What is in the best and long-term interest of teachers and ordinary members of the gigantic Mwalimu National Sacco following the recent decision by the society’s annual general meeting to liquidate Spire Bank?

The idea of killing the bank and tearing up its banking license does not appeal to me. Let me explain the offers and options on the table. Even the ordinary teacher and member of Mwalimu Sacco not familiar with nuances of complex mergers and acquisition transactions can join the conversation.

The first option on the table is an asset purchase transaction. A prominent local bank has offered to take over Spire Bank by buying certain ‘admitted assets’ and ‘admitted liabilities’ of the bank. Spire Bank’s admitted liabilities exceed the admitted assets, Mwalimu Sacco will pay this big local buyer billions of shillings.

The second option is to dispose of the bank through the going concern route. Offers are still coming in from parties willing to buy the bank and keep it running. 

The list includes a Hong Kong Stock Exchange-listed Chinese technology company with a market cap of $1.4 billion (Sh 140 billion) licensed last year by the Central Bank of Kenya to purchase a local microfinance bank. 

Why would a big Chinese technology company be interested in buying such a weak bank? I can only hazard a guess. My hunch is that they must be targeting to be a clearing and settlement member because they already have a deposit-taking license.

They want to deploy their fintech capacity to play in the national payments space and roll out the much-touted second-generation fintech services. I don’t know. 

The latest conditional offer is from a group of local tycoons representing Murang’a old money who have also tabled an offer to purchase the license.

 In the interest of the ordinary teacher and member of Mwalimu National Sacco, let Spire Bank’s banking license is sold to a private party on a going concern basis.

I think the interest of the ordinary teacher will best be served by any option that retains the bank as a going concern where the teachers retain residual equity of, say, 20 percent and wait to recoup the money they put in this bad investment.

The unfortunate predicament the ordinary teacher and member of Mwalimu Sacco find himself can be summarized as follows:

You spent almost KSh5 billion to buy a bank, and in five years, the bank has cumulatively lost another KSh 4 billion. They are asking you to pay more billions to get the Spire Bank off your back. Manifestly unfair.

As the Central Bank governor, your primary objective is protecting public deposits. Technically, it is prudent and perfectly legal. Why would CBK even countenance a proposal that, on the face of it, looks so manifestly unfair to the ordinary teacher and member of Mwalimu Sacco?

Therefore, the asset purchase deal on the table will make sense to you because it allows you to cart away customer deposits and associated loans made from the weak bank into a large local bank. 

After all, your primary objective is to ensure that the deposits are protected and the loans lent out are collected. This is the playbook the regulator followed in the case of Imperial Bank and Dubai Bank. But in many cases, the banking regulator has adopted the going concern route.

The transactions of Fidelity Bank, Chase Bank, Jamii Bora, and National Bank of Kenya were all structured on a going concern basis. My proposal, therefore, is the following. In the interest of the ordinary teacher and member of Mwalimu National Sacco, let Spire Bank’s banking license be sold to a private party on a going concern basis. And I am not the only one with this view. Last year (2021), Mwalimu Sacco appointed NCBA’s investment banking affiliate, NCBA Capital, as an independent transaction advisor to guide the process of sorting out the Spire Bank conundrum.

 The adviser’s verdict was that, based on their analysis, Mwalimu Sacco needed to incur KSh l.9 billion to consummate the proposed asset purchase transaction with the large local bank. 

The adviser pointed out that if teachers sell the bank as a going concern, they stand a chance of benefiting from a deferred consideration. 

I don’t know why Mwalimu Sacco has chosen to ignore the wisdom of their independent transaction adviser.

We have had terrible experiences with the liquidation of banks. Whenever we tried to resolve a troubled bank’s problems by moving loans and deposits to the defunct Deposits Protection Fund, most underlying collaterals were either lost or disposed of in murky circumstances. 

You have to confront protracted court cases from both the creditors and debtors. The average time for liquidating a bank in this country is more than 20 years. 

The teachers should not be made to lose everything.

By Jaindi Kisero, former Nation Media Group Managing Editor for Business and Economic Affairs


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