Familia ya Kenyatta yapata gawio la Tsh. Bilioni 58.7 za Hisa inazomiliki NCBA Bank

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Jul 24, 2018
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Familia ya Kenyatta imepata Tsh. Bilioni 58.7 kwa mwaka mmoja kutokana na umiliki wao wa hisa za NCBA Group baada ya mkopeshaji wa daraja la juu kukaidi kushuka kwa soko la hisa na kuibuka kuwa hisa bora zaidi katika Soko la Hisa la Nairobi (NSE).

Hisa za NCBA zilipanda kwa asilimia 57.94 mwaka wa 2022, na kuifanya kampuni iliyofanya vizuri zaidi katika soko la Hisa Nairobi iliyomwaga KSh 650.1 bilioni mwaka 2022 kufuatia ongezeko la viwango katika ulimwengu ulioendelea na uvamizi wa Urusi nchini Ukraine.

Familia ya Kenyatta, ambao wanadhibiti asilimia 13.2 ya benki hiyo, wameongeza thamani ya hisa zao kufikia Bilioni 164. kutoka Tsh. Bilioni 104 katika siku ya kwanza ya biashara ya Januari.

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The Kenyatta family has gained Sh3.12 billion in one year from their ownership of NCBA Group after the top tier lender defied the stock market crash to emerge the best stock at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE).

NCBA Group share jumped 57.94 percent in 2022, making it the top performer at the Nairobi bourse that shed Sh650.1 billion last year following rate hikes in the developed world and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The Kenyattas, who control 13.2 percent of the bank, saw the worth of their stake close the year at Sh8.66 billion from Sh5.5 billion on the first trading day of January.

The increase has been attributed to investors reacting positively to NCBA’s market beating half-year financial performance, which lifted the bank’s shares 66.74 percent over the past six months to close the year at Sh39.35 a piece — valuing the bank at Sh64.8 billion.

The bank’s net profits for the nine months to September grew fastest at 96.2 percent, with the lender overtaking Absa Kenya as the country’s fourth most profitable lender.

Equity, Kenya’s most profitable lender, posted a 27.9 percent profit growth in the period while KCB Group was up 21.4 percent.

NCBA owners include tycoons and formerly powerful political families in the era of Jomo Kenyatta and Daniel arap Moi including the ex-Central Bank Governor, Philip Ndegwa, businessman Naushad Merali and former head of Civil Service, Simeon Nyanchae.

All three are deceased, leaving their families to reap outsized capital gains at the NSE and steady dividend payouts.

The wealthy Kenyatta, Ndegwa and Merali families shepherded the merger of listed NIC Bank and the private CBA bank to form NCBA in 2019.

The Ndegwas’ 13.13 percent stake is worth Sh8.5 billion while the ownership of the Merali family is valued at Sh3.36 billion—making them among Kenya’s wealthiest families. The NCBA share rally has seen the Ndegwa’s gain Sh2.96 billion, with their recent decision to increase their stake through an additional purchase of 10 million shares in the bank paying off.

The Merali family through Yana Investments Limited has a 5.2 per cent stake in the bank, and their fortunes in the lender grew by Sh1.23 billion last year.

Analysts say NCBA’s surge at the NSE is the product of the profit growth that has seen its return on equity (ROE) rise to above 16.9 per cent, making the counter attractive to investors who prefer to put their money in risk-free Government when a company’s ROE is below 10 per cent.

A higher return on equity (ROE)—a measure of financial performance which offers owners and investors insight into a business’s profitability—is the main reason that has attracted investors to this counter.

ROE is the percentage of a company’s net income to its shareholder value and shows how much they are likely to get for every shilling they have pumped into the business.

Rival top lenders like Equity, KCB and Cooperative Bank saw their market value dip 15.6 percent, 16.1 percent and 5.02 percent last year in line with share erosion at the NSE.

The market capitalisation stood at Sh1.98 trillion at the close of trading last week, down from Sh2.59 trillion on the first day of trading this year, translating to a loss of Sh597 billion.

The loss of Sh597 billion is the worst annual slide the market has recorded since its inception in 1954 and topples the Sh203 billion that was wiped out in 2020 due to Covid-19 economic hardships.

The market is being weighed down by a reduced appetite for emerging markets after a jump in interest rates in developed countries such as the US.

The developed markets are currently battling high inflation that has forced their central banks to adjust rates upwards, attracting foreign investors who have been fleeing emerging markets like the NSE.

The benchmark US 10-year bond rate — a closely watched gauge of market inflation expectations over the next decade — has climbed to 3.68 per cent, up from 1.63 per cent at the start of the year.

The Kenyatta family’s vast business empire is associated with well-known commercial brands and blue-chip companies.

