with the completion of
first phase of debt restructure in 2019 and will be in a better
financial position to meet all maturing obligations upon completion of
the remaining phase of the debt restructuring plan.”
The
Kuramo loans are priced at an effective interest rate of seven percent.
TransCentury first took a series of dollar-denominated loans from the
PE firm worth Sh388 in 2017.
Kuramo subsequently gave
TransCentury two additional loans totalling Sh311 million in February
and November 2018, according to disclosures in the investment firm’s
latest annual report.
The first batch of loans was
scheduled to be repaid in 2018 but their maturity date has been extended
to June 2020 –the time when TransCentury is now required to settle all
the Kuramo debt.
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