KCB Bank Kenya Limited explained

KCB Bank Kenya Limited
Type:Subsidiary of KCB Group
Industry:Banking
Num Locations:207 Branches, 399 ATMs, 12,724 Agents, 8023 merchant outlets
Num Locations Year:2020
Rating:B2 negative (2020)(Moodys Investor Service)
Location:Kencom House, Moi Avenue, Nairobi, Kenya and KCB Plaza, Upperhill, Nairobi, Kenya
Key People:Lawrence Njiru
Chairman
Annastacia Kimtai
Chief Executive Officer[1]
  • Eng. Stanley Kamau - Alternate to CS Treasury
  • Tom Ipomai
  • Simeon Rono
  • Njeri Onyango
  • Caroline Rabar Okonga
  • Joseph Muigai
  • Anne Eriksson
  • Eunice Nyala
  • Samuel makome
  • Bonnie Okumu
Products:Loans, credit cards, savings, investments, mortgages, Insurance
Revenue:

Aftertax: US$166.3 million (KES:18.3 billion) (2020)

Assets:US$6.9 Billion+ (KES:758.3 billion) (2020)[2]
Num Employees:4901
Parent:KCB Group

KCB Bank Kenya Limited is a financial services provider headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya. It is licensed as a commercial bank, by the Central Bank of Kenya, the national banking regulator.[3] The bank has also been running Agency banking model.[4]

Overview

As of December 2015, KCB Bank Kenya was the largest commercial bank in Kenya with assets of more than US$3.681 billion (KES:366 billion) and US$2.776 billion (KES:276 billion) in customer deposits.[5] In August 2021, the bank recorded a customer deposit growth to USD$5.47 billion (KES:601.7 billion) and had an asset base value of USD$7.09 billion (KES:7.09 billion). During that time, it had 201 branches, 397 ATM machines, and registered 15,273 Agents and Merchant outlets spread across Kenya.

History

KCB Bank Kenya roots trace back to July 1896 when its parent company, KCB Group, was formed as a branch of the National Bank of India in Mombasa. In 1958, Grindlays Bank merged with the National Bank of India to form the National and Grindlays Bank. Upon independence, the Government of Kenya acquired 60% shareholding in National & Grindlays Bank. In 1970, the Government took full control of the bank and renamed it to Kenya Commercial Bank Group.[6]

KCB Bank Kenya, as it is now known, was incorporated in 2015 as a result of the corporate restructure of Kenya Commercial Bank Group (KCB Group). Prior to 2015, KCB Group was both a licensed bank and a holding company for its subsidiaries. This was in compliance with the Kenya Finance Act No.57 of 2012. KCB Group Limited announced, in April 2015, its intention to incorporate a new wholly owned subsidiary, KCB Bank Kenya Limited, to which it would transfer its Kenyan banking business, assets and liabilities. The re-organisation converted KCB Group Limited into a non-trading holding company that owns both banking and non-banking subsidiary companies.

In 2016, KCB Group PLC was registered as a non-operating holding company to manage and oversee all KCB regional units in Kenya, Tanzania, South Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and Ethiopia. [7] In 2019, KCB Group PLC acquired National Bank of Kenya.[8]

Ownership

KCB Bank Kenya Limited is a 100 percent subsidiary of KCB Group. Shares of KCB Group are listed on the Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE), under the symbol (KCB). The group's stock is also cross listed on the Uganda Securities Exchange (USE), the Rwanda Stock Exchange (RSE) and the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE).[9]

KCB Group Plc

See main article: KCB Group Limited. KCB Bank Kenya Limited is a member of the KCB Group of companies. KCB Group companies include:[10] [11]

Branch network

As of August 2021, KCB Group had a total of 354 branches, 1,103 ATM machines, and 15,273 bank agents and merchant outlets throughout all of its subsidiaries. It has the largest number of own-branded ATMs in Kenya. At that time, the Group had 26.8 million customers marking it the largest in the region.[12]

Officers and management

The chairman of the KCB Group board of directors is FCS Dr. Joseph Kinyua,[13] and the chief executive officer and managing director of the group is Paul Russo.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . KCB Group picks insider first CEO of Kenya unit . 13 April 2023 . Patrick Alushula . 13 April 2023 . Nairobi, Kenya.
  2. Web site: KCB-Group-Plc-2020-Integrated-Report-and-Annual-Financial-Statements_compressed . 2 September 2021.
  3. Web site: Directory of Licenced Commercial Banks, Mortgage Finance Institutions And Authorised Non-Operating Bank Holding Companies: Commercial Banks. CBK. 19 April 2016. Central Bank of Kenya (CBK). 19 April 2016.
  4. Web site: Agent Banking. ke.kcbbankgroup.com. en-gb. 2017-08-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20170223042319/https://ke.kcbbankgroup.com/home/ways-of-banking/48-agent-banking. 23 February 2017. dead.
  5. Web site: Kenya: Local and Foreign Suitors Jostle to Buy Chase Bank. Achuka. Vincent. 16 April 2016. Nairobi. 19 April 2016. Daily Nation via AllAfrica.com.
  6. Web site: Ratification of Incorporation of Wholly Owned Subsidiary And Proposal For The Transfer of Banking Business, Assets And Liabilities To That Subsidiary. KCBGL. 22 April 2015. KCB Group Limited (KCBGL). Nairobi. 20 April 2016.
  7. Web site: Update 2016: KCB Group Limited. KCB Group Limited (KCBGL). Nairobi.
  8. News: Kenya's KCB Group injects 5 bln shillings into NBK after acquisition . 9 January 2020 . Reuters . 20 January 2020.
  9. Web site: Cross-listed stocks could cut growth of bourses. Anyanzwa. James. 30 January 2016. Nairobi. 20 April 2016. The EastAfrican.
  10. Web site: Kenya KCB Shareholders Approve New Structural Changes . 15 May 2015 . . Margaret Wahito . 22 February 2024 . Nairobi, Kenya.
  11. Web site: . 16 May 2015 . Shareholders approve formation of KCB Group Limited . Jackson Okoth . 22 February 2024 . Nairobi, Kenya.
  12. Web site: KCB H1 Investor Presentation . 7 September 2021.
  13. Web site: KCB Group Limited.
  14. Web site: KCBGL . Our Leadership . 20 April 2016 . KCB Group Limited (KCBGL) . Nairobi.