Newsletters

Point AI

Powered by AI and perfected by seasoned editors. Every story blends AI speed with human judgment.

Kenya launches historic pipeline IPO, to raise $822 million in capital

Kenya expects to sell 65% of the pipeline to investors
Kenya President, WIlliam Ruto
Subject(s):

Psstโ€ฆ youโ€™re reading Techpoint Digest

Every day, we handpick the biggest stories, skip the noise, and bring you a fun digest you can trust.

EiA Sub Form

In the News:

  • Kenya has launched a public offer to sell 65% of kenya pipeline company.
  • The government is seeking to raise about kenya shillings 106.31 billion from the sale.
  • The offer places a valuation of about kenya shillings 163.56 billion on the company.

Kenya has launched a public offer for the sale of a majority stake in Kenya pipeline company as it seeks to raise about $822 million from the capital market.

The government of Kenya is offering 11,812,644,350 ordinary shares, representing a 65% divestiture in the state owned pipeline operator.

In an information memorandum issued ahead of the offer on Monday, the government said the shares are priced at Kenya shillings 9.00 each. At that price, the transaction implies a capital raise of Kenya shillings 106.31 billion and values the company at about Kenya shillings 163.56 billion.

The offer opens on January 19 and closes on February 19. The offer period spans one month, giving investors across different categories time to participate.

Kenya pipeline company operates the countryโ€™s main petroleum products transportation and storage infrastructure. Its pipeline network supports fuel supply across Kenya and parts of the East African region.

Faida investment bank limited is acting as the lead transaction advisor for the offer.
Legal advisory services are being provided by TripleOKLaw Advocates and G&A Advocates LLP.

How the shares are being allocated

The government has distributed the offer shares across several investor groups to widen participation. Retail investors, institutional investors and regional or east African community investors have each been allocated 20% of the shares.

Oil marketing companies have been allocated 15% of the offer. The allocation reflects the companyโ€™s role in supporting fuel supply and distribution across the country.

The government did not disclose whether any shares would be reserved for strategic investors outside these categories. Applications will be processed strictly within the stated allocation framework.

How the offer price was determined

The information memorandum explained that the offer price was set using an earnings based valuation approach. The government said the offer price was based on the companyโ€™s earnings, rather than its physical assets.

โ€œThe earnings profile reflects the companyโ€™s capacity to generate distributable returns to shareholders,โ€ the memorandum said.

The government explained that the pricing focused on earnings and dividend potential, which aligns with how investors on the Nairobi securities exchange assess infrastructure companies.

Asset based and income based methods were used as cross checks to ensure the valuation remains reasonable for investors assessing future profitability.

The offer forms part of the governmentโ€™s broader plan to raise capital from state assets while widening public participation in the local market.




Follow Techpoint Africa on WhatsApp!

Never miss a beat on tech, startups, and business news from across Africa with the best of journalism.

Follow

Read next