Category Archives: IFC

Diamond Trust: Third Rights

Diamond Trust Bank is back to shareholders for some fundraising after two rights issues in 2006 and 2007.
Since venturing into  Uganda and Burundi in  2008, it has become a pan-African bank growing from assets Kshs 45 billion and Kshs 1.6 billion in profits to 2011 assets of  Kshs. 107 billion and profits of Kshs 4.3 billion. The additional  funding will be invested in Tanzanian Uganda and Burundi as well as alternative channel categories.
Like the previous issues, this one closing on Friday, August 10, is likely to exceed the full subscription. All the large investors – Aga Khan Group (AK fund for economic development fund  (owns 17%), Habib Bank (11%), Jubilee Insurance (10%), and the International Finance Corporation (IFC owns 10%) have committed to take up their rights.
The above commitments are for 51%, and with the minimum target is 60%, there’s a rump option in case other shares are not taken up but it’s expected that most of the 11, 242 shareholders will pay up (there was little trade in rights when it opened).

Contrasting Rights
Year – Nov-06 ; Nov-07 ;  Jul-12
Target (Kshs M) – 735 ; 1,600 ; 1,809
New shares (M) – 15.5 ; 23.3 ; 24.4
Price (Kshs)  – 50 ; 70 ; 74
Ratio  –  1:8 ; 1;6 ; 1;8
Budget (Kshs M) 41.6 ;  54.7 ; 57.6
 

Others
  • IFC has also provided funding of about $65 million for the bank operations.
  • All the arms of the company are profitable; Kenya profit after tax of Kshs 2.2 billion in 2011, Tanzania (own 55%) Kshs. 398 million, Uganda (own 54%) Kshs. 315 million and Burundi  (own 67%) Kshs. 31 million.
  • Diamond Trust only owns 3 of their branches in Kenya (out of 38) , and none of the 22 in Uganda, 14 in Tanzania or 4 in Burundi.
  • There’s no indication of interest to venture into Rwanda or South Sudan as with many other Kenyan banks.

Reading the Kenya Airways Tea Leaves

Today is the last day of the Kenya Airways  rights issue in which they are seeking to raise Kshs 20 billion ($240 million) from shareholders.  The 35-year-old company is  one of the most-talked about companies in Kenya mainly as as a model of privatization gone right.

The airline which dubs itself The Pride of Africa has set out to branch out across Africa and cover every African capital, but has also had to fight a rearguard action from a handful of local airlines and gulf carriers.

The information memorandum is about 236 pages, but with most of the data in it one year old, relating for the financial year that ended in March 2011. Also, there have been no stockbroker reports about this rights issue.

Shareholders:

  • The company has 73,612 shareholders (old data)
  • The authorized share capital of the airline  is Kshs 10 billion (102) comprising 2  billion shares with a  par value of Kshs 5. 461 million have been issued and in 2011 shareholders had a return on equity of 15%.
  • Approval has been obtained from the stock exchanges in Tanzania (page 130) and Uganda  (page 127) where KQ” share are cross-listed.
  • The directors’ shareholding is listed (98) and they don’t own much in the airline while the CEO does not own any shares in the airline (odd as the marketing camping exhorts Kenyans to invest in the pride of Africa) and this does not bind the CEO to improve the share performance of the airline.
  • For any KQ shareholder who does not participate in their shareholding will mean a substantial dilution in their shareholding (93) and this has been enumerated in a court case where a shareholder sued the airline to stop the rights issue.

