Category Archives: East African Community

Kenya Agri Exports to the EU take a Hit?

An ad in the September 22 Nation newspaper  has a statement by the European Union addressed to exporters from the East African Community on changes to the tariff regime starting on October 1 owing to the failure of the two sides to sign an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA)

There was also an article in the same paper showing that a draft has been agreed to, and that a final EPA may be signed and effected in time, but others say it is too late for this.

The new rates, while still subsidized compared to what other nation suppliers pay to export to the EU, are still a blow considering that some exports will no longer be duty-free.

EU Agri

EU newspaper ad

While some like tea, coffee beans & carnations will remain duty-free, Kenyan exporters will pay subsidized rates  of 4.5% on tilapia exports (compared to a normal EU rate of 8%), 2.5% for roast coffee (not 7.5%), 10.9% for mixed vegetables (not 14.4%), and 5% for roses and cut flowers (not 8.5%) between November and May – which includes the crucial Valentine’s Day period when some flower farms can earn half their revenue.

This caps what has been a tough year for Kenya’s  exports of tourism, tea and coffee which have all been adversely affected, and now this.  The recently released Economic Survey 2014 showed total exports declined by 3% from Kshs 518 billion in 2012 to Kshs 502 billion in 2013 (as per the Devolution Cabinet Secretary).

Kenya will  qualify for the preferential (GSP) tariffs, while Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and Tanzania are currently considered under “least developed countries” and most of their exports to the EU will qualify for a unilateral 0% tariff.

 
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Possible Economic Bubble In Ethiopia?

A guest post by @Kahenya

Ethiopia has a very positive economic outlook and yes, it has a lot of development going on, but is this sustainable, now that the linchpin (Meles Zenawi) is gone? The one thing that is universal about the entire continent is that the poverty line seems to grow every year, sometimes it shrinks, but only for a moment. The cliché remains, that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer and there is no true middle class –  and if there is, it’s only based on people who don’t want to imagine that they are less than middle-class.
Africa is the kingdom of billion {insert any local currency here} projects. Ethiopia also finds itself in the same quagmire, except for one thing. They are actually making it work for their benefit. In Ethiopia, construction and infrastructure development are at an all-time high. It was necessary for this to happen until Meles Zenawi and his beloved Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) went their separate ways, much to the disadvantage of EPRDF. Zenawi’s rule transited between dictatorship and benevolence and it was working for him and Ethiopia. Love him or hate him, from being out in the rebel trenches to donning a suit, Meles was every bit a tactical genius. He grew Ethiopia from a war-torn country to one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies. Only Meles could conjure up infinite possibilities – sometimes by sheer cunning and sometimes by sheer fear.
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EPRDF needed Meles to live long enough to get to his end game which would have allowed EPRDF to focus on less ambitious but more people-driven development. That did not happen. With him gone, and an open democracy on the horizon (since every linchpin’s death or retirement is followed by internal crisis and eventual dissolution, with less political tolerance by the citizens), with a lot of projects still incomplete, and with Ethiopia still facing many financial challenges, the positive economic outlook has quickly shifted from “going to happen” to “may happen”.
EPRDF has moved from the strong offensive to a sullen offensive-defensive. Push-Pull. Addis, like Luanda, Angola, defies Economic Science. If you buy a vehicle in Ethiopia, when you sell it, even years later, the value generally appreciates. Rents and property rates are astronomically high, coming close to rivaling Luanda – a huge developmental Achilles heel.
Lunch at the  Sheraton in Addis
The key driver of such high rates is the presence of diplomats and NGOs who have an unending well of money – and this is where the very living ghost of Isaias Afewerki (President of neighbouring Eritrea) comes to haunt Ethiopia. Eritrea, despite being poor, is not dependent on Foreign Aid or NGOs. They have that to pride. For Eritrea, there are no illusions. Poor is poor so the only way is to go upwards – on their own. Ethiopia lacks that. Instead, they have to endure a very faint cushion, one that is rarely successful except in dire times. Unless Ethiopia starts equal distribution of development in the small business sector and begins to really crack the whip on poverty alleviation and shakes off its dependency on NGOs, EPRDF could find itself in a lot of trouble – just like the ANC is, despite them trying to conjure all sorts of ghosts, from Jacob Zuma’s incarnation of Umshini Wami to the very living ghost of Nelson Mandela. Nonetheless, Ethiopia’s economy is about to get a very shocking reality check.

