Tag: CAK

  • KRA And CAK Scuffle Over Pricing Of Cheap Liquor

    KRA And CAK Scuffle Over Pricing Of Cheap Liquor

    Competition Authority Of Kenya has rubbished off KRA orders prohibiting local distillers to sell alcoholic spirits in 250-millilitre containers below Sh150.

    According to KRA, the retailers selling spirits at or below Sh150 are tax cheats and illicit brewers who flood the market with deadly drinks. KRA stated that production expenses and duty cost don’t permit alcohol to be sold at that price. A statement that has forced CAK to seek constitutional clarity over the KRA order, pointing out that KRA could have breached sections of the antitrust law.

    “We are aware of it (price-setting order) and we have written to KRA to set up a meeting so as to appreciate where they are coming from,” CAK Director-General Wangómbe Kariuki told the Business Daily in an interview.

    KRA orders also warned distillers who sell products below Sh150 that their products would be impounded or/and withdraw their operating licenses. This whacks a large generation of consumers of upsurging cheaper spirits like Moonwalker, Jambo Extra, Dallas, meakins just to name but a few…

    Based on our review, products in the market with a selling price below Sh150 per bottle of 250ml at 40 per cent v/v are considered non-compliant in tax based on the minimum cost structure. We request companies to adjust the prices in the current and subsequent tax returns to reflect the correct price benchmark for the alcoholic beverage sector for tax purposes.” KRA says in a letter addressed to distillers.

    In the letter, KRA issued a seven-day notice for compliance with the minimum price order.

    “KRA intends to commence mop-up of all products sold below the benchmark prices and sanctions imposed on the affected excise manufactures. The mop-up will start after seven days from the date of this letter,” added KRA in reference to the order sent in late October.

    Kenya has the highest rates of tax on alcohol as compared to other African States. Here, Spirits are taxed at Sh221.24 per litre or Sh55.31 for the 250-millilitre product.

    Tusker lager has a recommended retail price of Sh180 per bottle and Sh55.31 goes to the taxman directly as excise duty. Tax on beer has increased from Sh32.50 per bottle in 2014.

    Beer and Spirit heads in Kenya have been thrown once again under the bus. High taxes have pushed almost bankrupt Kenyans to cheap alcohol majority who are illicit drinks.

    KRA Commissioner for Domestic Taxes Elizabeth Meyo said the move to set the minimum price would boost tax revenues and help the taxman to clamp down tax cheats.

    “As part of compliance monitoring, KRA monitors the prices in the market and any persons putting products in the market that fall below the minimum cost structure are normally targeted for compliance checks. We derive the minimum cost structure from the analysis of the cost of inputs required for the production of a unit of alcohol,” said Ms Meyo.

    However, the competition watchdog, CAK, has protested KRA’s orders setting a binding minimum price of Sh150 and the threat to impound products selling below the price.

    Restrictive trade practice which directly or indirectly fixes purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions in Kenya, or a part of Kenya, are prohibited, unless they are exempt in accordance with the provisions of Section D of this Part,” reads Section 21(1((a) of the law. Part D allows manufacturers to recommend non-binding retail prices.

    CAK in 2016 fined British multinational SABMiller Sh2.4 million for engaging in restrictive trade practices by setting minimum prices for its products.

    In 2016, Crown Beverages, British SABMiller owned company that sells Redds, Castle, Nile Special, Keringet mineral water, Peroni and Miller was fined Sh2.4 million by CAK for setting the minimum prices for its products.

    While KRA focuses more on imposing taxes on Kenyan products, Kenyans who have nothing in their pockets will still go for as cheap as Ksh20 illicit drinks from Uganda and Tanzania flooded on porous Kenyan markets. We are a country that is under the leadership that is focused on taxing more than creating a conduce business environment more fillings of tax returns.

  • CAK Orders Coca-Cola To Retain All Almasi Beverages Ltd Employees

    CAK Orders Coca-Cola To Retain All Almasi Beverages Ltd Employees

    Competition Authority of Kenya and Centum have instructed Coca-Cola Sabco East Africa (CCBA) to retain all 1739 permanent employees that the now merged firm Almasi Beverages limited had.

    While certifying the acquisition of ABL, CAK set conditions to not only protect 99 percent of the ABL workforce but also Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

    The merged entity shall for a three (3) year period following completion of the proposed transaction retain 1,749 employees of the total 1,760 permanent employees,” CAK declared.

    “The merged entity shall reserve the lower deck, or not less than 20 percent of the total storage space of the coolers lent to SMEs for products of competitors except the brands of the Coca-Cola Company’s three (3) largest global non-alcoholic ready-to-drink competitors.” CAK added.

    In the acquisition deal set to be complete by early next year, Centum will sell its entire 53.9 percent stake in Almasi and 27.6 percent of issued shares in Nairobi Bottlers Limited (NBL) for Sh19.5 billion.

    In June this year, Centum had stated that they will forfeit all its shares in Almasi to raise funds to offset part of Sh7.5 billion defaulted loans.

    CCBA will now operate the current Almasi bottling plants in Nyeri, Eldoret, Nairobi, Molo and Kisumu for at least three years after the acquisition.

    The Almasi deal is part of  Coca- Cola’s feats to increase its customer base in the local non-alcoholic drinks market. Currently, the drink giant has a 70percent marker dominance.

    Recent cases and corporate lawsuits against the drink giants have been threatening its  existence. The recent one being that of Funyula residents against Coca-Cola and their distributor.

     

    A recent invetigation by Vice News and James Roberts also exposed the mess that Coca-Cola has done with its single use plastics. An expose` that saw the giant firm change from single-use plastics to returnable glass bottles in all of its Dasani plants in Tanzania.

     

  • Narendra Raval, NCC’s Tycoon Ignores Rai’s Petition And Buys Sh5 Billion ARM Cement Plant

    Narendra Raval, NCC’s Tycoon Ignores Rai’s Petition And Buys Sh5 Billion ARM Cement Plant

    The world’s richest black man Aliko Dangote wanted to Buy the loss making Athi River Mining cement plan but, according to his foundation, ADF, people in Jubilee government demanded unmangeable bribes that saw him invest in Ethiopia.

    A worker in ARM cement Plant Photo|BD

    The very same embattled ARM has been bought by Devki’s National Cement Company a move that has seen billionaire Narendra Raval ‘Guru’  expand his kingdom in Cement making industry to second-largest manufacturer ahead of tomorrow’s court proceedings.

    Kabras Sugar mill owner Jaswat Rai and former ARM owner Pradeep Paunrana had petitioned the court to stop the sale. However, PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) administarors have closed the deal despite a pending appeal in a case filed on July 11 this year that is set to be heard tomorrow, Wednesday 16th October.

    Yeasterday, Mr Raval said that NCC had received authorization of the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) on condition that they retains 95 per cent of the ARM’s current 1,100 employees. He stated that they decided to keep all the workers.

    “We are happy to inform you today that we have been able to complete the ARM acquisition and cleared all the transaction cost amounting to Sh5 billion to the PwC,” said Mr Raval.

    According to PwC’s Muniu Thoithi,  National Cement Company had taken over all assets and businesses of ARM after paying Sh1 billion and safeguarded a payment of Sh4 billion in the next two months to settle administration expenses and distribute to creditors.

    “Securing a suitable investor with the ability to make the requisite CapEx investments and inject the much-needed working capital to boost production to optimal and sustainable levels was a top priority for us given ARM’s dire financial situation and the poor state of the plant,” Muniu Thoithi said.

    PwC also sold off Tanzanian subsidiary following the clearance by the court to sell ARM Kenya business to a Chinese company, Huaxin Cement. HCC bought ARM subsidiary Maweni Limestone Limited, in Tanzania for Sh11.9 billion immediately Justice Mary Kasango lifted the stay orders.

    ARM is set to make NCC, which manufactures the Simba Cement brand, the second-biggest cement maker in Kenya.

    According to CAK data, Bamburi Cement is the market leader in the sub-sector with a market share of 33 percent.

    Jaswant Rai the billinaire owner of Western Kenya Sugar, Sukari Industries and Olepito Sugar Company who also acquired cooking oil and soap manufacturing Menengai Oil company has also been making an expansion into cement manufacturing. Rai has established small cement plant in Awasi, Kisumu.

    Earlier this year, NCC merged with Cemtech in West Pokot with significant limestone and clay deposits that are key components in Cement production.

