Monthly Archives: October 2006

Stamp Relic

Today, for the first time in 2006, with ⅞ of the year gone, I bought and used a stamp to mail a personal letter.

q1: Do you know how much it costs to send a letter anymore?

The stamp is a relic today to many like me. I send out maybe 10 text messages a day and make a similar number of phone calls, and e-mails as well – not to mention blog comments and internet chats. Everyone I know has a cell phone, or can reach me by phone or e-mail – and only secondarily by post.

q2: When was the last time you gave anyone a P O Box address?

Hope for the post office
I also send out official letters from the office – but this is still not good for the post office because messenger companies (who we use) work with physical/office addresses not postal box numbers and take our letters from office to office – that way clients are assured of timely and reliable deliveries which they can track.

I still rely on a mailbox though, to receive electricity, water & telephone bills (fixed & mobile), postcards, corporate annual reports & dividends, Kenya gazette, bank statements, magazines arrive every week and this I guess provides enough revenue for the post office.

a1: 25 shillings
a2: Can’t remember no more steamy letters in high school, but I should be sending out some success cards in November to relatives once I get their school addresses.

Shortages Part II

See Part I

We have been taught time & again that shortages are opportunities to be taken advantage of.

Aircraft
Kenya Airways half-year results were released on Friday and the airline’s management mentioned plans to replace their Saab turboprops with jet aircraft.

The airline appears to be stretched, as their smallest 737 jets are used for routes such as South Africa, Dubai, India and Turkey, while filled-up 777s to Mombasa are not a rare occurrence. Meanwhile frequent travellers on the Kisumu route, opt for the Fokker 50s of East African Safari Air, which make the flight in 25 minutes compared to the Saab’s of KQ, which do it in about 45 minutes. So regional jet to serve local and short hop regional overland routes would be welcome for KQ.

Cement
(i) When you drive past Athi River, there’s a long line trucks outside Bamburi Cement Company waiting to collect cement from teh company
(ii) EAPC has just advertised for a huge clinker tender
(iii) Floods in Mombasa have washed away two bridges, cutting off the clinker plant of Athi River Mining Company
(iv) Regional problem now as Tororo Cement plans to open a plant next to parent Bamburi (at Athi River) to sevre the Ugandan market where power rationing/shortages have hit the energy intensive cement production industry

Investor information

Total reassures
Total Oil held a cocktail for all shareholders at the Hilton on Friday to review and explain their 9-month performance to September 2006 which they had published earlier in the week.

Management were keen to explain the dip in profits in line with various industry issues and reassure investors that the company was strong. The event immediately made one wish that Uchumi, board and management had done more in terms of informing shareholders when the company’s quarterly results were released after the rights issue.

The company profits dipped about 9% while its inventory and accounts receivable were both up about 80% from a year before. Chairman Nguer of Total mentioned the overall world oil price rise, competitor Kenol’s half year performance (30% down), entry of Tamoil (Libya) into the Kenyan market, government threats to regulate fuel prices, inefficiencies at at Kenya pipeline company and Kenya oil refineries and the new large Kengen contract whose costs were being felt but benefits would accrue later among other issues as he sought to reassure shareholders that Total was a great long term investment.

We need EDGAR
He also mentioned a 100 million shilling court award to be paid to the company by oil marketers, after conferring with his company secretary that the same information would be immediately released to the Nairobi stock exchange (NSE) for other investors not present.

One problem is that corporations like Kenya Airways, EABL and other NSE-listed companies hold briefings for select corporate investors, and the media, the news of which is occasionally posted on their websites (if they exist/are ever updated) and bits of which may appear in the newspapers or on TV news.

What Kenyan investors needs is an EDGAR where all company information sent to the Nairobi Stock Exchange is instantly published, compiled, archived and available for all investors to read/access free so we can understand better how/why shares like Barclays and Sasini both rose 25% in three days this week.

Stockbrokers
Riba Capital has a great review of stockbroker services.

18 stockbroker firms were enough to serve a market a few years ago, but today they are woefully unable to cope,with the flood of new shareholders brought in by Kengen Scangroup and anticipation of Kenya Re, Mumias and Safaricom IPO’s.

Nairobi land
Driving through Mlolongo which has been a rapidly growing town, its amazing that it all started with a road block i.e. weigh bridge, where all Nairobi and up-country bound trucks would stop for weight checks.

But, many significant buildings from houses to hotels, schools, nyama choma joints, churches, petrol stations and kiosks now spot distinctive painted X signs indicating that they are marked for demolition by ministry of roads as it seeks to expand the road into a dual carriageway.

