Commercial Bank of Africa | |
Type: | Private Subsidiary |
Location: | Upper Hill, Nairobi, Kenya |
Key People: | Desterio Oyatsi (Chairman), Isaac Awuondo (Managing Director) |
Industry: | Banking |
Fate: | Merged to NIC Bank |
Products: | Loans, credit cards, savings, investments, mortgages |
Revenue: | Aftertax:US$36 million (KES:3,592 billion) (2015) |
Assets: | US$2.166 billion (KES:215.6 billion) (2015) |
Num Employees: | 1,104 |
Num Employees Year: | 2015 |
Parent: | Commercial Bank of Africa Group |
Commercial Bank of Africa (CBA) was a financial services provider headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya, the largest economy in the East African Community. CBA was licensed by the Central Bank of Kenya, the central bank and national banking regulator.[1]
, the bank was one of the largest commercial banks in Kenya with assets of approximately US$2.166 billion (KES:215.6 billion), with shareholders' equity of approximately US$217.83 million (KES:21.68 billion).[2] It was the largest privately owned commercial bank in Kenya.
The bank was founded in 1962 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Soon, branches were opened in Nairobi & Mombasa, Kenya and in Kampala, Uganda. When Tanzania nationalised private banks in 1967, the bank moved its headquarters to Nairobi. Following political changes in Uganda in 1971, the bank sold its assets in that country.
At the beginning, CBA was owned by a consortium of financial institutions known as Société Financière pour les Pays d'Outre-Mer (SFOM), based in Switzerland. Original members of the consortium included Banque Nationale de Paris, Bank Bruxelles Lambert, Commerzbank, and Bank of America. In 1980, Bank of America acquired 84% shareholding, effectively buying out all the other SFOM partners. Sixteen per cent shareholding in CBA remained in the hands of Kenyan investors. During the 1980s Bank of America divested from the bank, putting 100% shareholding in CBA in the hands of Kenyan nationals.[3]
In December 2018, Commercial Bank of Africa Group (CBA Group) announced that it would be merging with NIC Group creating the Kenya's third-biggest bank. The Transaction was approved by the Kenyan regulators and shareholders in April 2019.[4] [5] On 27 September 2019, the Central Bank of Kenya approved the merger, effective 1 October 2019. Through the merger, the combined group, NCBA Group, was to consolidate their banking business. This led to the transfer of business to one entity renamed NCBA Bank Kenya Limited.[6]
Commercial Bank of Africa's ownership is under a shareholding structure. The Kenyatta family controls 24.91 percent of CBA through an investment vehicle called Enke Investments Limited.[7] The table below illustrates the shareholding in the company stock, as of December 2017.[8]
1 | Enke Investments Limited | 24.91 |
2 | Ropat Nominees Limited | 22.50 |
3 | Livingstone Registrars Limited | 19.90 |
4 | Yana Investments Limited | 11.14 |
5 | Ropat Trust Company Limited | 5.37 |
6 | Other Institutions & Individual | 16.18 |
Total | 100.00 | |
Commercial Bank of Africa (Kenya) is a member of the CBA Group of companies. These include:
The chairman of the board of directors is Desterio Oyatsi, one of the non-executive directors. Isaac Awoundo serves as the managing director.[2]
Other executives include: