Summary
- Close associates of former President Daniel Moi have received Sh1.4 billion for selling a majority stake in Transnational Bank to a top Nigerian lender.
- Regulatory filings seen by the Business Daily show the Nigerian tier one lender Access Bank paid the amount to close the deal for the Kenyan bank linked with persons who were close to Mr Moi, who died in February.
- The closure of the deal now paves the way for Access Bank, owned by business mogul Herbert Wigwe, to inject additional capital in Transnational, which had 0.25 percent stake in December 2018, as it seeks a return to profitability.
Close associates of former President Daniel Moi have received
Sh1.4 billion for selling a majority stake in Transnational Bank to a
top Nigerian lender.
Regulatory filings seen by the Business Daily
show the Nigerian tier one lender Access Bank paid the amount to close
the deal for the Kenyan bank linked with persons who were close to Mr
Moi, who died in February.
The closure of the deal now
paves the way for Access Bank, owned by business mogul Herbert Wigwe, to
inject additional capital in Transnational, which had 0.25 percent
stake in December 2018, as it seeks a return to profitability.
The
price is a discount given that shareholders’ fund-- the amount of money
Transnational could return to shareholders if all assets were converted
to cash and all debts paid off -- stood at Sh1.82 billion at the end of
March.
Top owners of the 36-year-old Kenyan bank with
28 branches were companies owned by close associates of the late Moi,
including Joshua Kulei, Simeon Nyachae and the former Vice President
George Saitoti.
The Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) and the Central Bank of
Kenya (CBK) early January endorsed the deal that gives Access Bank a 97
percent stake in Transnational. The bank is the largest in Nigeria with
assets worth Sh1.17 trillion.
Access Bank CEO Herbert Wigwe had said the lender would buy in cash and inject fresh capital into Transnational.
“It
will be paid for in cash so we have taken out the existing shareholders
and we will basically inject a bit more equity into the institution,”
Mr Wigwe said in a recent transcript of a conference call.
Sovereign
Trust, a company associated with Mr Kulei, a former aide of the
ex-President, held 23.03 per cent shareholding in Transnational.
Simbi
Investors, linked with Mr Nyachae, a former Cabinet minister during Mr
Moi’s administration, held 8.2 million shares or 4.11 percent of the
bank.
Losupuk Ltd, associated with the late former vice
President George Saitoti, holds 2.79 per cent. The bank’s chairman has
been Henry Kiptiony Kiplangat, who is also the vice-chancellor of
Kabarak University, an institution owned by the Moi family.
Andre DeSimone, formerly CEO of Kestrel Capital, was also a director at Transnational but retired in December 2018.
Kestrel Capital is linked to the late Nicholas Biwott, who was a powerful minister in the Moi administration.
Other
major shareholders are listed as Archers and Wilcock Ltd with a 23.75
percent stake, and Kenyerere Ltd — associated with Jared Kangwana — with
2.15 per cent stake.
Mr Kangwana last year got
approval to raise his stake in Maisha Microfinance Bank beyond 25
percent. He is also associated with Monarch Group, which owns Monarch
Insurance and a number of real estate properties.
In
total, Transnational had 18 corporate shareholders (51.4 percent) and
17 individual shareholders with a stake of 48.6 percent, all locally
based.
WikiLeaks, a London-based organisation,
published a 2007 report in which forensic auditors Kroll Inc linked the
bank to Sh21.4 billion ($200 million) money laundering.
“An
estimated $200 million of Abacha money was laundered through Kenya,
using Transnational Bank and its Nostro accounts held in Frankfurt and
other jurisdictions. This money was parked in off-shore accounts,” the
leaked Kroll report said.
Transnational, with assets
worth Sh9.7 billion, made a loss of Sh83.9 million in the financial year
ended December 2019, worse from a loss of Sh71.8 million the previous
year.
At the end of 2018, it disclosed that it held
Sh24.7 million deposits by companies controlled by directors or their
families. Deposits by companies related through control by a common
shareholder or their families hit Sh1.42 billion.
The
small lender started off as Transnational Finance in 1984, a non-bank,
deposit-taking institution that also provided hire purchase services and
other loans.
It established a separate fully fledged
bank in 1985 dubbed Trans National Bank Ltd. The two financial firms
merged in 1996, and Transnational Finance ceased to exist.
The
buyout by Access has deepened the presence of Nigerian banks in Kenya
with United Bank of Africa (UBA) and Guarantee Trust Bank already in the
market. The Kenyan banking sector has witnessed increased interest in
the last seven years, with mergers and acquisitions happening.
Egypt’s
largest private lender Commercial International Bank in April received
CBK’s nod to acquire a controlling stake in Mayfair Bank.
Other
banks that have been acquired in the last seven years include Fina
Bank, Giro Commercial, Oriental Commercial, Fidelity, Chase Bank,
Imperial Bank and National Bank of Kenya. NIC and CBA groups last year
merged to form NCBA group, marking one of the recent largest deals in
the Kenyan banking sector.
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