Category Archives: NSE portfolio

Share Portfolio: May 2008

treading water, pre-Safaricom

The Stable

Diamond Trust
Express
KCB
Scangroup
Sameer
Stanbic (UG)
Safaricom (?)
Total

What’s changed?
In: Safaricom
Out: ICDCI (Centum)
Increase: none
Lightened: KCB
Dividends expected: Diamond trust, KCB, Express, Total, Scangroup, Stanbic
Unexpected gains/losses: none
Best Performer: Stanbic (Ug), then Scangroup
Worst Performer: Express

Looking forward to: Increasing Safaricom holdings after the expected ⅓ IPO allocation, then Kenya Pipeline, Co-Op Bank (though their service is poor) and whatever other IPO comes along.

Performance Summary: The Motley Fool advises that investors should beat the share index to consider their returns a success. The NSE 20 share index is where it was six months ago: 5,153 (-0.08%), while I’m down 0.44% even after taking some cash out (chucking Centum) to meet unexpected January/February 08 payments and am still waiting for all the afore-mentioned 2007 dividends half way into the year.

Earlier portfolio summaries: – ½ a year ago November 2007 and a year ago.

IPO Train: full on board

It’s now the fourth official day of the Safaricom IPO, with some banks and brokers working over 7 days processing applications. And, over the weekend, many of the negatives of the IPO turned into positives;

Politics align: The IPO was launched last Friday by President Mwai Kibaki, who placed a personal application for 1 million shares, worth 5 million shillings ((0.01% of the shares on offer) . Since then the ODM side have also changed tune of the IPO matter, as they realized that as leaders they have to guide their people – and one of the ways to do so is to enlighten them on opportunities of wealth building and methods of advancement beyond agricultural and real estate productivity. Why tell people not to buy shares, when other communities buy the shares? What do you want your people to do? In any case the public holds minority stakes in most NSE companies with over half the shareholding hidden behind other companies whose shareholders are not well known.

Competitive sisters: Kengen was a watershed IPO but that was 2 years ago. The last massive regional IPO was Stanbic Uganda – how do they compare?

Company; Stanbic : Safaricom
Target; (Ushs 70 billion) USS$ 38 million: (Kshs. 50 billion) US$ 770 million
Beneficiaries; Standard Bank (SA) & Government of Uganda ; Government of Kenya only
Shares on offer; 1 billion shares : 10 billion shares
Share price; (Kshs. 3) $0.04 : (Kshs. 5) $0.08
Oversubscription 3 X : (2X is a conservative estimate)
Applications: 37,000 ; (1 million expected)

Animal Metaphors: We now have CNBC Africa which has been live for about a month and it’s a great channel to watch especially late at night, when they are covering Asia or American markets. Last week, they were discussing the US banking crisis and one analyst used the Sherlock Holmes tale of the dog that did not bark in the night to reflect on the silence of Japanese banks that were heavy investors in US mortgage securities but have not declared any losses.

The animal metaphor with Safaricom – is the elephant in the room which everyone is ignoring and that is Vodafone (UK): Did they want the IPO? I doubt it – they are not making money from the IPO, and will go from having a cozy boardroom, to having a million shareholders (estimate) demanding phones and umbrella’s at AGM’s.

– They are reluctant partners in this who for the last three years (and long before Mobitelea became a Matatu name) they had tried to buy 9% or 11% of Safaricom from the Government of Kenya, for a figure far less than the Government will raise from the public. Vodafone will remain the largest shareholder with 40% (or 35%) to GoK’s 35% , and retain veto power over business plans, budget, and CEO & FC appointments. But most companies listed on the NSE have parent companies who find it prudent to retain at least 50% of the company’s ownership to control the strategic and management direction of a company – and could they be buying any floating shares out there after listing? They can own up to 60% of Safaricom.
– It has exposed the embarrassing practices that gave rise to Mobitelea

Will stockbrokers’ change?: The only smudge so far has been the past performance of stockbrokers. It is sad that the lines outside Nation Center (of Nyaga Stockbroker clients) is as long as that any broker/banker I have seen this week. Stockbrokers have put out their best clothes, advertised and got new staff to woo investors for the 1 billion plus shillings ($15 million) commissions from the IPO – but what happens after? Will they revert to their dark old ways of insider trading, and secret share dealing? An ominous story from the Nation goes that one of the most interesting but unconfirmed anecdotes at the bourse is that Nyaga Securities managing director Patrick Gakiavi actually attended (as a director) the NSE meeting that decided to pump Kshs. 100 million into his operation. – and that joins the NSE urban legend archive like the one of the CEO who was able to cash out his significant stake on the last day of Uchumi share trading

Modernization to eliminate rogue brokers: The central deposit settlement corporation (CDSC) is seeking an SMS solution (mobile phone messaging) to alert investors on their account share trades (theirs/by rogue brokers) and also respond to client requests. (Deadline is April 9) The laws have already been amended to allow them to collect 30 shillings from each Safaricom applicant for postage and this will probably continue for any statements thereafter – as investors will be eased into the cheaper option of SMS (maybe at 5 or 10 shillings per message)

Beyond Safaricom: Hisanet Africa recommend that investors look at some other shares of interest amidst the IPO: these include NIC Bank, Kengen, Barclays (who are now expanding into Rwanda), Access Kenya, and East African Cables.

