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Co-operative Bank of Kenya to form a Holding Company

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Co-op Bank Head Offices in Nairobi
Co-op Bank of Kenya is majority-owned by co-operative societies,
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Co-operative Bank of Kenya, initially set up to be a bank for Co-operative Societies, is moving to a holding company structure, with the listed entity to become Co-op Bank Group PLC (NOHC) and a new subsidiary, Co-op Bank Kenya Limited, taking over the banking business. The plan is subject to approvals from the Central Bank of Kenya, Capital Markets Authority, and shareholders at the upcoming AGM.

This is a structural shift rather than a cosmetic change. The intent is to separate the regulated banking unit from the broader group, giving the parent more flexibility on capital allocation and strategy while keeping the bank ring-fenced under CBK oversight.

The logic is straightforward. Banking capital is tightly regulated and limits how aggressively a bank can expand into adjacent businesses. Moving to a NOHC structure allows Co-op to pursue growth in non-banking verticals — insurance, asset management, fintech — without stretching the bank’s balance sheet. It also creates optionality around capital raising at the group level and improves how capital is deployed across subsidiaries.

There is also a defensive angle. With increasing regulatory pressure and evolving capital requirements, isolating the banking entity reduces contagion risk and protects the core franchise.

The trade-off is execution. The transition will require regulatory alignment, internal restructuring, and could introduce short-term friction. Benefits tend to play out over time, not immediately.

Co-operative Bank is Changing its Corporate Structure

Co-op is positioning ahead of the curve. This is about building a group structure that can scale beyond lending, not fixing a near-term problem. If executed cleanly, it should improve capital efficiency and open up new growth channels, but the market will likely wait for evidence of that before repricing the story.

The Co-operative Bank of Kenya Limited is currently incorporated in Kenya under the Company Act and is also licensed to do the business of banking under the Banking Act.

The Bank was initially registered under the Co-operative Societies Act at the point of founding in 1965.

This status was retained up to and until June 27th 2008 when the Bank’s Special General Meeting resolved to incorporate under the Companies Act with a view to complying with the requirements for listing on the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE).

The Bank went public and was listed on December 22nd 2008.

Shares previously held by the 3,805 Co-operative Societies and unions were ring-fenced under Coop Holdings Co-operative Society Limited which became the strategic investor in the Bank with a 64.56% stake.

The Bank runs five subsidiary companies, namely;

-Kingdom Securities Limited: This is a stockbroking firm with the bank holding a controlling 60% stake.

-Co-op Trust Investment Services Limited: This is the fund management subsidiary wholly-owned by the bank.

-Co-op Bancassurance Intermediary Limited (CBI): This is the corporate finance, financial advisory and capacity-building subsidiary wholly-owned by the bank.

-Kingdom Bank Limited: A niche MSME Bank providing financial services.

– Co-operative Bank of South Sudan: (Owned 51% by the Co-operative Bank of Kenya and 49% by the Government of South Sudan) providing financial services in South Sudan through 5 Branches.

The Directors of Co-op Bank have recommended to the Members at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting, the payment of a final dividend for the year 2025 of KSh 1.50 per ordinary share held; an interim dividend of KSh 1.00 per ordinary share held paid in December 2025 to make a total payment of KSh 2.50 per share (a 67% growth over the dividend of KSh 1.50 per share paid in the year 2024.

The Co-operative Bank AGM will be held in the year as per the separate notice yet to be issued, to also cover the date for the dividend payment.

ALSO READ: Co-Operative Bank Q3 Net Profit Up 12.3% to KSh 21.56B

Written by
JACKSON OKOTH -

Jackson Okoth writes for Business Today. He can be reached on email at editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

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