Rights issue:

  • Proceeds of the rights issue will be used to make pre-delivery payments (28) for aircraft  between June 2012 and March 2013  and pay down some unsecured loans.
  • The success level of the rights issue is to raise Kshs 14.4 billion ($173 million) (26)  and KQ will lower its risk profile (and maybe borrowing costs) by having a higher equity level (23).
  • Kenyans have to own at least 50% of the shares and the transaction advisors may refuse transfer of shares to foreigners that will violate that (p37)
  • Shareholders are being offered 16 new shares for every 5 held. They were priced at a discount when the offer was announced, but the market price is now the same as the rights price was at a discount, but now trades (Kshs 14.9) at  about the offer price.
  • The  rights issue will cost Kshs 620 million ($7.4 million) (p38) -comprising commissions of Kshs 310 million, advertising 66M, CMA Kenya fees 51M, underwriting (up to 47M), and lead transaction advisor 15M  ($180,000)
  • The issue is underwritten for only up to Kshs 420 million (93) and they are aiming to raise Kshs 20 billion.
  • Rump allotment: Qualified institutional investors (33) will be invited to buy shares at the discounted price concurrent with the rights issue , and these social security funds of Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi, pension & insurance companies in East Africa, financial forms in South Africa and other foreign institutional investors(230). Yesterday’s paper had a story that the IFC will own 7.4% of KQ after the rights issue. 

Performance:

  • Despite revenue increasing from Kshs 41 billion to Kshs 55 billion  ($662 million) in the first six months of their 2012 year, operating profit for the 6 months was Kshs as 1 billion ($12 million), down from 2.4 billion  the year before. This was attributed to increased employee costs and new routes and the airline issued a profit warning in January 2012 profit wanting in January 2012 (68) citing the rising fuel costs which will impact full year profits for 2012.
  • For the full-year to March 2011 revenue of Kshs 85 billion (comprising passenger 75, freight 6.5, handing 1.4)  and had direct costs of Kshs 54 billion (comprising fuel of 25b billion, landing 8 billion, maintenance 7b, sales commission 2.7b), fleet ownership of 9 billion, 13 billion on administration (11 billion on staff).
  • Of the revenue, 54% is from African routes, 27% Europe, and 19% Mid-East & Asia (68) .
  • Their hedging policy is to hedge 80% of their fuel requirements for the next one year hedged and 50% for following months  (70).
  • Their debt-equity ratio in 2010 was 111% (borrowings of Kshs 20 billion against equity of Kshs 17 billion) and this improved to 88% in 2011.
  • Deferred income – includes compensation from a manufacturer (204 -likely Boeing)  of Kshs 2.5 billion and they also have deferred tax liabilities of Kshs 8 billion (203)

Banking: KQ has borrowing of Kshs 25 billion ($301 million) (201)  from Private Export Funding (PEFCO), Barclays and ABN Amro at rates of 4-6%  over 12 years and lien of credit for Kshs 20 billion (202). The loans are routed through Simba Finance, Swara Aircraft Finance, Chui Aircraft Finance and Kifaru Aircraft who are registered as owners of the aircraft  (81) (these are not subsidiaries) and will transfer their titles once the loans (secured through Eximbank) are repaid (201). KQ also drew new loan facilities in 2011 from Standard Bank, KCB and Barclays to pay for pre-delivery payments (87) . KQ also earns rates of 4 -6% on their deposits (198).

Staff:

  • KQ has 4,355 staff who earned Kshs 11 billion ($132 million) in 2011 (numbers in December are 4,672 (61).
  • KLM appoints the CEO, finance director and one director for each 10% they own (106).
  • Directors and key management were paid 223 million in 2011, with directors earning 78 million of that (175).
  • KQ is recruiting expatriate pilots to meet a shortage (65).
  • Have an Ab Initio pilot training program (pilots who had no previous flight experience)  that now has 87 pilots getting training in South Africa (61). KQ has an arrangement with Co-Op bank in which these students can borrow and pay for their expensive training of pilots and they have drawn Kshs 500 million ($6 million) (112).
  • KQ will hire a director for a new fleet delivery department and separate that from the technical department (61)
     

Fleet:

  • KQ operates 33 aircraft, 20 under lease (108) and has 7 spare engines.
  • Have Kshs 20 billion worth of leases (213)  and commitments to buy about Kshs 100 billion ($1.2 billion) worth of aircraft (212)
  • Paid deposits of Kshs 2.1 billion to Boeing (192) and Kshs 631 million for leases of Boeing and Embraer planes & engines.
  • Have signed purchase agreements for 10 Embraer 190, three 777-300ER,  and 9 Boeing 787 Dreamliner’s with options for 4 more (111)
  • Future fleet will comprise Embraers (for domestic/short routes), Boeing 737 (NG) next generation (for medium/Africa routs), and Boeing 787/777 for intercontinental routes). They also have board approval to acquire 12 freighters (53).
  • Sold 2 Saab 340 aircraft to Alandia as well as land in Nairobi and Lusaka, (108)

