FEATURED STORY

Kenya retains two banks to source for Sh100b syndicated loan

Share
National Treasury Building.
Share

The government has retained Trade and Development Bank (TDB) and Standard Bank Group Ltd to arrange syndicated loans of Ksh 102 billion ($1 billion) by April this year.

“We have that mandate alongside Standard Bank,” Admassu Tadesse, the president and chief executive of TDB, a regional bank formerly known as PTA Bank, told Bloomberg on Thursday by phone. He did not provide further details on how then will seek to proceed with the venture.

Quoting a person knowlegeable with the matter, Bloomberg reports there will be three tranches — a $250 million 10-year debt and two seven-year loans of $410 million and 300 million euros ($340 million),. The proceeds will be used to refinance loans, and fund some projects in the national budget, the person said, asking not to be identified because they are not authorized to comment on the matter.

The transaction features an accordion option to raise an additional $250 million that will be used to help finance projects under the 2018-19 budget, the person told Bloomberg.

The National Treasury planned to raise about Ksh 282 billion ($2.8 billion) of external debt to help plug the 2018-19 budget shortfall. That’s even as more than Ksh 200 billion ($2 billion) of debt is maturing this year, and Ksh 129 billion ($1.28 billion) in 2020, according to government documents.

On Wednesday, Reuters reported that the government is talking to banks separately to arrange a Ksh 250 billion ($2.5 billion) Eurobond-offering, probably during the first quarter. Treasury later confirmed the same.

Last month, National Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge had told the news agency that the government was in talks with lenders to roll over a Ksh 76.6 billion ($760 million) syndicated loan this fiscal year and lengthen its maturity in order to make debt repayments more manageable.

The loan, which was initially for two years, was also arranged by TDB bank.

The new borrowing comes amid concern over Kenya’s borrowing appetite, which has raised alarm both locally and in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

READ: EABL HALF YEAR PROFIT JUMPS 33% TO KSH 6.6 BILLION

However, President Uhuru Kenyatta insists he would continue borrowing to enhance development through initiatives such as infrastructure development but not for consumption or personal gain.

Written by
BT Reporter -

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

1 Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PAST ARTICLES AND INSIGHTS

Related Articles
A customer in Nairobi tops up on clean fuel at a KOKO Fuel ATM 1024x576
BUSINESSFEATURED STORYTECHNOLOGY

KOKO Fuel Vendors, Users Stranded as Government Pulls Plug

KOKO Fuel Vendors are staring at losses, empty shelves and huge cost...

Kenya Power Engineers on site
BUSINESSSTOCKS

Kenya Power Half Year Net Earnings Up 4.3% to KSh 10.4 Billion

Kenya Power’s half year 2025/26 financial results show its profit after tax...

Mastercard © iStock
BUSINESSFEATURED STORYMARKETSNEWSSMART BUSINESS

MasterCard to Introduce New AI Tools for Kenyan Banks, Merchants

MasterCard , a US-based global payments firm, is set to launch a...

BUSINESSFEATURED STORYNEWS

KenGen to Overhaul its Board of Directors as New Law Takes Effect

KenGen (Kenya Electricity Generating Company) is set to hold an Extraordinary General...