From reading a 1968 book Who Controls Industry in Kenya - a report of a working party comes some history of the Kenyan banking sector. It mentions that in 1968;
- Kenya had 10 banks and all but 3 banks were foreign bank off shoots.
- They had given loans of loans of £70m, deposits of £83m – a book ratio of 83% - compared to US or US which had rations of between 33% to 50%
- Depositors received 3-4% interest on deposits, and paid interest of 7-8% on loans [today deposit rates are about the same but loan borrowers pay 12 - 25%]
There were two tiers of banks then;
The Big 3 Banks which 3 held 80% of deposits and 85% of bank assets amounting to K£111 million in 1966 were
- Barclays Bank – had assets of UK£1.4 billion and had 83 branches, and Kenyan directors included Michael Blundell, S. Waruhiu and J. Opembe. Today it has 111 branches
- Nation & Grindlays (now KCB) had assets of UK £401 million and after tax profit of £1.2 million. It had 50 branches, and 16 directors who were all British. Today KCB has 165 outlets in Kenya
_ Standard Bank (now Standard Chartered) with assets of UK £892 million and a net profit of £3.1 million. It had 41 offices, 22 directors all British.
Next 7 Banks
- Bank of Baroda
- Ottoman bank
- Bank of India
- African Banking Corporation (subsidiary of standard bank)
- Commercial bank of Africa
- Algemene bank (General Bank of Netherlands)
- Habib bank
Other institutions
- Cooperative Bank of Kenya (established in 1967)
- National Bank of Kenya (established in 1968)
Finance houses
- Big 3 (licensed as banks)
- United Dominions Corporation
- Credit finance company (now CFCStanbic)
Others registered as ordinary companies
- Transaction finance corporation (subsidiary of cooper motor corporation CMC)
- Industrial promotion services (Now IPS, was est. in 1963 by the Aga Khan)
- Africindo industrial development (powerful Asian industrialists seeking credit facilities for exports o India with training for Kenyans there)
Development corporations
The big 3 commercial banks also owned development corporations to undertake longer-term investments than normal banks accepted; these were Barleys Overseas Development [assets of B£9m and 88 projects in east Africa], National & Grindalys Finance and Development [B£3m] and Standard Bank Development Corporation
Building societies
As at 1964 they had loaned k£3m more than they had in deposits; this was after sudden withdrawal in 1959 of £4m savings by European and Asian depositors
- Savings & loan society
- East African building society
- First permanent (east Africa)
- Kenya building society (subsidiary of commonwealth development corporation CDC)
- housing finance company of Kenya (now Housing Finance)
2 comments:
Very interesting piece of history bankelele
interesting- like the Bedfor lorry picture- whatever happened to them
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