Moses Omusolo
Sanlam Kenya Group CEO Dr Patrick Tumbo.
Financial services firm Sanlam is near to realising the full effect of
its costly turnaround strategy after the...
firm crawled back into
profitability.
The results for the year ended December 2019 show that the firm is
promising to get out of troubled waters after profit for the year
reached Sh114.4 million from a Sh1.98 billion loss realised in 2018.
"The improved performance reflects progress made by the group’s
insurance subsidiaries. Total income at Sh8.9 billion was a 50 per cent
improvement compared to the previous year's .... Gross premium income
improved by 10 per cent... while investment performance improved to
Sh2.7 billion,” said Sanlam in a statement published in the dailies
yesterday.
This is even as the company’s results for the six months of 2019 had
shown investors signs of a major rebound after it booked a profit after
tax of Sh639.7 million.
Rebound then was attributed to, among other factors, an improved
investment performance in core insurance where revenues grew by 17 per
cent to Sh3.65 billion in first half last year up from Sh3.11 billion
reported over the same period in 2018.
However, reports indicate that in 2017, the company suffered the pain of
writing off some Sh1.15 billion related the defunct Chase Bank and
Imperial Bank bonds that became eventually irredeemable.
Other struggling firms that had reportedly failed to meet their
obligations to Sanlam include Athi River Mining which had gone into
receivership before it was bought by Devki. Real People sought in late
2018 an extension to settle its debt.
Chandaria family owned Kaluworks was in the news early last year for
being at the mercy of auctioneers over non-payment of multiple debts
worth an estimated Sh6 billion.
Other than Sanlam Kenya, the aluminium products manufacturer was
indebted to among other lenders, I&M Bank, which had since published
notices for auction of the company's assets.
Sustained financial woes reportedly pushed Sanlam to an aggressive
cost-cutting strategies including layoffs through a Voluntary Early
Retirement (VER) scheme affecting employees over 50 years.
Sanlam Kenya Chief Executive Patrick Tumbo (pictured) yesterday said the
firm retains a positive outlook for the current financial year as
revenues and earnings from the group’s insurance business are expected
to improve.
Tumbo said investment returns are expected to reflect positive results from improved asset management.
“At Sanlam Kenya, we have been pursuing our earlier announced strategy
that focused on cost-containment and aggressively growing our revenue
base in the short and medium-term. The full-year results reflect the
success of this strategy and provide a good foundation for sustained
growth,” he said.
Tumbo further said ongoing stakeholder partnerships, product and process
innovations in 2020 will translate into a better outcome.
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