The town falls in Mavoko where the county council issued letters of allocation for many years that enabled these settlements near the road that fuelled the towns’ growth. The cost of land appreciated over the years owing to demand, and many of the original allootees sold their land to new owners even though they never got title deeds – which were never issued by the Land ministry since the lots were still marked as road reserve.

The demolition process is likely to be delayed in court as business owners will challenge the outright demolition of their buildings on genuinely, if improperly, allocated land through the courts. The government should do the humane thing and compensate these building owners, using their formula for land buying. That way the politics of the demolitions will be removed.

Next: A popular idea circulating, first mentioned by Karanja Kabage, is that the Nairobi National Park be reduced in size or eliminated, by having the animals relocated to other parks, to increase the land available for Nairobi’s growth.

Water
Water rationing will be effected in various residential estates/zones (typically for ½ a week) of Nairobi and according to the Nairobi water company it is due to unexpected demand for water from unplanned developments. This is expected to continue until the next rains begin (probably November)

October 27 Jobs

Junior officers at Bank of India

Sales manager at Create Africa. Apply to jerry@createafrica.com.

Chief financial officer, marketing director, procurement manager, and a credit manager at Equity Bank. Apply to jobs@ebsafrica.co.ke by 10/11

Accountant, purchasing manager at HLB Zainash. Apply to consult@ashvir.com by 3/11

Transport manager at Homegrown Flowers.apply to Hrd.NboHQ@f-h.biz by 25/11

Senior manager – development program at Industrial Promotion Services (IPS) apply to HR@ipskenya.com by 24/11

Office director & project head, and a senior researcher – both in Addis Ababa at the Institute for security services. Apply to jobs@issafrica.org by 3/11

In house health systems consultant at Japanese Internal Cooperation Agency (JICA). Apply to res_oso_rep@jica.go.jp by 6/11

Policy research economists (in macroeconomics, transport & communications, trade, and industry) and a macroeconomic modeling expert at Kenya institute for public policy research & analysis (KIPPRA). apply to jkimeto@kippra.or.ke by 8/11

Director of operations and a sub grant manager at National democratic institute – Sudan.apply to kssadmin@ndi.org by 10/11

Program coordinator, at UNDP Kenya details at their site

TV anchors at an upcoming TV station. Apply to anchors.2006@yahoo.com

Sales and marketing manager at un-named Mombasa company. Apply to recruit@adeptsystems.co.ke by 10/11

Green Card anyone?

It’s that time of the year: The US 2008 diversity visa program is on, and applications are to be submitted online by Sunday, December 3. Once again it is important to inform people that the application process is free. Kenyans are still eligible to win green cards to the USA, though early this year some green cards lottery winners were arrested at the Nairobi Embassy for adding on relatives.

Related
– Kenyans pay 270 million shillings in visa fees a year to the UK and US embassies while Nigerians pay 1.4 billion shillings a year to the UK in visa fees.

Other
Sudan’s economy, fuelled by oil exports and trade with Arab and Asian counties, is booming – projected to grow by 12 % this year despite a US embargo.

Cost of going shags & other observations

Made a similar trip before, and this time I decided to quantify the trip in terms of the expenses. People upcountry ask why I visit so little and I try and explain that the distance and the cost are a burden.

Trip Costs
5,200 shillings ($72) for car fuel on the 950-kilometre journey
13,200 Car repair
10,000 (Pre-trip) car service
4,000 Cash handouts
3,200 Drinks
1,800 Fuel (diesel and kerosene for others)
1,500 Hotel
1,000 Food shopping (for others)
900 Food (mine)
250 Supplies
200 Newspapers
Total spent 41,250 shillings ($573)

Lessons learnt
– Avoid driving own car unless absolutely necessary. It’s better to take a bus and remove the pain (really bad roads) and cost of car travel out. (68% of this trip costs were car-related including 13,000 shillings for a pair of new shock absorbers after I hit a pothole)
– Keep your movements as mysterious as possible, just show up and leave before people discover you’re around and try not to be expected.
– Eating costs are not much, because food is served in households and it is so much that you can get by on one (lunch) meal a day.
– Radio and TV are still the primary way that people get information up-country. Newspapers are not widely circuited – I had to make 3 phone calls to arrange to get the Friday newspapers and reliable cyber café to browse the Internet or check mail are rare things – cybers are not seen as a viable business and have very short hours. E.g. at the post office
– All our roads should be built by Chinese engineers and companies as the roads they built have stood the test of time over many years. We should also beware of roads put up before an election, as they often collapse within less than a year. It is shocking to find two stretches of a road, done by two different companies, where one is in great shape and the adjacent stretch had as little gravel as a school tennis court. Actually, our roads collapse because load limits are not observed, and lorries on the roads are too heavy.