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situs gacor

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Guide to Dar es Salaam

A guest post by Josiah Mugambi – @JMugambi to a neighbouring coastal city with good manners and good food, proper Swahili and while Ujamaa is strong, so is government corruption as in Kenya

Getting there: Transport options from Nairobi include road (driving a car or taking a bus for the over 900KM journey) and air with Kenya Airways / Precision Air which is a 1:15 duration. There are at least two flights each way daily, with a return ticket going for about 410$.

The Julius Nyerere International Airport is smallish, and when busy, the queues for arriving passengers waiting to clear with immigration can be long. However, they seemed to be able to handle the large number of arriving passengers reasonably well. On this day, there was a large number of people waiting to buy their visas on arrival, however, I did not need one as East African citizens ordinarily do not need a visa for stays of less than three months. Visa requirements are easily found online

Once out of immigration, it is possible to change money at one of the few forex bureaus at the airport. (1 USD was equal to about TSh 1770 at the time of my stay)

Getting Around: Taxi’s are readily identifiable, mainly white with yellow or green stripes. A cab (most if not all are not metered) from the airport to the Oyster bay area costs about 35-40k Tsh (approximately 20-25 US$) meaning that one to town would be slightly less as it is closer from the airport.

Most people use the “dala dala” public transport vehicles to get around; which are clearly distinguishable. The ‘City Bus’ operates several routes, which are clearly indicated on the front and side, with fares (nauli in Swahili) starting at 300-450 Tsh ( ~ $0.20) for most city destinations.

‘Bajaja’s – three-wheel Bajaj scooters are another popular form of transport for those who want added flexibility without paying for a taxi. They are however sometimes driven rather recklessly. For shorter distances, some may opt to walk but the hot and humid weather can be a disincentive.

Communications: I was able to use both my Kenyan phone lines in the country. I avoided roaming data (usually expensive anywhere in the world) as much as I could. For internet access, one can get a data modem from any of the four local mobile operators (Vodacom, Airtel, Tigo, Zantel) with Wi-Fi available in some locations (mostly restaurants). I noticed that the mobile market in Tanzania is more evenly spread among the four major operators: Vodacom 37%, Airtel 30%, Tigo 25%, Zantel (Zanzibar focused) 8% (2010 stats from CGAP)

Where to stay, What to eat: If you are in the central business district for business, it would be probably wiser to stay closer to town. Reasonable hotel rates start at $100-150 depending on location, and hotels around Sea Cliff area tend to be more expensive. I stayed at the Colosseum Hotel & Fitness Centre mostly because of the state-of-the-art gym. I also liked the Mediterraneo after visiting it briefly with friends.

Any (modern) economy is heavily reliant on electricity and Tanzania is no exception. I noted that the hotel I was staying at had a backup generator that seemed to go on nearly every night, implying that demand for electricity at peak hours was very high.

One thing that I loved about Dar was the quality of food. Many Kenyans go to Tanzania and say that things happen slower there, but when it comes to food, it’s probably for a good reason as most of the time, the food is freshly cooked and delicious (and served in good quantities too!).

I loved the Mshkaki (a form of Kebab, either roast beef or fish) which one can order with lightly roasted bananas – absolutely delicious. If there’s anything I miss from Dar it is this! I’m not one for beer, but the average price of a bottle starts at around 1500 TShs ( less than $1), and some (familiar) sodas (Coke, Fanta, Sprite) are sold in 350 ML bottles.

All in all, daily one can expect to spend anything from $10 to over $45 depending primarily on your mode of transport and choice of food.