    NCC is also constructing  a second 1.8 million metric tonnes p.a. clinker line in Kajiado that is set to be commissioned by 2020.

    Raval is also setting up another 0.75 million metric tonnes cement plant to be built in Kilifi while the 0.88 million metric tonnes is still underway to be commissioned in mid-2020.

    “These two plants will cost Sh3 billion each while the Kenyan plant of ARM Cement may increase their capacity by 0.4 million metric tonnes,” Apex Capital said in a note to investors.

  • Airtel-Telkom Merger Flopping Before It Starts

    Airtel-Telkom Merger Flopping Before It Starts

    Airtel and Telkom Kenya planned merger plans are seriously dangling as EACC launches investigations into the merger details affecting the completion deadline agreed between the two companies.

    Airtel and Telkom, that are without doubt Kenya’s second and third-largest telecommunications firms respectively, had set tomorrow, September 27, as the final date by which they were to have negotiated and signed the merger agreement that they first announced in February.

    The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, however, instructed regulators to suspend the merger pending the conclusion of investigations into how the transaction was conceptualized, and how the Treasury ceded further ownership of Telkom Kenya to Orange, the French multinational which later sold its stake to private equity fund Helios. The Treasury has a 40 percent stake in Telkom Kenya, initially a fully State-owned corporation, while Helios controls 60 percent shareholding.

    “There is no chance it (the merger) will happen by Friday and there is no guarantee that Airtel will agree to a new signing date especially with the uncertainty of the ongoing investigations,” said a source familiar with the ongoing transaction.

    The merger was the pride of the two telcos and a lifeline by increasing their subscriber base, reducing their average operating costs and increasing their economies of scale. In turn, these were expected to increase the competitive edge of the merged entity against Safaricom.

    Sources involved in the negotiations have stated that if the deadline is missed, this could possibly lead Airtel to walk away from the deal, weakening the two operators’ chances of challenging Safaricom’s dominance of the market on the one hand and making it difficult for them to leverage their respective strengths in the merged entity on the other.

    “A board meeting has been called next week where the issue of the merger will be discussed with a view of negotiating new timelines with Airtel,” said another source with knowledge of the matter.

    EACC last month instructed the communications regulator and the Competition Authority to suspend their approval of the merger to allow investigators to review a 2012 restructuring that whittled down the government’s stake in Telkom Kenya. The investigation has been going on without clarity on when it will be completed.

    Safaricom has also been accused of using CAK to cripple the plans to have the merger successful and happen as soon as the initial plans had been originally drafted and approved moths ago.

    Acting Safaricom Chief Executive Officer Michael Joseph stated through a statement to the media that the company is not opposed to the merger between Airtel and Telkom Kenya as it has been alleged before but raised three concerns among them the Ksh.1.3 billion debt the two companies owe the Telco giant.

    “While we are supportive of industry changes that seek to deliver greater choice and value to consumers, we have raised valid concerns that we hope the regulator will consider and address as part of the approval process. The first is the debt owed by the two operators, amounting to KES 1,297,448,468.88, incurred for the provision of various services including interconnection, co-location and fibre services. This debt is due and payable, based on the agreement to provide services entered into with the two entities as distinct operators,” reads the statement.

    Telkom Kenya, which has been making losses for the past ten years, has been surviving on asset sales, making the merger urgent for its survival. Airtel Kenya, on the other hand, is keen to grow its revenues by leaning on the economies of scale expected from the merger. EACC has been questioning both former and current officials on how the government shareholding was diluted during a restructuring in 2012.

    Telkom was privatised in 2009 when France Telecom bought a 51 percent stake from the government, which held on to the other 49 percent. Between 2009 and 2016, France Telecom invested $900 million (Sh90 billion) into the business while the governed put in $100 million (Sh10 billion).

    In 2015, France Telecom sold its stake to Helios, a Private Equity firm that agreed to put money into the business on condition that the regulator would review mobile termination rates (MTR), a fee charged on calls and texts completed on rivals’ networks. Helios was also promised regulatory interventions on inter-operability and national roaming services. In exchange, the government, got a 10 per cent stake that raised its shareholding to 40 per cent under the Helios deal and also got interest in 40 percent of shareholder loans advanced by France Telecom to the company.