Thanksgiving Portfolio

Earlier: Thanksgiving 2006 portfolio

The Stable
Diamond Trust
Express
ICDCI
KCB
Scangroup
Sameer
Stanbic (UG)
Total
* Uchumi (suspended)

What’s changed?
In: ICDCI
Out: None
Increase: Diamond Trust (rights), Scangroup
Lightened: KCB
Dividends expected: no interims
Unexpected gains/losses:
New listings not taken on: Kenya Re
Best performer: Stanbic (Ug)
Worst Performer: Total (though the dividend is assured)

Looking forward to: none really. I sat out of the Kenya Re IPO, and then didn’t really want it after the shares listed – maybe next year. Same with the Safaricom IPO which is getting dangerously close to the election, but which I expect to sit out again and instead give the money I have to some candidates (2 parliamentary, 1 civic) toward election expenses.

Lessons learnt: (i) you should not try and time trades e.g. company books for dividend close on Thursday, so you try and buy shares on Tuesday – just won’t work; think and trade long term (ii) attempts to buy low and sell high by setting a price based on yesterday’s high/low also won’t work; so think long term and don’t worry about intra-day prices

Performance Summary: The Motley Fool advises that investors should beat the share index to consider their returns a success. The NSE 20 share index is up 1% in the last six months while my portfolio is down 0.7% from May 2007. The actual share holdings are up about 13% but with the cash taken out from when KCB shares sold, the net position is down.

Nairobi Shares Portfolio – May 2007

Be a vulture

The Portfolio review is being done a week earlier than expected as I usually try and update six months from last review.

However, in keeping in sync with other blogger portfolios recently released by Odegle Nyang and Riba Capital, here it is:

Current portfolio
Diamond Trust
Express Kenya
Kenya Commercial Bank
Sameer Africa
Scangroup
Stanbic Uganda
Total Oil
* Uchumi (suspended)

What’s changed?
There are fewer shares and portfolio has less value than before as I sold more shares than I bought back.

In: Stanbic (Uganda), Total
Out: Crown Berger, Kenya Airways, Kengen
Increased: Diamond Trust (Rights)
Reduced: –
Dividends expected: D-Trust, Express, KCB, Scangroup, Total
Unexpected gains/losses: Express bonus share, KCB share split
New listings not taken on: Access Kenya, Mumias (Rights)
Best performer: Stanbic (Ug)
Worst Performer: Sameer Africa
Looking forward to: Kenya Airways, Safaricom IPO

Performance Summary: The Motley Fool advises that investors should beat the share index to consider their returns a success. The NSE 20 share index is down 10% in the last six months while my portfolio is down 13% from November 2006.

I sold Kenya Airways shares at around 120/= and for the first time my portfolio does not have KQ shares. If the price continues to drop, I expect to buy some shares in this great company in the coming days, before they announce their year end results – which should have been finalized, but may be delayed by post-Cameroon events.

Thanksgiving Portfolio

Shares I own
Crown Berger
Diamond Trust
Express Kenya
Kenya Airways
Kenya Commercial Bank
Kenya Electricity Generation Company
Sameer Africa
Scangroup
* Uchumi (suspended)

Verdict: Surprisingly little change from six months ago

Performance: The Motley Fool advises that investors should beat the share index to consider their returns a success. The NSE 20 share index is up 30% in six months while my portfolio is up about 35% from May. *(The NSE index still lists Uchumi and if I zero it from my calculations my portfolio is up only about 30% in six months)

What’s changed?
In: Scangroup
Out: Housing Finance
Reduced: KCB, Kengen
In-n-Out: Sold Sameer Africa high bought it back low
Dividends: Payments from Kenya Airways KCB, D-Trust, Crown and Kengen (not factored into my performance return)
Bonus share: Express
Best performers: Scangroup, HFCK, D-Trust
Worst: Uchumi
Risk vs. Return: Some Nyramids give 30% a month returns, but I can’t afford to take those risks
Looking forward to: Kenya Re, Diamond Trust (rights), and Safaricom