Language, Stuff to do: Being from Kenya it was not too difficult to communicate in Swahili to locals, though their grasp of the language exceeds that of most Kenyans. I had an interesting conversation with a traffic police lady (after we got pulled over for a routine check) and she said that they (Tanzanians) get really amused about how Kenyans speak Swahili. They are very conscious about grammar while in Kenya we tend to gloss over poor Swahili (unless one is doing an exam of course).

I visited the Mlimani City Complex which is an interesting development bordering the University of Dar Es Salaam, with an office complex hosting multinational firms, a shopping centre and a residential park. This is a popular shopping location outside of the city centre with a large supermarket as well as a theatre and several banks. The Sea Cliff area is popular, especially for tourists who buy African art, and Tanzanite stones.

I noted that many security guards are armed with a shotgun which lent some semblance of security (unlike in Kenya where your ordinary watchman would have at most a piece of wood to defend himself). Walking around is not advised in lonely places, especially on the beach.

As with many coastal areas, the main leisure activity would be visiting the beach. I especially liked Kunduchi beach, situated north of the city centre, with its white beach and from which several windsurfers took advantage of the excellent conditions to show off :). A weekend excursion would be to take a short trip to Zanzibar by boat, but I was not able to do this.

Economy and Society: In Kenya, there is a lot of talk about corruption, but even in Tanzania many of the locals complain about the corruption that is rife in government. There have been several corruption scandals lately and my taxi guy was rather emotive about the subject.

Mwalimu Julius Nyerere is still highly regarded by many, though some say that he held back economic development somewhat (compared say to Kenya). I however admire the level of social integration present. Unlike in Kenya, there is a distinct sense of unity (possibly due to Julius Nyerere and Ujamaa) and ‘negative ethnicity’ is virtually unheard of – Something Kenya could learn from its neighbour!

Also, unique, I noticed children holding ‘School Children Crossing’ signboards at the zebra crossings helping fellow students cross the road, and that drivers respected their right to cross :). Tanzanians are generally courteous and respectful, (a sign of ujamaa?), and generally follow traffic lights and rules – another thing I liked about Dar.

All in all, a good place to visit, especially on holiday.
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ALN 2011 Day 2

Day 2 of ALN brought out the importance of observing trends & change, understanding markets, engaging with partners, appreciating the arts and making tough decisions as leaders

Imagining the Future: Dr. Chris Luebkeman of Over Arup, spoke of trends that will drive the future which were:

1. Change is constant – no matter where you go, the context, or the duration it takes, and it is important to stop and look up every once in a while, and not do things forever without thinking. Think STEEP (social, technological, economic, environmental political) most make decisions based on three of the five

It also matters where you’re standing, as an exercise he concluded showed; While most ALN attendees believed that the driver of the future in Africa was education infrastructure and the influence of China, outsiders’ views on Africa were that the main issues would be corruption, education infrastructure, and water.

Tools he advocated for assessing future trends & decisions are STEEP modeling (social, technological, economic, environmental political), as well as population pyramids which all thinkers should analyze for their countries and cities.

2. The future is fiction; no one knows what will happen tomorrow. It is a story each one writes, the outline, and characters. Visions can become reality. E.g. A former MIT professor had a vision those 15 years ago that you’d grow organs, and this year at the TED conference, a kidney was printed, on the stage.

3. Participation is what shapes the world – so stay active.

Avoiding the Resource Curse: Oxford Economics Prof. Paul Collier, spoke about the opportunities Africa faced in terms of resources and how to avoid resource curse pitfalls.

As much as the continent is known for mineral & resource wealth, it has still been barely searched, and there could be much more to find. However the history of such resources in Africa is sad in that rather than transforming economies, they have been plundered, not saved or reinvested,

He listed five decisions & steps for resources to be handled right

1. In terms of the discovery of natural assets (already been done wrong), geological information has to be made public before governments call in the private companies (manage discovery)
2. Have a good taxation system to benefit the society – the history is one of missed revenue, and misaligned contracts so it is important to get the right contracts
3. Involve & manage the locals – avoid the Niger Delta problem
4. A substantial portion of income should be saved rather than consumed
5. save in what? Africa needs sovereign development funds, not sovereign wealth funds. However Africa does not have much of this capability, and there is a need to build capacity, i.e invest in investing to manage the resource depletion and erratic commodity prices.

