A year ago wrote this on the information availed to Ugandan investors by their companies; this year the envy is even more, it makes me sad; that by being the leading country in the region, we may not notice we are being passed in some aspects of investor awareness & rights.
Use of E-Mail: The Stanbic Uganda invitation/AGM notice again arrived by e-mail; now many Kenyan companies have passed by-laws allowing them to send out e-mail notices and annual reports to shareholders, but none has done so far. Maybe, with the eventual passage of the much maligned/controversial communications bill the legal framework is now there to back enable this – but we’ll see; While not every shareholder will have an e-mail account, if 1/4 of 1/3 of some company’s shareholders (Kengen, Co-Op, Safaricom) do, then these companies could potentially saves millions of shillings in postage costs.
Investor Disclosures:
(i) For Stanbic UG, rules of voting are clearly stated – shareholders are to endorse new directors and that 1/3 of directors will retire at each meeting.
(ii) for directors who are up for election, their mini-CV’s are printed out for all to peruse i.e. their ages, year of appointment, educational qualifications, directorships in other companies, and committee seats they. In Kenya, Company Chairmen just mumble through, if at all, fully expecting elections to be a foregone conclusion. Refreshingly here, the directors up for election at Stanbic Uganda (Hannington Karuhanga, Kitili Mbathi, and Samuel Sejjakka) are all younger than 50 years. In Kenya, opportunities for younger leaders & directors are the exception rather than the rule. But at Stanbic Uganda - the Chairman and Deputy Chairman have their tenure is capped at two terms of 5 years only.
(iii) Remuneration of directors is declared. Again in Kenya money amounts paid to directors are rarely mentioned, but in Uganda they are spelt out for shareholders to approve – here the Company (non executive) Chairman gets an annual retainer of US$7,500 while a director gets US$5,500
Language used; several companies (most recently) KCB have amended their company article to allow for electronic communication with clients; but they merely replace one of gibberish with another one, without bothering to explain what the jargon means. Here; Stanbic explain allows video-conferencing or tele-conferencing to be used at board meetings
Proxy detail proxy forms contain a lot more details including the items to be voted for with shareholder able to vote for or abstain on votes. They also call for shareholders to provide contact details (name, e-mail – what an easy way for a company registrar to build up a working database to manage is subsequent years)
Shareholders or their proxies (who can be more than one)are entitles to attend, speak, and vote, and the endorsement /presence of a proxy does not disqualify a shareholder from attending; this enables a shareholder to bring his wife/wives or children for them to learn about the process!
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Investor guides: There are many things to learn from other countries in the region on investor rights and information despite Kenya being the leader. We are innovative, Uganda is about to unveil a CDSC system that Kenyan investors have had for three years, but which rogue stockbroker have besmirched. It would not be surprising if the Ugandan version may be sorted out ahead of time, closing loopholes that will be used to protect shareholders, and by educating them on how the system works.
All the regional exchanges – Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and soon Rwanda (where KCB, Kenya’s largest bank in Kenya will be the first company to have its shares to be (cross) listed & trading) all have the same information; but my NSE seems stale, like all the regulations were put up years ago and forgotten. Usualy we just check for the latest share trades, bond trades and quarterly financial announcements.
e.g. Faced with a budget deficit, Kenya has lowered the minimum amounts to invest in bonds to Kshs. 50,000 ($625). The Central Bank of Kenya which issues these bonds has put up some investor information basics, but nothing from the NSE who trade in these bonds. In Uganda, there is an advisory page for investor guides for bonds and shares, for any new investor to read, download for free.
Also in Kenya , tribe is the unacknowledged elephant in the room; one we pretend to not be influenced by, but which governs many aspects of our lives. Kenyans are required to communicate official in English (almost all government documents), and to a lesser extent in Kiswahili. But there are rural folk who may not understand the national or official language, but may wish to learn about shares and bond Uganda has investor awareness booklets in vernacular languages – including a Luo investor guide (PDF)(for the Northern Region) available from the Uganda Securities Exchange. And that, properly disseminated, may be worth much more than a small island.
8 comments:
The Migingo Island thing has made me to start hating anything to do with Uganda and it is refreshing to read this.
Back to the real deal, Mr Uhuru Kenyatta’s announced several proposals to streamline NSE including the appointment of Micah Cheserem as the chairman of CMA but i don't think upto now there has been any tangible change or reform as far as fishy business of NSE is concern. Am not sure if Central Depository and Settlement Corporation has reconstituted their board of governors, which was a key directive of the finance minister. Now it seems even Finance Minister cannot help the Kenyan investors....
The CMA still seems to be as toothless as it was before so i guess you are right, the other regional stocks trading markets might be inferior now but if we are not careful they will zoom past us in the very near future
banks, it comes through that Uganda is working to be as transparent and investor friendly as possible while the cartels in the NSE just want retail investor resources without extending rights and privileges...
I don't think Cheserem will change anything...Lots and lots of vested interests at the NSE. Untill this thing is demutualized we are in for some bad bad times
Kachwanya: It’s a beautiful country, and I wonder why they are poking Kenya. The land around Mount Elgon would be more prized and they have ½ the lake which they have used to do many projects.
3Nspeaks: it’s nice what they are doing. Hope to catch the Stanbic AGM next year to see for myself.
Kenyans need to watch Hotel Rwanda & see the patterns.
A little bit of extra historical digging will reveal that Rwanda actually had about 3 Genocides. What differed with each case was the scale of violence and murders.
Back to Kenya: Every 5 years we have hate speech, demonization of certain tribes, then tribal/ethnic violence.
Perpetrators walk scot free in each instance (usually rewarded with plump Gov. jobs!). Media refuses to take responsibility for encouraging violence. The International community wags fingers ("you bad bad boy" style) and discusses over and over the merits and demerits of the word "genocide" and its applicability to the situation vs other historical/hypothetical situations.
People are told to Forgive and forget (for 5 years) - and the cycle continues. The scale of violence intensifying with each cycle of bloodshed as the war mongers grow bolder, colder, greedier and more vicious.
Similar pattern in pre-1990's Rwanda.
2007/8 PEV is a warning to all peace loving Kenyans. Please do whatever you can to push for real reforms, ethnic tolerance and peaceful co-existence - especially with your upcountry folks who may not be exposed to other communities.
Anon: Does that mean the only way Kenya can go Rwanda's path... 'clean' leadership is thru a cleansing?
Scary...
1. 1Million murders of innocent civillians and children is NOT cleansing.
2. The murders did not achieve anything that could not have been achieved peacefully.
3. Who said Rwandan Gov is clean? Do you follow their politics? Do they have a free media?
4. Do you know any Rwandans? Ask them whether it was worth it.
5. Kenyans should specifically reject people who think the way you seem to be thinking.
I think Anon is saying: A wise person learns from other people's mistakes; a fool from his own mistakes.
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