Nigeria-based financial magazine, Ventures, in 2013 estimated the Kenyatta family fortune, including thousands of acres of land and commercial buildings to be worth $1 billion (Sh100 billion).

But the full extent of the business dynasty, however, is still a closely guarded secret known only to the family, top lawyers and the elite investors with whom they do business.

Besides NCBA, Kenyatta’s other investments are Brookside Dairy—where the President’s younger brother, Muhoho Kenyatta, sits as executive chairman, and the upmarket and chic hotel chain, Heritage Hotels East Africa.

The family is also linked to Media Max Company, which owns K24 TV, Kameme Radio and The People Daily newspaper.

It also owns thousands of acres of prime land across Kenya that was acquired by the late President Kenyatta in the ‘60s and ‘70s under a settlement transfer fund scheme that allowed government officials to acquire land from the British.

Uhuru Kenyatta’s assumption of the presidency has injected fresh energy into his family’s commercial empire with expansion plans, buyouts and mergers taking centre stage.

In 2021, Mr Kenyatta failed to respond fully to a huge leak of financial papers dubbed the Pandora Papers that showed his family secretly owned a network of offshore companies for decades.

DAILY BUSINESS AFRICA
 
Nairobi Security Exchange wako vizuri kila kona sio kama wale jamaa wakuipigia upatu JATU PLC, tangu hapo niliwapuuza. Na kampuni zao zinapata faida kubwa, bongo hii kupata kampuni ina ROE ya 16 percent ni vigumu. Kampuni zenyewe chache na hazifanyi mapinduzi kwenye ushindani
 
NCBA-TZ.jpg

Familia ya Kenyatta imepata Tsh. Bilioni 58.7 kwa mwaka mmoja kutokana na umiliki wao wa hisa za NCBA Group baada ya mkopeshaji wa daraja la juu kukaidi kushuka kwa soko la hisa na kuibuka kuwa hisa bora zaidi katika Soko la Hisa la Nairobi (NSE).

Hisa za NCBA zilipanda kwa asilimia 57.94 mwaka wa 2022, na kuifanya kampuni iliyofanya vizuri zaidi katika soko la Hisa Nairobi iliyomwaga KSh 650.1 bilioni mwaka 2022 kufuatia ongezeko la viwango katika ulimwengu ulioendelea na uvamizi wa Urusi nchini Ukraine.

Familia ya Kenyatta, ambao wanadhibiti asilimia 13.2 ya benki hiyo, wameongeza thamani ya hisa zao kufikia Bilioni 164. kutoka Tsh. Bilioni 104 katika siku ya kwanza ya biashara ya Januari.

================

The Kenyatta family has gained Sh3.12 billion in one year from their ownership of NCBA Group after the top tier lender defied the stock market crash to emerge the best stock at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE).

NCBA Group share jumped 57.94 percent in 2022, making it the top performer at the Nairobi bourse that shed Sh650.1 billion last year following rate hikes in the developed world and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The Kenyattas, who control 13.2 percent of the bank, saw the worth of their stake close the year at Sh8.66 billion from Sh5.5 billion on the first trading day of January.

The increase has been attributed to investors reacting positively to NCBA’s market beating half-year financial performance, which lifted the bank’s shares 66.74 percent over the past six months to close the year at Sh39.35 a piece — valuing the bank at Sh64.8 billion.

The bank’s net profits for the nine months to September grew fastest at 96.2 percent, with the lender overtaking Absa Kenya as the country’s fourth most profitable lender.

Equity, Kenya’s most profitable lender, posted a 27.9 percent profit growth in the period while KCB Group was up 21.4 percent.

NCBA owners include tycoons and formerly powerful political families in the era of Jomo Kenyatta and Daniel arap Moi including the ex-Central Bank Governor, Philip Ndegwa, businessman Naushad Merali and former head of Civil Service, Simeon Nyanchae.

All three are deceased, leaving their families to reap outsized capital gains at the NSE and steady dividend payouts.

The wealthy Kenyatta, Ndegwa and Merali families shepherded the merger of listed NIC Bank and the private CBA bank to form NCBA in 2019.

The Ndegwas’ 13.13 percent stake is worth Sh8.5 billion while the ownership of the Merali family is valued at Sh3.36 billion—making them among Kenya’s wealthiest families. The NCBA share rally has seen the Ndegwa’s gain Sh2.96 billion, with their recent decision to increase their stake through an additional purchase of 10 million shares in the bank paying off.

The Merali family through Yana Investments Limited has a 5.2 per cent stake in the bank, and their fortunes in the lender grew by Sh1.23 billion last year.

Analysts say NCBA’s surge at the NSE is the product of the profit growth that has seen its return on equity (ROE) rise to above 16.9 per cent, making the counter attractive to investors who prefer to put their money in risk-free Government when a company’s ROE is below 10 per cent.