There is a natural resource charter document that is a guide for these steps.

China in Africa: China expert Buddy Buruku and journalist Adama Gaye shared their views on the state of China–Africa relations

Buddy talked of the difficulty finding consistent data on China’s investments in Africa, but that about 3% of global investments were coming to Africa, with the largest recipients being South Africa, Sudan, Nigeria, Zambia, Algeria, Tanzania, Mauritius, Egypt, Madagascar (no Kenya in the top 10)

China’s trade with Africa has been growing exponentially, and their main imports from Africa were mineral fuel and ores. The top importer from China is South Africa (19%), while Angola is the top exporter to China (41%) as well as the largest trade partner in terms of combined exports & imports.

It is also difficult to quantify the type of Chinese aid, as a lot of it is bundled. However it mainly takes the form of concessional loans with China issuing $31 billion worldwide – and Africa getting 22 billion of that. Other (smaller) forms of aid are debt cancellation in-kind aid and grants.

It is also tough to track what is pledged versus delivered in terms of Aid & trade, but contrary to expectations, trade is not just about oil, e.g. Their main focus in Zambia is on manufacturing, in SA there was the large finance deal via an investment of $5.5 billion in Stanbic Bank, in Nigeria it is manufacturing and EPZ, while in Mauritius, Tanzania and Ethiopia the investments have been for manufacturing capacity.

She added that Africa should look at China as a resource, and the onus is on Africans to engage with China in a mutually beneficial way – use access to capital, and access to markets. In terms of capital: no other country is providing debt & equity to Africa as much as China, and the $5 billion China Africa Development Fund is the continent’s largest, seeking out infrastructure and renewable energy projects for which they have extensive capabilities and history.

Adama said that China’s interest in Africa is a transformative force, that may give Africa the chance it may never have for centuries. However this is not a new engagement, and they have prepared for this for decades, and they will engage with Africa as long as there is some gain or disappear (he cited the DRC crisis in 2009 when mines were closed)

Adama said African countries can come up with the same (joint venture) demands that western companies got faced when they wanted to go to China, insist on waived tariffs and access to the 1.4 billion population China market, require the transfer of know-how and technology, but that instead of negotiating as 54 small countries, regional blocks should step forward for that. He also said countries should appreciate & utilize Africans who were trained in the 195’0s on engagement with China, and their diplomats who worked there.

Making Phones for Africa: Alpesh Patel, the founder & CEO of Mi-Fone, spoke of his company which is making a luxury brand of mass-market phone for Africans who earn less than $200 a month.

With 800 million people in Africa, and only 5% have internet access, the phone screen is the most potent real estate in Africa – capable of delivering banking, music, sports, entertainment, email web loyalty, mobile advertising, social media etc.

In just over 3 years, they have revenue of $15 million, have partnerships with 9 GSM carriers in 12 countries, and they have done branded phones like the Mi-Obama phone which sold 10,000 handsets in Kenya and Uganda the day he was inaugurated. They have also done Western Union handsets, formed partnerships with local musical artists (like Kenya’s Liz Ogumbo) and will soon launch the first Facebook phone in Africa and an application store for mass-market consumers.

Leadership in Africa: The keynote speech was given by Dr. Donald Kaberuka, President of the African Development Bank (ADB). He talked about the failure of leadership in rich countries to address the financial problems they are facing now which constitute the worst crisis since World War II – with some potential impact on Africa – but having to undertake harsh structural reforms that African countries undertook a few years ago

He said leadership was about making tough decisions – like Helmut Kohl accepting to exchange East Germany’s currency at ten times its value in the interest of reunification, Gorbachev ending communism and Mandela ending apartheid and reconciling South Africa, and not the kind of leadership that watches the next elections.