Customers & Passengers:

  • Flew 3.1 million passengers in 2011 and 1.8 million in the first half of 2012.
  • All KQ ground staff participated in customer service training at the end of 2011 (65)
  • The airline seeks to maintain & improve on on-time performance but this has been hampered by airport congestion, traffic jams unavailability of equipment and a lack of captains (65)
  • KQ plans to re-design their network to decongest JKIA by having more mid-day flight blocks, in addition to the current morning  & evening ones (58)
  • Passenger meals are by KLM catering and NAS (111)

Risks: Risks to the company include adverse publicity from terror alerts or attacks,  aircraft crashes (91) fuel prices (90) and the slow pace of Jomo Kenyatta Airport (JKIA) expansion (90) which impacts on time performance. They need the airport authorities to complete terminal 4 which will be exclusive for KQ with 7 parking bays nose-in, and also construct multi-level terminals, have a separate domestic terminal, and (later) construct a new (greenfield) airport and a second runway.

On-going construction at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, Nairobi

But they also note in risk mitigation that:  Support from the Government of Kenya for the airline is another important positive factor, which allows the airline to compete successfully. Lenders’ and investors’ experiences with flag carriers and airlines in general across the world create an expectation that carriers tend to find some way to keep operating in difficult circumstances, and this usually involves the state in some form or another (63)
 

Litigation: KQ has suffered two fatal crashes and there are still cases and investigations that stem from those two in Cameroon (2007)  and Ivory Coast (2000) . There are minor passenger and staff cases, but also a long-running claim by Kenya Revenue Authority for indirect taxes (page 107)

Competition:

  • KQ is largest in Africa with 42 African destinations compared to Ethiopian 40, South Africa (22) (p47)
  • Comparing airline traffic (62) between Africa to the world, the top is South Africa, Egypt Air, Air France, and KQ is 8th , just behind Ethiopian and Emirates while for traffic between Africa and Asia, KQ  is 6th behind Emirates, Ethiopian, Qatar, Egypt Air.
  • KQ enjoys some advantages by having a young aircraft fleet, while other countries don’t have working airlines. It competes in the region with Ethiopian & South Africa, but these airlines have distant hubs in Johannesburg and Addis, while Gulf carriers pull traffic away from the region with their long haul aircraft and cheap tickets (64).
  • KLM owns 26% of KQ and KQ owns 41.23% of Precision Air in Tanzania (72) after their own rights issue which reduced KQ’s shareholding from 49%.

Centum seeks Carbacid

and other Bank Twits

Twitter is a micro-blogging tool that is really nifty for doing mini-posts, forwards and other remarks that (are on any subject) and are maybe not worthy of a full blog post. Here’s a summary of my week on Twitter:

– @louizah Zain Vuka has ended? Please confirm
@NTV showing IFC-funded docu on women entrepreneurs – meaning manu-arsenal will be on tape delay – WHY? next @NTV ditched a static-filled channel & skipped their ‘half time’ piece to present second half live, on a much clearer signal! Kudos
– Sports journo era over? Player asks for trade on blog team obliges on Twitter player thanks fans on Facebook http://tinyurl.com/d967eu
blog post Why Safaricom should spin-off MPesa http://bit.ly/gYZ86
– The Central Bank of Kenya reports have become incomprehensible B.S
– Upgraded Safaricom Investor relations page has media and CEO briefings http://bit.ly/VBZ2f
– Tanzania will now recognize Kenya manufacturers mark of quality http://bit.ly/USZHg
Delta Air round-trip intro fares from Nairobi include (ex-tax) $650-NY/DC, $975-ATL/Chi/ Dallas, $1124-LA/SF and $1440-Detroit
– @kahenya @jamesmurua likes Riviera, which has good crowd and facilities, but beer is pricey and the place is a fire-trap
– So Joe Biden met Nairobi Mayor Majiwa in Chicago. There, that’s the end of the joke
– Safaricom CEO says M-Pesa not yet profitable http://bit.ly/TDV8D
– @leofaya says Kenyan promoters are killing Facebook http://bit.ly/zBHXB
– Today’s pavement uprooting is sponsored by Access Kenya – as the fibre optic railway is laid around Nairobi
– @Archermishale sports conspiracy goes that where a sport wants to sway a big game, they put in a low-quality ref, but didn’t happen on Wednesday
– Safaricom partners with Kenya’s largest bank KCB http://bit.ly/J4l92
– Kenya budget saga ($115 million) blamed on a typo – Quote ODB “N___ please!” http://tinyurl.com/p5hoyo
blog post: two bank shareholder meetings same day same building same time http://bit.ly/86lNq
– @pinkm so you can only use debit, but not credit card to buy amazon books from KE? Interesting
Ethiopian Air applies to fly from Nairobi to Amsterdam and Nairobi –Liege (Belgium)
– Land spin: Could there be a link between Migingo Island and the Kampala land Kenya got from the Uganda military?
– If MTN buy Yu or Access Kenya, they will have to negotiate with MTN matatu society for use of the name.
blog post Its Our Turn to Eat (is credit card worthy) http://bit.ly/YnriQ
– NMG 2008 report gives prominent mention of new digital division, Making-Nation DVD and Zuqka portal http://tinyurl.com/qkcphc
Centum applies to the CMA to buy Kshs. 350M of Carbacid shares and be the largest shareholder of the Nairobi listed (but suspended) company
– Senator cards advise customers to only upload to https, not http sites. It’s rare to find credit company giving card advice
– From Mars Group: Parliament’s Report on the Kenya Budget inconsistencies http://blog.marsgroupkenya….

From Banks to Chips

IFC funds D-Trust diversification: Diamond Trust Bank will get a $45 million (Kshs. 3.2 billion) loan from the Investment Finance Corporation this year: a subordinated loan of $15 million; and $30 million for housing finance, on lending to SMEs, consumer financing, education/student loans, health-care, and agribusiness financing. (Note: I own shares in Diamond Trust)

Super Barclays: Barclays Kenya is the first bank to announce ‘its profits for 2007. They are up about 7% from the subdued profit of Kshs. 7 billion ($100 million), but the profits of Barclays makes in African Countries mean that the units are too expensive for Absa

From the Blogs
– Local TV leader KTN follows NTV by expanding into Uganda
– Just how free is free secondary education?
Inflation update: One common item I missed in inflation tracker is Chips (French fries). They are a popular Nairobi meal that’s cheap, and filling, often goes well with a ¼ chicken from Kenchic. But the price of chips has shot up in the post election period – from 20- 30 shillings ($0.4) for a pack/plate, to abut Kshs. 50 – 60 ($0.85) at the same Kenchic joints. The price of cooking oil has also gone up by about 30 – 40% in supermarkets – which may be contribute, as would the availability of potatoes which were produced in clash-hit areas.

KCB treading

KCB has lowered borrowing rates for a variety of retail loans by up to 5% and the move is already having a knockdown effect with customers, at other bank, asking for their loans rates to also be lowered likewise.

But for KCB, their intention is probably to accelerate their lending which has remained flat this year. From January to June 2006 their loan book is up less than 1%, compared to peers Barclays and Standard Charted whose loan books have increased by 7% and Equity Bank whose loan book increased 46% in the half year.

Card ping
CFC card account holders can receives SMS each time their MasterCard’s are used/charged.

School Finance Loans
(From Africa Intelligence )
The International Finance Corporation (IFC) will provide financing for private school institutions in Kenya, towards purchase of educational materials, and other capital expenditures under a formula which it inaugurated in Ghana last year.

On the flip side Bretton Woods Project offers six reasons why the World Bank (and IFC) should not finance educational projects