Kenyan banks have slowly been expanding across the East African region,
with the Central Bank of Kenya confirming that ten of the country’s
biggest banks have subsidiaries operating in East African Community
partner states and South Sudan. Tom Jackson takes a look at ten of the
richest and most prominent bankers making money from the expansion of
the sector.
James Mwangi
CEO
and Managing Director of Equity Bank, Mwangi made $2 million dollars
when he sold off some of his shares in the company in November last
year. He has sold shares totalling $8 million in the last three years,
and has an estimated wealth of $8 million. He retains a 4.65 percent in
the bank, as the largest individual
shareholder. Last month he was named Ernst &
Young World Entrepreneur of the Year for 2012, as a result of his having
turned around what was originally a moribund microfinance company and
turning it into East Africa’s largest financial services provider, which
now represents millions of customers in the region. The more than seven
million Equity Bank accounts represent over half of all bank accounts
in Kenya.
Gideon Muriuki
Co-operative
Bank CEO Muriuki, through cash collected from the sale of shares and
the value of shares he retains, is worth around $11.3 million. Muriuki
has worked his way up the banking system, gaining 22 years experience
between Barclays, Standard Chartered and Co-operative. A Graduate of
Mathematics and a Fellow of the Kenya Institute of Bankers, he joined
Co-operative in 1996 as Senior Corporate Manager, rising to Managing
Director in 2001. He has restructured the operations of the bank,
turning it around from facing closure in 2001 to becoming the fourth
biggest in the country.
Jimnah Mbaru
With
a wealth estimated at $5 million, Mbaru is the foremost investment
banker in the East African region. He currently operates as the Chairman
of Dyer and Blair Investment Bank and as director of the Nairobi
Securities Exchange, having been chairman until 2001. He has led some of
the greatest capital market deals such as the landmark $110 million
KenGen IPO 2006, the $60 million Celtel 2005 corporate bond and the 1996
EADB Bond, the first ever corporate bond in the region.
Peter Munga
Munga
founded Equity Building Society Ltd, the precursor of Equity Bank, and
now serves as its chairman. He is listed amongst the richest men in
Kenya. He is also the chairman of, amongst others, Pioneer International
College, Kenya Genetic Resource Centre and Freshco International Ltd.
He is also a Director of British American Investments Company (Kenya)
Ltd. He is a retired civil servant, industrialist and educationist.
Titus Muya
Muya
is the current non-Executive Chairman of Family Bank, having been
founding Chairman and CEO for the first twenty-three years of Family
Finance Building before it converted to a full commercial bank in 2007.
His exact wealth is unknown but substantial, with his interests ranging
from insurance, real estate and property development to commercial
farming. Before entering the world of business, he worked as a senior
government officer in the Ministry of Home Affairs and Tourism.
Sarit S. Raja Shah
The
founder of I&M Bank, which has an estimated asset base in excess of
$937 million and shareholder’s equity of approximately $169 million,
Shah is well respected in the business community and earned $1.6 million
in dividends in one year alone. In 2002 he was bestowed the honour of a
Moran of the Order of the Burning Spear by the former President of
Kenya, Daniel Arap Moi. He sits on the Board of several companies.
Martin Oduor-Otieno
CEO
of KCB Bank, Oduor-Otieno holds a number of degrees and was appointed
to the KCB board in 2005, becoming CEO in 2007. He is also chairman of
the Kenya Bankers Association. KCB’s net profit rose 36.7 percent in the
first quarter of this year, making it poised to become most profitable
lender. Oduor-Otieno acquired shares to the value of Sh12 million
($150,000) last year.
Richard Etemesi
Etemesi
is the CEO of Standard Chartered, as well as the current Chairman of
the Kenya Bankers Association. Appointed to the board of Standard
Chartered in 2004, becoming CEO in 2006, he has previously held senior
management positions with the bank in Zambia and Uganda. The nation’s
fourth biggest lender by market value, the bank is set to see profit
growth accelerate this year as it adds more branches, faster than the
8.6 percent it recorded last year.
Dhanu Hansraj Chandaria
Chandaria
is the principle founder of Fina Bank and an eminent entrepreneur with
over 50 years experience in business. He also own Kenpoly, the leading
households plastics company in East Africa, and serves as Fina Bank
Chairman. Fina is a medium-sized financial services provider, offering
loans to individuals and organisations. It also has arms in Uganda and
Rwanda. The asset valuation of Fina Bank (Kenya) is estimated to be
approximately $171 million.
Duncan Ndegwa
The first
African governor of the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), Ndegwa also served
as the first Kenyan African Head of the Civil Service. His exact net
worth is not known, but is sure to run into the millions of dollars. He
recently published his memoirs.
Source: Ventures Africa.
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