Summary
- The proposal to take the company private will be put to a shareholder vote at an extraordinary general meeting to be held via electronic means on July 30.
- If successful, the move will close the chapter on Transcentury’s nine-year life as a publicly traded firm during which it has lost Sh12.6 billion or 95 percent of its market value.
- It would join eight other firms that have gone private in recent years, mostly through takeovers, including oil marketer KenolKobil and motor vehicle dealer CMC Holdings.
Loss-making investment firm TransCentury is
seeking to delist from the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE), saying it
needs to meet a precondition for accessing new capital from private
equity funds.
The proposal to take the company private
will be put to a shareholder vote at an extraordinary general meeting to
be held via electronic means on July 30.
If
successful, the move will close the chapter on Transcentury’s nine-year
life as a publicly traded firm during which it has lost Sh12.6 billion
or 95 percent of its market value.
It would join eight
other firms that have gone private in recent years, mostly through
takeovers, including oil marketer KenolKobil and motor vehicle dealer
CMC Holdings.
For TransCentury’s 1,600 retail investors, going private means loss of access to trading liquidity afforded by the NSE.
“The focus now remains attracting funding that is aligned to the
group strategy to be able to realise full value from opportunities at
hand,” TransCentury said in a statement.
“A significant
source of such capital, however, remains unavailable to the business
while it remains listed, including the fast-growing pools of
sector-specific capital targeting private/ non listed businesses.”
The
company did not say how much of new capital it is seeking to raise and
the identity of investors willing to provide the cash once it goes
private. The prospective investors, however, want to fund TransCentury
as a private firm to avoid reporting and regulatory requirements that
apply to listed companies.
The resolution to take the company private will need the approval of most of the company’s shareholders to succeed.
Kenya’s
securities law says that a delisting resolution can be passed by a
simple majority at a meeting where shareholders with a combined stake of
at least 75 percent are represented in person or through proxies.
Such
a resolution can nonetheless be nullified if investors with a 10
percent equity or more vote against it. It remains to be seen whether
TransCentury will also seek the delisting of its major subsidiary East
African Cables, which traded on the NSE yesterday at Sh1.95 per share,
giving it a market capitalisation of Sh493.5 million. TransCentury’s
delisting plan has the backing of its controlling shareholder, private
equity firm Kuramo Capital, which acquired its 24.9 percent stake in
April 2017 for $20 million (Sh2.1 billion).
The company
raised the funds from Kuramo to help pay off part of its Sh6 billion
bond, which it had issued in Mauritius shortly before listing on the NSE
on July 14, 2011.
Significant shareholders include
TransCentury’s founders Michael Waweru, the former Kenya Revenue
Authority commissioner-general, with a 5.6 percent equity, Anne Gachui
(5.6 percent) and Zephaniah Mbugua (3.1 percent).
The
original shareholders held a combined stake of 71.2 percent when
TransCentury listed on the NSE but later got diluted from the entry of
Kuramo and bondholders who converted part of their claims into shares.
Investment
banker Jimnah Mbaru was among the company’s founders but he offloaded
his shares between 2013 and 2015 for an estimated Sh260 million.
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