Summary
·
Subsidiaries
operating in Tanzania accounted for 20.37 percent of the gross loans.
Rwanda contributed the highest volume of profit earnings for Kenyan bank subsidiaries in East Africa and beyond last year, a new report by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) said.
The CBK said the regional
subsidiaries of Kenyan banks posted a combined pre-tax profit of Sh32.51
billion as of December 31, 2022, an increase of 88.65 percent from KSh17.23
billion reported on December 31, 2021.
“Rwanda contributed the highest
earnings capacity recording KSh.10.16 billion in profits, translating to 31.26
percent of the total profits. Subsidiaries operating in DRC (Democratic
Republic of Congo) and Uganda contributed 30.10 percent and 16.11 percent of
the total profits respectively while subsidiaries in South Sudan contributed
14.28 percent of the total profits” the CBK said.
everal Kenyan banks have expanded
operations in the East African Community (EAC) partner states and beyond in
markets such as Mauritius, Malawi, and Mozambique.
These banks include KCB Group,
Diamond Trust Bank, NCBA, Guaranty Trust Bank Kenya Limited, Equity Group,
I&M Holdings Plc, African Banking Corporation Limited, and the Co-operative
Bank of Kenya with a presence in EAC.
Some of the Kenyan lenders such as
I&M and Prime Bank Limited have expanded beyond the EAC jurisdiction. For
instance, I&M has a 50 percent shareholding in Bank One Limited in
Mauritius, Prime Bank has a 10.6 percent shareholding of First Capital Bank
Malawi, 6.62 percent shareholding of First Capital Bank of Botswana and 5.0
percent shareholding of First Capital Bank SA, Mozambique.
The CBK report said that Kenyan bank
units operating in Mauritius, Tanzania, and Burundi were the least profitable
and contributed 4.50 percent, 2.82 percent, and 0.93 percent of the total
profits respectively.
“Three subsidiaries registered a
combined loss of Sh2.4 billion. Out of the three loss-making subsidiaries, two
were operating in Tanzania and one in Uganda” the regulator said.
The CBK report said the total assets
of Kenyan bank subsidiaries abroad stood at Sh1.61 trillion as of December 31,
2022, compared to Sh1.21 trillion as of December 31, 2021.
“A significant contributor to the
asset base was Equity Group Plc’s subsidiary in DRC, Banque Commerciale Du
Congo -BCDC with total assets of KSh442 billion and KCB Group Plc’s subsidiary
in DRC, Trust Merchant Bank with total assets of KSh212 billion,” it said.
The Kenyan banks' subsidiaries
accounted for a combined deposit base of Sh1.28 trillion in December 2022
compared to Sh940 billion in December 2021.
The main contributors of deposits
were Equity's subsidiary in DRC, Banque Commerciale Du Congo -BCDC, with total
deposits of KSh365 billion or 28 percent of the total deposits of subsidiaries
in the host countries, and KCB Group’s subsidiary in DR Congo, Trust Merchant
Bank, with total deposits of Sh180 billion or 14 percent of the total deposits
of subsidiaries in the host countries.
The combined gross loans for the
subsidiaries in the host countries stood at Sh725.8 billion as of December 31,
2022, an increase of 42.2 percent from KSh510.3 billion as of December 31,
2021.
The Kenyan banks' subsidiaries
operating in DRC recorded the highest level of gross loans at KSh.244.5 billion
accounting for 33.69 percent of gross loans in all the subsidiaries outside
Kenya.
Subsidiaries operating in Tanzania
accounted for 20.37 percent of the gross loans. Uganda and Rwanda accounted for
17.16 percent and 16.53 percent of the gross loans respectively. Mauritius
recorded gross loans of KSh73.1 billion accounting for 10.07 percent of gross
loans.
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