Wednesday, February 19, 2014
A small but growing elite of super-wealthy Kenyans are putting the country top on the continent’s rich list, a new report shows.
A small but growing elite of super-wealthy Kenyans are putting the country top on the continent’s rich list, a new report shows.
The super-rich are dollar millionaires, some of them many times over, and control about half of the country’s wealth.
And
the group is growing. In 2007, there were 6,600 super-rich people;
today there are 8,200. They are projected to grow by 28 per cent to
10,700 by 2017.
Consumer goods maker Bidco’s chief
executive Vimal Shah tops the list of the super-rich with Sh144 billion
($1.7 billion) to his name, making him Kenya’s first dollar billionaire,
according to a survey by London-based New World Wealth group.
He accounts for 36 per cent of the Sh404 billion ($4.7 billion) worth of assets controlled by the 25 richest Kenyans.
This
is the second survey to rank him as Kenya’s richest individual after
Forbes Africa’s 2013 list, which ranked him as Africa’s 18th richest
individual.
PRIMARY SHARE HOLDER
It
was, however, not possible to ascertain how New World Wealth group
picked him out as the principal beneficiary of the company that is owned
by the Shah family.
Mr Andrew Amoils, the senior
analyst at New World Wealth said Mr Shah stood out because he is the
primary stock holder whose control of the wealth can only change in the
event of inheritance or death.
“We only include wealth under primary stock holder. Wealth only passes on inheritance or divorce,” he said.
The
list of the super-rich includes 16 enterprising individuals such as
Equity Bank CEO James Mwangi and chairman Peter Munga, industrialists
Manu Chandaria and Chris Kirubi and Prandeep Paunrhana, who are
classified as centi-millionaires with assets valued at between Sh860
million ($100 million) and Sh86 billion ($1 billion).
The 16 have an average wealth of Sh1.7 billion compared to Sh100,620 ($1,170) for ordinary Kenyans.
Kenya’s
super-rich have made their money from real estate and construction, a
sector that has been booming in the past decade — helped by
mega-infrastructure developments that have opened up new locations for
investment.
New World Wealth has identified 105
Kenyans as ultra-rich individuals who control more than half of the
country’s individually-held wealth.
Rich Kenyans have always held their wealth in secret, forming companies and nominee accounts to hold their stock market wealth.
This
has resulted in deep differences as to who is the country’s richest or
the variation in the ranking of the super rich produced by different
surveys.
“We only include people as centimillionaires if we have a good idea of what they own,” said Mr Amoils.
Last
year, Mr Chandaria was ranked as Kenya’s richest man by Nigerian
publication Ventures Africa with a fortune of $1.65 billion (Sh142
billion). Mr Chandaria, Mr Vimal Shah, and Mr Paunrhana of Athi River
Mining have all built their wealth from businesses founded by their
parents.
Mr Chandaria said he had the option of taking
well-paying jobs after his studies in the US and India in 1951 but opted
to take the risk of working with his father.
The
industrialist who has recently become Kenya’s top most philanthropists
chairs Comcraft Group, a company that produces steel and has a presence
in more than 40 countries.
Founded by his father in
1985, Vimal Shah and younger brother have managed Bidco to become Kenya
and East Africa’s leading consumer goods manufacturer that has over the
years acquired a significant portion of Unilever’s edible oil
businesses.
Mr Paunrhana returned from New York
University in 1984 to manage his father’s small agricultural lime
producing company turning it to a big cement-maker in which he now holds
an 18 per cent stake.
The company, Athi River Mining, is currently worth Sh7.9 billion at the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
DIVERSE INTERESTS
The
Nairobi bourse has proved to be a good grooming ground for Kenya’s
billionaires, having been the main source of wealth for Mr Mwangi and Mr
Munga and Scangroup chief executive Bharat Thakrar, who made billions
with the listing of their companies at the bourse.
Equities
accounted for the largest share of the wealth held by the ultra-rich in
2013. The billionaires put 24.9 per cent of their total wealth in the
bourse, 24.6 per cent in real estate and had another 20.3 per cent in
different business interests.
Last year, the NSE recorded an average rate of return on investment of 19 per cent boosting the wealth of the ultra-rich.
In
2004, Mr Mwangi’s 7.32 per cent stake at Equity Building Society was
valued at Sh900 million, but that multiplied many times upon the
company’s listing at the bourse where the value of his 4.88 per cent
stake has since risen to Sh5.8 billion.
Mr Munga owns
0.42 per cent of the bank he also chairs and is also listed as a major
shareholder in Britam Insurance Company worth Sh5.8 billion.
Mr
Mwangi and Mr Munga are known for turning around the fortunes of Equity
Building Society and shepherding it to become the largest retail bank
in Kenya.
Financial magnate Jimnah Mbaru, who has
tried his hands in many ventures including politics, has made it to the
list of the super-rich for his controlling stake in Dyer and Blair
Investment Bank.
He also holds sizeable stakes in Equity Bank, Britam, TransCentury and Uchumi Supermarket.
Centum
Investment company majority shareholder Chris Kirubi also features on
the list of the dollar millionaires. Mr Kirubi also has interests in
media outlet Capital FM and in real estate, notably the ownership of
International Life House.
Mr Neushad Merali, who chairs
a conglomerate of 15 subsidiaries with interests in sectors like
agriculture, information technology, telecom and finance is also in the
list.
The business has large interests in tyre maker
Sameer, Equatorial Commercial Bank and Sasini Tea. Other asset classes
preferred by the wealthy include fixed income securities and cash.
Additional reporting by James Kariuki
Kenya's wealthiest men in pictures
VIMAL SHAH: Founder and CEO of Bidco.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
BHARAT THAKRAR: Scangroup CEO.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
CHRIS KIRUBI: Centum Investment.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
(HNWIs---High Net Worth Individuals)
|
JAMES MWANGI: Equity Bank CEO.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
JIMNAH MBARU: Dyer and Blair Chairman. Photo/FILE
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
NAUSHAD MERALI: Sameer Africa Chairman.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
PETER MUNGA: Equity Bank Chairman.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
PRADEEP PAUNRANA: Athi River Mining Cement CEO.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
NICHOLAS BIWOTT: KenolKobil Board.
Photo/FILE/NATION MEDIA GROUP |
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