In Q&A:
Leaders he admires? He believes in Institutions! So they should be built & strengthened even as leaders go bad; but he admires Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

What will it take for ADB to go back to Cote d’Ivoire? He lamented that Kenya, Cote d’Ivoire, Zimbabwe, and Madagascar were all on their way to middle income, but were re-railed by political setbacks. He said they may go back to their CIV headquarters soon, and when the Bank governors decide

Integration for Africa? Economic integration is not new – East Africa had one currency, central bank, airline etc. China is one, Brazil is one, and India which is very diverse in terms of people & religion is one. But many African countries have too small GDPs, while others have some resources. African countries combined have 400 billion dollars in reserves, which is more than India, where many countries go to borrow.

Helping Countries Avoid the Oil Curse?. He said Diamond-rich Botswana has shown that it is possible to do this. Oil exporting countries have made mistakes but recently when an African country (he did not name) discovered oil, ADB went to see the President and if they could advise. The ADB is helping countries through a legal support facility to help countries negotiate good contracts, as the bad deals they previously signed became difficult to wiggle out without damaging investor confidence.

Advice for countries?: When he worked in post-conflict Rwanda, he knew they would be aid dependent for a while as tax base was low; still they insisted on some budgetary support for domestic resource (tax) mobilization and it worked. Also, it is important to fight corruption to the core, which is not just a moral issue, but a is a break on development. Rwanda did not even create an anti-corruption authority, as they emphasized that the existing institutions be functional, and he also said that leaders should show that they are sacrificing.

Employment in Africa: Chinezi Chijioke of Mckinsey said that while there are more school, more jobs, unemployment has dropped, and discretionary income is up across Africa, 2011 has been one of the most tumultuous years in African history.

So is economic growth lifting all boats? how inclusive has it been? There are frustrations due to:

– Unmet expectations;, with more schooling there is higher unemployment (North Africa tertiary education graduates have the highest unemployment)
– The excluded: consumer class has grown, number of households that are excluded, not participating, has grown
– The vulnerable & the unemployed. While there is 9% unemployment, another 63% are considered vulnerably employed and the combined figure of 70% is scarily high (Latin America is 30%)

It is therefore important to address:

1. Accelerate the creation of jobs: Countries should move from mere economic growth targets to economic growth & job creation strategy; they should try and understand which sectors will catalyze jobs and promote entrepreneurship in those sectors. Mining and finance sectors don’t create jobs unlike those in retail, hospitality, agriculture, government and social services that do.

2. Improve labour supply – Ensure there are people who are job ready (Many companies have trouble filling jobs as candidates are not job ready – have no technical, soft, experience or schooling).

3. Match those two. E.g. a study found that in Nigeria small enterprises will create jobs, while in Kenya middle and large enterprises are the engines for jobs.

Solar for Africa: Asif Ansari of Suntrough Energy spoke about power generation which is crucial as a world bank study found that a 1% increase in power generation, 3% on GDP. However, power infrastructure was a very complex process, combining servicing debt vs. fuel. E.g. a 100MW power plant may cost $100 million to put up and one can get a bank to finance, that but it will cost $1 billion of fuel during the life of the plant. He advocated that sustainability requires the use of some indigenous fuel – anything available locally – biogas, solar water etc. and we cannot be held back by climate change advocates, since Africa did not cause that, and needs energy now.

Africa is one of the wealthiest regions in the world – but the tremendous resource is underutilized so far, noting that 5% of the Sahara Desert can power the world for 24 hours a day – and solar is half the cost of natural gas (diesel costs 25c, wind 9c, gas 9c, coal 6c, hydro 6c, and Morgan solar 5c)

In terms of funding, multi-lateral banks are there, but it takes time to get a loan going, so you should structure something that can be financed by private equity such as middle east investors or local sovereign equity.

They use Morgan solar technology and there are also employment opportunities in developing standardized solar hybrid plants of  10 – 20MW. You can actually bring them here early and fabricate them in Africa. Power plants expectancy is of 50 years.

Invest in the Arts: Cobhams Asuquo a music producer and the CEO of CAMP (Cobhams Asuquo Music Productions), spoke of challenges in the indigenous arts including the low premium placed on the arts, high infrastructure costs, piracy, pressure to adapt to westernize styles, and little regulatory assistance from bodies to market & sell African arts. he urged more people to invest in the arts in sectors like film distribution, and this was followed by one of the artistes on the CAMP label, Bez Idakula who gave some great, Stevie Wonder-ish, performances.

