Business
First Community Bank Sold Due To Missing Billion, Report Says
First Community Bank (FCB) has disclosed a shortfall of more than Sh1 billion in core capital, revealing the extent of the crisis that pushed its owners to sell a majority stake to a Mogadishu-based lender in a rescue deal.
The small lender’s latest books of account show that the core capital dropped from Sh1.65 billion in September to negative Sh331 million in December, sending it into a breach of the capital strength ratios required by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK).
The unexplained fall in core capital within three months pushed its owners to resort to selling a 62.5 percent stake to Mogadishu’s Premier Bank Limited (Somalia) for Sh2.8 billion.
Premier Bank was offered 10.8 million new shares to inject in Sh2.8 billion to boost the financial health of FCB, which as of December required more than Sh1 billion to comply with CBK rules. The deal was expected to have been completed by last week.
FCB sunk into a net loss of Sh224.57 million in the year ended December, reversing a net profit of Sh416.6 million a year earlier.
FCB, which last year suffered panic withdrawals, saw customer deposits drop by 36 percent to Sh13.74 billion from Sh21.48 billion a year earlier.
More than half (Sh4.43 billion) of the Sh7.74 billion drop in deposits during the year came within the last three months of the year, coinciding with the period it suffered a small bank run.
The panic withdrawals occurred in October last year on what the institution blamed on a system hitch that hit its operations.
Customers who lined up to draw their cash claimed the bank was only permitting withdrawals of less than Sh10,000 a day and had placed limits on cheque transactions.
The bank’s problems became public after it said it was experiencing system disruptions that affected most of its services, creating a backlog.
This triggered panic withdrawals raising fears that it was headed for a full-blown bank run.
FCB’s core capital to total risk-weighted assets ratio stood at zero percent compared to the required minimum of 10.5 percent.
FCB commenced operations on June 1, 2008 as the first fully-fledged Shariah-compliant bank in Kenya but has been in breach of capital ratios for the past five years.
The sale of the controlling stake in FCB to the Premier Bank is the latest rescue deal in the banking sector.
Kenya Insights allows guest blogging, if you want to be published on Kenya’s most authoritative and accurate blog, have an expose, news TIPS, story angles, human interest stories, drop us an email on [email protected] or via Telegram
-
Grapevine1 day agoAlleged Male Lover Claims His Life Is in Danger, Leaks Screenshots and Private Videos Linking SportPesa CEO Ronald Karauri
-
Lifestyle4 days agoThe General’s Fall: From Barracks To Bankruptcy As Illness Ravages Karangi’s Memory And Empire
-
Americas1 week agoEpstein Files: Bill Clinton and George Bush Accused Of Raping A Boy In A Yacht Of ‘Ritualistic Sacrifice’
-
Business2 weeks agoCooking Fuel Firm Koko Collapses After Govt Blocks Sh23bn Carbon Deal
-
Business1 week agoABSA BANK IN CRISIS: How Internal Rot and Client Betrayals Have Exposed Kenya’s Banking Giant
-
Investigations6 days agoEpstein Files: Sultan bin Sulayem Bragged on His Closeness to President Uhuru Then His Firm DP World Controversially Won Port Construction in Kenya, Tanzania
-
Business1 week agoKRA Can Now Tax Unexplained Bank Deposits
-
News1 week agoAUDIT EXPOSES INEQUALITY IN STAREHE SCHOOLS: PARENTS BLED DRY AS FEES HIT Sh300,000 AGAINST Sh67,244 CAP
