Home West Africa Nigerian Access Acquires ‘National Bank of Kenya’

Nigerian Access Acquires ‘National Bank of Kenya’

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Nigerian Access Acquires ‘National Bank of Kenya’

(3 Minutes read)

Access Bank Plc, a Nigerian top lender, will pay KCB Group about Sh13.2 billion to acquire the National Bank of Kenya (NBK), even as the lender announced an eight per cent decline in its net profit on higher operating costs. KCB Group chief executive Paul Russo said the lender has signed a binding agreement with Access in a deal that will be completed in the next six to nine months.

The deal will see Access pay multiples of 1.25 times the book value of NBK, which stood at Sh10.57 billion as of the end of December 2023. This values the deal at about Sh13.2 billion even though the actual figure will arrive on the day of signing the sale deal. This transaction is a great opportunity to maximise value for the company’s shareholders while strengthening the competitive position of the Group. The past four years have been defining for NBK as a KCB Group subsidiary and this step marks the opening of new opportunities, Russo said further.

The NBK sale announcement came as KCB Group’s full-year net profit dropped by 8.3 per cent to Sh37.46 billion from Sh40.83 billion. Access Bank will pay 1.25 times the net assets of NBK on the date of the deal’s conclusion. KCB operating expenses in the review jumped 60.9 per cent to Sh116.79 billion from Sh72.57 billion, leading to a drop in net profit despite operating income having grown 27.2 percent to Sh165.24 billion. Net interest income grew 23.9 per cent to Sh107.3 billion while non-interest income increased by 33.9 percent to Sh57.9 billion. The group had to do a “clean up” that included dealing with legacy issues such as non-performing loans and that required taking “tough calls for the future”.

The rise in operating expenses came when KCB raised its provisioning for loan defaults 2.5 times to Sh33.64 billion driven by downgraded loans in Kenya and additional provisions on foreign currency facilities as the Kenya shilling shed a quarter of its value against the dollar. Staff costs rose 26 per cent to Sh38.14 billion to reflect the consolidation of DRC Congo’s Trust Merchant Bank (TMB) into KCB operations after the mid-December 2022 acquisition of an 85 percent stake for Sh25.1 billion. The rise in operating expenses was also driven by a 76.8 per cent rise in depreciation charge to Sh7.06 billion and a 61 per cent growth in other operating costs to Sh34.6 billion.

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KCB Group shareholders will for the first time in 21 years miss out on dividends with the lender saying the decision to not recommend any dividend was necessary to preserve capital, especially for KCB Bank Kenya.