Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Mostly Centum

Last week the company CEO departed and the Centum (formerly ICDCI) directors postponed the annual general meeting (AGM) and payment of the year end dividend.

Today’s newspaper has a statement from the Centum Board asserting that:
- The management is firm, the company is on sound financial footing, and the departure of CEO Peter Mwangi had no relation to the delayed dividend and meeting. However, while Tony Wainaina (Mwangi’s predecessor) and Mugo Kibati (EA Cables) may have set a precedent for young CEO’s to enhance corporate performance and value and leave at the top, the timing & coincidence is not good.
- Statement does not address delay of the dividend which would amount to about Kshs. 248 million ($3.3 million). Without doubt, the conpany's investment portfolio is down this year (quoted investments - which should be easily disposable include about Kshs. 1.5 billion of KCB (but down from 2 billion ), Kshs. 422 m of EABL and probably a healthy slice of Safaricom) - but it’s scary that three months after a company declared a dividend, it would find itself unable to fund it.

Toxic broker:
- Centum’s statement adds that its listed holdings are not accessible to any (rogue) stockbroker, and the company had no dealings with Discount Stockbrokers
- A separate from the CMA statement today effectively states that the company is under receivership by KPMG – owing to corporate governance including poor strategies manifested by an unsustainable expansion plan (branches all over the country)
- A bigger scandal than Discount appears to be at the national Social Security Fund (NSSF) whose dealings with Discount are a lesson for fraudsters.

Best Kenyan corporate site
In the wake of hiding from questions on Discount, the Centum statements along with financial results from listed companies (Kengen, EA Cables and KPLC) have appeared in the newspapers before they were posted on the NSE site. And though the NSE won an African Investor award (for 2nd runner up - most innovative African stock exchange) website updates should be a priority matter

Probably the best bank, and perhaps corporate site in Kenya, with the most relevant, timely, updates has to be the Central Bank of Kenya website with their controversial/pro-active governor Professor Njuguna Ndung’u (and his media team) who post several statements, speeches, policy matters a week (read it and judge)

Co-Op IPO: After a stop-go debate the Co-op Bank IPO has been green-lit and will begin in about a week’s time with investors still digesting refunds and possible losses from the previous IPO – Safaricom.
Dates: October 30 - November 13
Share price Kshs. 9.50 ($0.13) each (for 701 million shares)

Related Posts
- Reasons to invest in Co-op IPO (or not)
- The last Centum AGM (February 2008)
- Saying farewell at AGM’s: in style (Barclays) or in shame (Kenya Airways)

7 comments:

The Black Mamba said...

I am made to understand that Mwangi left for greener pastures. Expect an announcement in the coming months.

I can't verify what I was told but we'll find out very soon if indeed he has hit the jackpot.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

Co op IPO timing is very bold. I guess the shareholders can't wait to offload to the market...

Gotchas include:
- Lock-in period. If between 1 & 2 years then am in. else am out.
- if market is on downward trend then whats to say coop will excite depressed investors?
- are foreign investors too broke to participate?

MainaT said...

I think Co-op is going to the market now to augment its capital.
Aside from that my cynical take, brokers are broke (pardoning the pun) so getting some extra 700m shares and offering 60%+ to retailers who will quickly offload on Tuesday after the Monday.

kainvestor said...

Then disount scandal is bigger than any other rogue broker failure. NSSF could have lost (defrauded) over 4.8 billion through DSL.

@mainat; 'broke broker' is a very bad thing for the NSE. they will sell anything to make business.

MainaT said...

Anybody recall Shah Munge?

Anonymous said...

Why are they offering the IPO..what is the rush when all are saying to wait until D & B Chairman? Do they need the money that bad, then this could be a bad sign, shows how cash strapped they are? Does anyone have any info. ? What about the prospectus? Is it out? What is the minimum amount of shares? What about Kenyans in the U.S. can we use our bank accounts here to verify funds or does it have to be a Kenyan bank? Anyone pls with any info on this IPO? except the price and the ipo window. Thank you, watamu wetu!!

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