Deputy PM Wows ALN: Few people outside Ethiopia can name another leader besides their Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi. But at a dinner at the historic palace of Emperor, Ato Hailemariam Desalegn, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs engaged in a Q&A session on various topics put by ALN members. His fast answers included;

Plans to open up communications sector They are focusing on completing the inland national fibre backbone first, and when complete they will now talk to private sector players (who are biased toward urban rather than rural consumers)

Advice Kenya on Somalia? Kenya tolerated Al Shabab for too long and now has disturbed the tourism sector. The movement must be defeated at all costs to help Somalia find some stability after 20 years and Kenya is right by international law of self-defence.

Gibe dam impact on Lake Turkana communities: All infrastructure has some impact but this was assessed by international standards and found to be minimal. The dam has the support of the Kenya and Uganda governments, and the noise about the dam is caused by NGOs who have politicized the debate. Ethiopia may later sell power to Uganda, Sudan, Kenya, and Djibouti.

Do Funders impose conditions? Domestic savings are not enough for all the loans so they have sourced funding loans unconditionally from China, South Korea, Turkey, Brazil, and India.

Lessons for other African countries? The western model of development for Africa from Bretton woods is dead, so they got examples from Asian tigers and are pursuing a development-state model where the government intervenes in some sectorst. They focus on agriculture and manufacturing and this ensures that Ethiopia has a low gini coefficient (equivalent to Scandinavia) through growing high-value crops like Denmark and New Zealand, building capacity in textiles, and the deployment of 62,000 agricultural extension workers to advise farmers, showing them kaizen bench-marking and seek out export markets.

He also said that African leaders should be drawn from productive private sectors (not rent seekers interested only in wealth accumulation from land taxes government contracts and corruption who are disruptive elements)

Plan to join the East Africa community? He hinted that another country was not comfortable with an 80 million population country joining, but will start as observer-member before going for full membership. Regional integration is the way to go – under Nepad, South Africa pioneered transport integration and Ethiopia will do power integration as a start with Gibe.
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Reading the Precision Air Tea Leaves

Precision Air (now a PLC with a 126-page prospectus at their site) was incorporated as an LLC in 1991. It flies to all major towns in Tanzania Mwanza, Tabora, Musoma, Shinyanga, Kigoma, Kilimanjaro, Zanzibar, Mtwara, Arusha and Dar es Salaam) and internationally to Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, and Comoros. Kenya Airways (KQ) became a strategic investor in 2003, acquiring a 49% stake.

Air Industry: There are 27 air operators in the country, and Precision Air is the second national carrier of Tanzania with a 59% market share, followed by Coastal Travel 14%, others with 21% and Air Tanzania with 6% (via TAA stats). It is also the only Tanzania carrier operating scheduled international flights and member of the IATA clearing house (ouch!)

Tanzania is a large country with a service industry that contributes 43% to GDP of the country, and id that has increasing air industry opportunities thanks to mining, tourism, but challenges include a lack of staff. Precision has been a local pioneer in e-ticketing (which cost $1 compared to $10 for paper ones), frequent flyer programs and online check-in.

On Offer: Unlike past cross-border listing like Bralirwa (Rwanda), Stanbic (Uganda) and Safaricom & Britak (Kenya) which have been available to nationals of all East African countries, the Precision Air IPO has only Tanzanian and non-Tanzanian categories for retail and corporate investors (no East African category). 51% of the shares are reserved for Tanzania nationals in the case of an over-subscription, Tanzanians can’t buy on behalf of non-Tanzanians, and 3% of the shares are reserved for staff of the airline.

If dividends are paid, they are taxed at 5% for both Tanzanians and Non-Tanzanians (shareholders of unlisted companies are charged 10%). Historically, they have paid dividend of about Kshs. 7 million and shareholders equity tumbled in 2011 thanks to a hedging reserve hit of Kshs. 615 million.

