Displaying items by tag: KCB Bank
Savannah Cement prepares to sell assets
02 August 2024Kenya: Savannah Cement will sell assets including its Athi River grinding plant to compensate creditors, following its liquidation after entering administration in 2023, Business Daily has reported. Savannah Cement’s administrator PKF Kenya announced that the closing date for expressions of interest will be 16 August 2024. The company owes creditors US$139m. KCB Bank Kenya and Absa Bank Kenya, as preferential creditors, are owed US$68.5m and US$40.3m respectively, and will have their claims prioritised in the liquidation process. The forced sale value of these assets stands at US$58.6m, suggesting losses for unsecured creditors.
Court prevents bank seizure of Savannah Cement's assets
20 December 2022Kenya: The Supreme Court of Kenya has ordered lenders Absa Bank and KCB Group to not seize Savannah Cement's assets or appoint administrators or receivers for it after the producer defaulted on its debts. The producer's debts include US$2.41m in interest and US$110,000 in penalties. The temporary block will stand until the court issues further directions. Business Daily News has reported that the court has ordered Savannah Cement to pay US$81,200 to Absa Bank by 28 December 2022.
Savannah Cement director Benson Sande Ndete alleged that lenders coerced the company into repaying US$40.6m-worth of debt. The law forbids interest payments greater than the principal sum of a loan.
Ndete said, "The firm is working to complete the funding of its Kitui clinker plant project, which will allow it to get all the funds necessary to clear the debts."
East Africa Portland Cement Company defaults on loan
26 October 2020Kenya: East Africa Portland Cement Company has defaulted on a long-term loan from KCB Bank. The bank has demanded immediate repayment of the full loan, according to the Business Day newspaper. The cement producer’s current liabilities grew by 70% year-on-year to US$126m in the financial year to June 2019. In a report made to parliament Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu said, “This movement was largely due to the transfer of long-term loans to current liabilities on account of default on existing loan covenants.”