A higher return on equity (ROE)—a measure of financial performance which offers owners and investors insight into a business’s profitability—is the main reason that has attracted investors to this counter.

ROE is the percentage of a company’s net income to its shareholder value and shows how much they are likely to get for every shilling they have pumped into the business.

Rival top lenders like Equity, KCB and Cooperative Bank saw their market value dip 15.6 percent, 16.1 percent and 5.02 percent last year in line with share erosion at the NSE.

The market capitalisation stood at Sh1.98 trillion at the close of trading last week, down from Sh2.59 trillion on the first day of trading this year, translating to a loss of Sh597 billion.

The loss of Sh597 billion is the worst annual slide the market has recorded since its inception in 1954 and topples the Sh203 billion that was wiped out in 2020 due to Covid-19 economic hardships.

The market is being weighed down by a reduced appetite for emerging markets after a jump in interest rates in developed countries such as the US.

The developed markets are currently battling high inflation that has forced their central banks to adjust rates upwards, attracting foreign investors who have been fleeing emerging markets like the NSE.

The benchmark US 10-year bond rate — a closely watched gauge of market inflation expectations over the next decade — has climbed to 3.68 per cent, up from 1.63 per cent at the start of the year.

The Kenyatta family’s vast business empire is associated with well-known commercial brands and blue-chip companies.

Nigeria-based financial magazine, Ventures, in 2013 estimated the Kenyatta family fortune, including thousands of acres of land and commercial buildings to be worth $1 billion (Sh100 billion).

But the full extent of the business dynasty, however, is still a closely guarded secret known only to the family, top lawyers and the elite investors with whom they do business.

Besides NCBA, Kenyatta’s other investments are Brookside Dairy—where the President’s younger brother, Muhoho Kenyatta, sits as executive chairman, and the upmarket and chic hotel chain, Heritage Hotels East Africa.

The family is also linked to Media Max Company, which owns K24 TV, Kameme Radio and The People Daily newspaper.

It also owns thousands of acres of prime land across Kenya that was acquired by the late President Kenyatta in the ‘60s and ‘70s under a settlement transfer fund scheme that allowed government officials to acquire land from the British.

Uhuru Kenyatta’s assumption of the presidency has injected fresh energy into his family’s commercial empire with expansion plans, buyouts and mergers taking centre stage.

In 2021, Mr Kenyatta failed to respond fully to a huge leak of financial papers dubbed the Pandora Papers that showed his family secretly owned a network of offshore companies for decades.

DAILY BUSINESS AFRICA
Huko ndiko kwa kupeleka hela za kifisadi huko. Unapiga 50B za wadwanzi wa CCM unaidumbukiza kwenye hisa huko NCBA unatulia unaskilizia gawio tu 😀 ununue Range Rover mpya kila toleo jipya likitoka
 
Nairobi Security Exchange wako vizuri kila kona sio kama wale jamaa wakuipigia upatu JATU PLC, tangu hapo niliwapuuza. Na kampuni zao zinapata faida kubwa, bongo hii kupata kampuni ina ROE ya 16 percent ni vigumu. Kampuni zenyewe chache na hazifanyi mapinduzi kwenye ushindani
Isee hata mimi hii nilishangaa sana

Weledi na maalifa hii nchi bado sana.
 
Uzuri wa Wakenya ni kwamba wanasiasa wao hawaoni aibu wala soni kujitangaza wana ukwasi na ni fahari kwao kuwa matajiri. Njoo Tz sasa, huku utakutana na wanasiasa wanaojifanya na kujiita maskini huku wakila mahindi ya kuchoma barabarani ilhali ni matajiri wa kutupwa.
 
Ivi nchi hii hakuna wanasiasa mabilionea
Tanzania mwanasiasa akijiita tajiri raia wanamuona mwizi na sio mwenzao. Inabidi ajiite mnyonge hata akifa wadeki barabara wapige yowe hata kama alikuwa na billions ameficha nje. Akiwa mwizi na akajibrand kama mnyonge wanafurahia

Wizi mbaya ila its better mwizi awekeze ndani kuliko wezi wetu wanaopeleka hela nje zikafaidisha wengine. Wanasiasa walioiba fedha za umma miaka ya RTD, mashirika, makampuni, taasisi, viwanda na miradi ya serikali miaka yote wakikuonyesha waliwezeka wapi sana sana ni nyumba za kupanga na mahoteli. Uwekezaji wa hivi hausaidii sana taifa, bora mtu ajenge kiwanda au waungane kadhaa kama hawa wa NCBAA wafungue multinational company ikuze uchumi maradufu.
 
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