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Fidelity Bank acquired by SBM of Mauritius
Rank: New-farer Joined: 3/12/2014 Posts: 96
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meanwhile The Board of Directors of SBM Holdings Ltd (SBMH) wishes to inform its shareholders and the public in general that, subject to regulatory approval, it has at its meeting of 21 November 2016 resolved to proceed with the acquisition of Fidelity Commercial Bank (FCB), headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya with a network of 14 branches across the country and a total balance sheet as at June 2016 ofKenya Shillings 12. 9 billion. SBMH will acquire the entire share capital of FCB
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Rank: Elder Joined: 9/15/2006 Posts: 3,905
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Fidelity Bank: First Kenyan bank to be acquired for the princely sum of $1 USD, yes one US dollar. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/30/2016 Posts: 332 Location: Rift Valley
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And the article continues.. Quote:SBM said in a filing with the Mauritian bourse that it would inject 1.45 billion shillings of fresh capital into Fidelity, once the deal gets all the required regulatory approval.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
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Must have been insolvent. Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/23/2008 Posts: 3,017
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KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. "The purpose of bureaucracy is to compensate for incompetence and lack of discipline." James Collins
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
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Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/23/2008 Posts: 3,017
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KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold "The purpose of bureaucracy is to compensate for incompetence and lack of discipline." James Collins
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 11/21/2006 Posts: 1,590
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CBK announced the deal. That is telling...Probably has a list of foreigners who are interested in entering the market and just picked the call to one. I also recall the suspension of new licences sometime back. The two are linked. That berk signing the interest cap will wipe tier 3 and 4s which are now either unattractive or very cheap Sehemu ndio nyumba
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
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Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/23/2008 Posts: 3,017
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KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. "The purpose of bureaucracy is to compensate for incompetence and lack of discipline." James Collins
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 5/7/2014 Posts: 40
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Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/7/2012 Posts: 11,908
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@Obiero should bring the exchange bar version In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins - cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later - H Geneen
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/23/2008 Posts: 3,017
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KenyanEconomist wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
Funny, but the mentioning of the deal price of Usd 1 is what has led me to believe that its not a mere acquisition. When an acquisition takes place, they always say "for an undisclosed amount" especially for private entities. In this instance, there has to be a share swap somewhere in the backroom between the 2 shareholders. "The purpose of bureaucracy is to compensate for incompetence and lack of discipline." James Collins
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Rank: Member Joined: 12/22/2015 Posts: 224 Location: Mombasa, Kenya
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Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KenyanEconomist wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
Funny, but the mentioning of the deal price of Usd 1 is what has led me to believe that its not a mere acquisition. When an acquisition takes place, they always say "for an undisclosed amount" especially for private entities. In this instance, there has to be a share swap somewhere in the backroom between the 2 shareholders. Seriously Guys, to call this a mere acquisition is really pedestrian. Its like saying if u were in the right place at the right time with 2USD u would have outbid the Mauritians and acquired Fidelity bank! Start!
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 5/7/2014 Posts: 40
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Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KenyanEconomist wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
Funny, but the mentioning of the deal price of Usd 1 is what has led me to believe that its not a mere acquisition. When an acquisition takes place, they always say "for an undisclosed amount" especially for private entities. In this instance, there has to be a share swap somewhere in the backroom between the 2 shareholders. Not true, Obi. You cannot have a deal value of $1, and in addition have a share swap. The value of the deal is one thing, and the consideration (how you pay) can then either be cash or stock (or both). But in stating the deal value, you would take both into account. Regarding "for an undisclosed amount", not sure SBM is actually a private institution in Mauritius. disclosure could have been driven by Mauritius regulations.
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 5/7/2014 Posts: 40
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Metch wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KenyanEconomist wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
Funny, but the mentioning of the deal price of Usd 1 is what has led me to believe that its not a mere acquisition. When an acquisition takes place, they always say "for an undisclosed amount" especially for private entities. In this instance, there has to be a share swap somewhere in the backroom between the 2 shareholders. Seriously Guys, to call this a mere acquisition is really pedestrian. Its like saying if u were in the right place at the right time with 2USD u would have outbid the Mauritians and acquired Fidelity bank! Metch, $1 deals are typical if liabilities outweigh assets. That is why SBM is also injecting Kes 1.5bn immediately into Fidelity as the bank is probably in need of a cash infusion/ liquidity...