58 million new shares are on sale at a price of ~Kshs 29 (TzS 475 each), with a minimum application amount of 200 shares, then multiples of 100 thereafter. The offer runs from 7th to 28th October with results announced on November 11 and listing at the Dares Salaam exchange on December 8 2011.

The IPO has had some delays such as by a small a lawsuit and (threat of) a winding-up petition. However the only material litigation mentioned are two (lightweight ones) of a passenger who lost luggage and sued for about $50,000, and some former employees suing for overtime pay of $150,000 which the Precision lawyers note are unlikely to lead to winding up proceedings.

Valuation: With a re-worked earnings per share of 10, the price advised by NIC Capital works to a historical P/E ratio of 50, which is seen as high (see Transcentury [KE] for a similarly listed share)

Cost of Offer: The IPO will cost about Kshs 64 million including payments to Ernst & Young (transaction advisors – Kshs 5M), Orbit (stockbroking – Kshs 3.5M), Stanbic (Receiving bank- Kshs 3M) and the receiving agents (stockbrokers, branches of CRDB, and Stanbic banks all budgeted at Kshs 37M)

Use of Proceeds: hoping to raise about Kshs 1.7 billion (TzS 27 billion or ~ $16 million) and Kshs 700 million will go to fleet expansion, Kshs 400 million for ATR spare parts and the balance in systems, training, equipment and working capital.

 

Background on Transaction: Michael Shirima, the Chairman had had 1.37 million and KQ 1.32 million shares each. Their shares were split 50 times giving Michael Shirima had 51% (68m) shares and KQ had 49% (66m) and they will retain those shares, alongside the newly created 58 million shares, but which will reduce their holdings to 35.5% and 34.1% respectively

Early partners in the airline’s history include Mtengei Materu, Hillary Ngaleku, The Tanzania Venture Capital Fund and East African Development Bank, but at this stage it’s only MS and KQ. The company does not own land but has leases from Kilimanjaro Airports Development Company, Kilimanjaro Native Cooperative Union, Quality Plaza Limited and National Insurance Corporation.

Fleet: Comprises 2 ATR 42-320 (All Owned), 4 ATR 42-500 (2 Owned and 2 Leased) 5, ATR 72-500 (All Owned) and 2 Boeing 733: 2 (Leased). ART 42 (4 in the fleet) and ATR 72 (5) use 700 litres per hour, with which they fly almost 700,000 passengers and forecast flying about 1 million passengers next year. The 737’s are maintained by KQ.

Banking: Their arrangements include Citibank ($127 million) who are financing the purchase of 7 ATR aircraft, Stanbic ($6 million) one aircraft and a KCB $6 million) taking over an EADB loan for hangar construction (at Nyerere International airport). They also have letters of credit and guarantee facilities with Stanbic Tanzania.

Human Resource: Precision has 657 staff, but a SWOT in the Prospectus notes that a weakness of the industry is a shortage of pilots and engineers. The Managing Director, Finance, Information Systems and Commercial directors are Kenyans, seconded from KQ who provide manpower development, and training of Precision staff who are attached to KQ. Also at Precision, 4 pilots have been trained from scratch, 12 technicians have been trained at Toulouse by ATR and 5 senior managers are also enrolled in MBA’s at Toulouse.

Ground Handling: 150 were employed after the company got approval in 2009 to do their own ground handling – and hope to employ more if they get permission to do the same for other airlines. They do self-handling at Nyerere International Airport (Dar es Salaam) and Kilimanjaro International Airport (Arusha)

Governance: Precision Air has a lean board with only one independent director and only one committee (audit & risk) that each meets four times a year. As long as they own 20% KQ must be consulted by Precision and agree on the appointment of Managing Director and Finance Director, entry into alliances, new routes, acquisition & disposal of the fleet, any issue that dilutes shares, taking on debt. same for MS who holds 20%. KQ and MS have the right to appoint one director for each 10% they have and replace their directors. The IPO also provides for some rights for a minority shareholder who ends up owing 10% shares in the company.
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