Central Finance Company Explained

Central Finance Company PLC
Type:Public
Industry:Financial services
Founded: in Kandy, Sri Lanka
Founder:Chandra Wijenaike
Hq Location City:Kandy
Hq Location Country:Sri Lanka
Num Locations:103
Num Locations Year:2023
Revenue: LKR24.474 billion
Revenue Year:2023
Operating Income: LKR16.806 billion
Income Year:2023
Net Income: LKR7.559 billion
Net Income Year:2023
Assets: LKR106.728 billion
Assets Year:2023
Equity: LKR61.446 billion
Equity Year:2023
Num Employees: 1,582
Num Employees Year:2023
Subsid:Central Industries PLC
Rating:Fitch

A-(lka)

Footnotes:[1]

Central Finance Company PLC is one of the oldest non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) in Sri Lanka having founded in 1957. The company is listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange in 1969. Brand Finance ranked the company the 28th most valuable brand in Sri Lanka for the year 2021.[2] Central Finance Company was ranked 44th in the LMD 100 for the fiscal year 2019/20 by LMD.[3]

History

Central Finance Company was founded in 1957 in Kandy by Chandra Wijenaike.[4] The company was listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange in 1969. By 1999, the company was headquartered in Kandy and had nine branches and two non-deposit-taking outlets. The company diversified into other areas of business including real estate development and insurance brokering.[5] The company acquired a 90.1 per cent stake in Isuru Leasing, a small-scale finance company based in Kandy in November 2014. This was carried out as part of the plan of consolidating the financial services sector by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.[6]

Perpetual Treasuries, the primary dealer involved in the Central Bank of Sri Lanka bond scandal invested heavily in Central Finance. Perpetual Treasuries entered into the top ten shareholders in 2016.[7]

Operations

Central Finance Company is one of the licensed finance companies, authorised to accept deposits from the public by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.[8] The company's main business activities include leasing, hire purchase financing, deposit mobilization and providing other financial services.[9] The company received an A+ rating from Fitch Ratings in 2019.[10] The company owns a number of subsidiaries including Central Industries PLC and Kandy Private Hospitals (Pvt) Ltd. The company also has invested in Nations Trust Bank (owns a stake of 21.38%), Tea Smallholders Factories PLC (29.30%), and Capital Suisse Asia Ltd (24.58%). However, the Monetary Board of Central Bank has asked both John Keells Holdings and Central Finance Company to reduce their stakes in the Nations Trust Bank to a maximum of 20% at the end of 2021 and 15% at the end of 2022.[11]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Annual Report 2022/23 . cse.lk . Central Finance Company PLC . 11 June 2023.
  2. Web site: Sri Lanka 100 2021 Ranking . brandirectory.com . Brand Finance . 10 October 2021.
  3. Web site: Top 100 Chronology . lmd100.lk . . 10 October 2021.
  4. Web site: Central Finance Co. PLC . . . 10 October 2021.
  5. Book: Abeysekera . Indra . Intellectual Capital Accounting: Practices in a Developing Country . 20 December 2007 . . 978-1-134-07361-0 . 71 . 11 June 2023 . en.
  6. News: Central Finance completes Isuru Leasing amalgamation . 10 October 2021 . . . 7 March 2017.
  7. News: Perpetual Treasuries on buying spree with its billions . 11 June 2023 . . Wijeya Newspapers . 30 October 2016.
  8. Web site: Licensed Finance Companies . cbsl.gov.lk . . 10 October 2021.
  9. Web site: Central Finance Company PLC . . . 10 October 2021.
  10. News: Fitch revises outlook on Central Finance to negative; affirms ratings of 5 finance companies . 10 October 2021 . newstube.lk . 2 July 2019.
  11. News: Regulator notices JKH and Central Finance to reduce their NTB stakes . 10 October 2021 . . . 17 December 2020.