The comments on this thread
Anyway...
KenGen's problem would be politically connected fellows milking it dry. But it hasn't happened yet. Otherwise, as a utility firm, it has a stable income base, stock liquidity to board and disembark any time, and ability to pay out dividends with minimal price volatility and moderate risk. Current DY: 5%.
BBK- Cash rich. Stable corporate structure. Dividend yield at 9%, higher than nearly all NSE firms. You can keep complaining that it lost market to rivals a decade ago or observe what steps it’s taking to grow its market in the near to far future. Then decide whether or not it suits your palate.
KQ- somehow it keeps popping up in every thread, and its own is the most commented. Yet as far as profitability/capital gains/dividend payouts goes, shareholders can only hope things will turn in their favour. In fact nearly all minority shareholders are deep in the red.
"Know what you own, and know why you own it."