Markets & Finance

Tanzania’s Bank M to cross-list on Dar, Nairobi stock markets

bankM

Bank M Tanzania CEO designate Jacqueline Woiso (right) with Oriental Commercial Bank head of risk Josiah Onsembe during a media briefing. PHOTO | DIANA NGILA

Bank M of Tanzania, set to enter the Kenyan market this month, is seeking to list at the Dar es Salaam Securities Exchange (DSE) by end-year and later cross-list at the Nairobi Securities Exchange.

It will become the first Tanzanian lender to enter the Kenyan market after 73 per cent of its shareholders under the M Holdings Group agreed to buy 51 per cent stake in Oriental Commercial Bank.

“We will definitely be looking at cross listing which is something that several companies have done” said Bank M CEO designate Jacqueline Woiso.

KCB is the only bank to cross-list on the two markets.

Upon acquisition the bank will operate under the name M-Oriental. The bank’s management believes the lender with an eye on local corporates can crack the more competitive Kenyan market despite its relatively small balance sheet.

“The shareholders who are coming to acquire Oriental are coming with much more capital to boost the bank so it can operate smoothly and get the right trust in the market,” said Ms Woiso.

The deal has the nod of the Competition Authority of Kenya and the Central Bank of Kenya gave the green light in May last year.

Last year Oriental Shareholders approved the allotment of 42,281,893 ordinary shares valued at Sh30 each to M Holdings valuing the deal at Sh1.268 billion.

READ: Oriental Bank owners cede control to investor

Ms Woiso declined to comment on the transaction indicating it was still subject to approval but indicating she expected it to be complete month-end.

The bank plans to raise Sh5 billion in the next nine months in two private placements through an initial public offering (IPO) of its shares and a debt issue.

The aggressive capital raising by Bank M is intended to help it open new branches in Tanzania and set up the first mortgage financing company in the country.

Bank M has partnered with World Bank’s investment arm, the International Finance Corporation and Housing Development Finance Corporation of India to set up the mortgage company.

Bank M has operated with five branches since 2011, which are open for 12 hours every day of the week. It plans to open an additional four outlet this year.

Its management seeks to raise Sh1 billion through the two rights issues, with the first targeting high network individuals ongoing and the second scheduled during the third quarter of the year.

The bank aims to raise an additional Sh1.5 billion through the IPO scheduled for between September and December this year.

The lender posted a Sh596 million profit last year which ranked it the fifth most profitable lender in Tanzania.

It outdid subsidiaries of Kenyan banks in Tanzania with the exception of DTB which posted better profits. There are six Kenyan lenders in Tanzania being KCB, Equity, CBA, NIC Bank, DTB and I&M Bank.

It has a deposit base of Sh31.8 billion and a loan book of Sh33.5 billion.

Oriental Commercial Bank is classified as a small lender by the CBK and was formerly Delphis.

The bank recorded a profit drop for two years in a row last year after it posted net earnings of Sh43 million down from Sh72 million in 2014 and Sh140 million a year earlier. It has a deposit base of Sh6.2 billion and a loan book of Sh5.2 billion.