Equity is seeking to conserve cash due to the Covid-19 outbreak. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Equity Bank’s share closed Tuesday 5.4 percent down at Sh34.20 from Sh36.15 on Monday, when the lender disclosed the move to retain the dividend pay-out.
- The stock recouped some of the losses on Wednesday, closing higher by 4.8 per cent at Sh35.85, before retreating marginally by 0.15 per cent Thursday by mid-afternoon.
- This is the first time the country’s second-largest bank by assets has skipped dividends since listing on the NSE in August 2006.
Equity Bank’s share has wobbled from Tuesday
after the lender informed investors of a surprise withdrawal of
dividend, before recovering some of the losses in the last two days as
buyers returned to look for a friendly entry price.
The
share closed Tuesday 5.4 percent down at Sh34.20 from Sh36.15 on
Monday, when the lender disclosed the move to retain the dividend
pay-out totalling Sh9.4 billion due to the need to conserve cash in the
wake of the global Covid-19 pandemic.
The stock
recouped some of the losses on Wednesday, closing higher by 4.8 per cent
at Sh35.85, before retreating marginally by 0.15 per cent Thursday by
mid-afternoon.
This is the first time the country’s
second-largest bank by assets has skipped dividends since listing on the
Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in August 2006.
The
pay-out of Sh2.50 a share would yield about seven per cent for
investors. The bank was scheduled to pay the dividend on July 24 to
shareholders on register as of June 12.
Equity’s move to conserve cash due to the Covid-19 outbreak follows a similar stance by fellow top tier lender NCBA
, which last month opted to pay shareholders a bonus share for every 10 held instead of dividends worth Sh2.24 billion.
In
his monetary policy press conference Thursday, CBK Governor Patrick
Njoroge said while the regulator is not putting out a statement asking
lenders to withhold dividends, the move is prudent based on whether a
bank feels it may need to get additional capital down the road.
“There
is no point in having all this money going out in dividends and the
next day you are going back to the shareholders asking for it in form of
capital injection,” he said.
Co-operative Bank
has gone ahead with its dividend pay-out, going as far as bringing
forward its Sh1 per share or Sh5.8 billion dividend on April 23.
KCB
will pay a final dividend of Sh2.50 per share or an aggregate of Sh8 billion before July 3.
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