KCB to offer Islamic banking in all its branches

A KCB banking hall. The lender plans to offer Islamic banking products through its entire branch network. FILE

What you need to know:

  • The lender will initially roll out Islamic banking services through seven branch centers, beginning from next month.
  • KCB already offers Islamic banking services in Tanzania.

Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB), the country's largest lender by assets, plans to offer Islamic banking products through its entire branch network, accelerating the expansion of sharia-compliant banking in Kenya.

The move comes after Kenya's Capital Market Authority proposed a separate regulatory framework for Islamic finance, part of a broader strategy designed to boost the country's capital markets.

KCB has received all necessary approvals to launch Islamic banking across its 182 branches in the country, chief executive Joshua Oigara said in a statement. "In the long term, the product will promote development in the marginalised areas of our country," Oigara said.

The lender will initially roll out Islamic banking services through seven branch centers, beginning from next month. KCB joins Standard Chartered in offering Islamic banking services in Kenya, after the British lender launched its "Saadiq" brand in March.

Islamic finance, which follows religious principles such as bans on interest payments, accounts for roughly 2 per cent of total banking business in Kenya, where Muslims make up about 15 per cent of the population of 40 million.

There are currently two full-fledged Islamic banks in Kenya - Gulf African Bank and First Community Bank (FCB) - as well as Islamic banking services at several conventional lenders.

KCB, which operates across east Africa from Burundi to South Sudan, already offers Islamic banking services in Tanzania. Islamic finance is also being developed by several other sub-Saharan countries in Africa such as Nigeria and Djibouti.

In June, Kenya's finance minister said the government would consider issuing Islamic bonds, or sukuk, after a successful debut $2 billion Eurobond.

-Reuters-

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