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Rank: Member Joined: 12/22/2015 Posts: 224 Location: Mombasa, Kenya
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KenyanEconomist wrote:Metch wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KenyanEconomist wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Obi 1 Kanobi wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Must have been insolvent. This is where deep understanding of accounting principles help. This is not an acquisition, its a merger, I can assure you the shareholders of Fidelity will receive equivalent value shares in SBM or whichever entity shareholders of SBM use as their dividend receiving vehicle. I doubt this very much. The main shareholder was happy to give away Fidelity and walk. He hadn't paid salaries in months due to lack of funding and depositors were baying for blood. May be you should not be allowed to post. Fidelity is a bank! do you understand how the prudential guidelines work, a bank will most likely not become insolvent, simply because its liquidity issues will be picked up months before any insolvency. Even Chase could have continued limping for another year had it been allowed. Secondly, which investor in his right mind can give away a company for free let alone a bank that still has a banking license. And still operational. When insolvency kicks on, the business valuation model changes, assets are carried at fair value, meaning the HO of say Fidelity Bank can increase in value 10 fold. The banking license is sold separately, the customer list, contracts, even accumulated tax losses are assets and are sold Ummm, Fidelity is a toxic asset: costs more to keep open and run that it earns. Liquidity issues were known months ago. CBK must have "convinced" Fidelity main shareholder to take a hike...they don't want to close another bank, do they? Fidelity assets are owned by the shareholder, Imperial style: that HO is not the bank's. SBM bought the license...probably most assets are non performing . Liabilities are due, and cannot be paid, the capital injection is needed to keep doors open. I think the shareholder got a great deal: Walk away from this hot mess and never see the inside of a court. Merger my foot LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL !!!!! You do realise that CBK has no powers to enforce half the things you are mentioning above unless they place an institution under receivership? The rest of your post is just speculation, example, I don't think Fidelity's liquidity issues were as well documented as you put here. When you don't have facts, the simplest solution is probably the correct answer. Call it what you want but the owners did not walk away with 1 Usd. They got paid and got paid proper. You are the one speculating, Obi. Article clearly says that the deal value was $1. You are speculating now that it is a merger? If it was a merger, they would have mentioned Exchange/ Swap ratio and not deal value. http://www.cnbc.com/2016...nyas-fidelity-bank.html
Funny, but the mentioning of the deal price of Usd 1 is what has led me to believe that its not a mere acquisition. When an acquisition takes place, they always say "for an undisclosed amount" especially for private entities. In this instance, there has to be a share swap somewhere in the backroom between the 2 shareholders. Seriouslys, to call this a mere acquisition is really pedestrian. Its like saying if u were in the right place at the right time with 2USD u would have outbid the Mauritians and acquired Fidelity bank! Metch, $1 deals are typical if liabilities outweigh assets. That is why SBM is also injecting Kes 1.5bn immediately into Fidelity as the bank is probably in need of a cash infusion/ liquidity... I know 1USD deals are not uncommon. I've done 1ksh deals myself. My question is, had u been there with 2 dollars would they have sold it to you? Start!
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 5/7/2014 Posts: 40
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I know 1USD deals are not uncommon. I've done 1ksh deals myself. My question is, had u been there with 2 dollars would they have sold it to you? [/quote]
My guess: Only if you agree to match the KES 1.5bn capital injection.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 6/23/2011 Posts: 1,740 Location: Nairobi
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This is a normal business transaction when you want to transfer property to another party. For example you want to help you bro who is poor. This safes him from having to.deal with your other real etc
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/23/2008 Posts: 3,017
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KenyanEconomist wrote:I know 1USD deals are not uncommon. I've done 1ksh deals myself. My question is, had u been there with 2 dollars would they have sold it to you?
My guess: Only if you agree to match the KES 1.5bn capital injection. [/quote] Aren't you contradicting yourself here. Why would the shareholders of Fidelity care about capital injection if all they are interested in is to get rid of the bank. "The purpose of bureaucracy is to compensate for incompetence and lack of discipline." James Collins
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