    Helios has reportedly invested $50 million (Sh5 billion) that went into network rolling, rebranding, T-Kash (mobile money service) and leveraging debt. The government on its part gave Telkom a 4G license valued at Sh2.5 billion, a payment in kind for its commensurate stake. Despite the investments, Telkom Kenya is still deep in the red, a factor it attributes to the high costs of running the mobile telephone business.

    Management consultancy firm McKinsey, which studied the viability of the business last year, concluded that its mobile business unit could neither keep up with the required investments in technological advancement nor carry the costs and compete with global players with economies of scale and with operations in more than one country. The study recommended a merger with Airtel and regulatory interventions to allow the firm to compete.

    The report said that even with a significant inflow of shareholder funds, the mobile business structure was untenable. Telkom was making about Sh3 million per base station but incurring twice as much in costs. Both Airtel and Telkom are running 1,600 base stations each. Safaricom, with 5,000 bases stations, serves 31.8 million subscribers and makes 20 times Telkom’s revenue, which brings down its average operating costs.

    A merger between Telkom and Airtel would result in a combined 17.3 million subscribers and 3,200 base stations, but which would be cut down to about 2,500 once the two companies bring down those in close proximity to each.

    The merged entity would also have an edge with economies of scale in procurement, sales, and distribution. For instance, while Safaricom normally leverages on Vodafone and Airtel on its mother company while making capital expenditures, Telkom has to go to the market alone, missing out on quantity discounts.

    What happens to be taken as a threat to Safaricom, the merged firm between Airtel and Telkom is probably going to be a superior network with a bandwidth of 77.5 for its approximated 17. 3 million subscribers while Safaricom, Kenya’s leading firm, will have 57.5 percent spectrum for its 31.8 million subscribers.

    The merged entity will take up the mobile subscribers, fiber and part of Telkom’s enterprise business that is not linked to government and security services, base stations and the distribution network. Telkom Kenya could shrink to about a tenth of its size, and be left with managing services for government and security organs.

    It will also be allowed to keep real estate whose valuation is estimated at about Sh10 billion. However, sources say that if the merger is not concluded in good time, Telkom’s thinning real estate portfolio is unlikely to sustain the company over the long term given its accumulated losses and mounting debt. A move to destabilize the merger has been blamed fully on Safaricom And CAK.

  • How Email Hacks Are A Threat To Businesses Globally

    How Email Hacks Are A Threat To Businesses Globally

    Have you ever been hacked? If not, then invest in cybersecurity a lot because email hacking or what is dubbed as Business email compromise (BEC) attacks in the tech world have overtaken both ransomware and data breaches.

    According to Insuarence Giant AIG, BEC has been recorded as the leading main reason why companies filed a cyber-insurance claim in the EMEA region last year alone.

    Statistics published by the firm in July revealed that BEC-related insurance filings accounted for 23 percent of all cyber-insurance claims received by the company in 2018.

    Of those surveyed, almost half (47%) have been hit by a ransomware attack as a result of an employee opening a suspicious email and 31 percent fell victim to a business email compromise (BEC) attack. However, the majority (75%) of organizations have been hit by a brand impersonation attack.

    • One trillion phishing emails sent every year
    • Hackers target Office 365 business accounts
    • US presidential candidates aren’t using basic email security

    According to Barracuda research, finance departments are the most targeted by email-borne cyber-attacks according to 57 percent of respondents. Though 32 percent said that customer support was their most targeted department which could signal the start of a new trend among would-be attackers.

    According to the Communications Authority of Kenya, local organizations were hit by 11.2 million cyber threats. This records a 10.1 percent increase in the number of incidences in the first quarter of 2019 when compared to the previous quarter. CAK’s incident response centre detected growing cases of malware, web application attacks, system misconfiguration, and mostly online abuse.

    Incidents related to ransomware came in second place and accounted for 18 percent of all cyber-insurance claims in the EMEA region. Data breaches caused by hackers and data breaches caused by employee negligence tied for third place with both at 14 percent.

    According to AIG, the recent rise in cyber-insurance claims from BEC attacks was caused by poor security measures at victim companies including the use of poor passwords for email accounts, not using multi-factor authentication and the lack of employee training about email-based attacks.

    Although BEC attacks currently hold the top spot, AIG expects that ransomware may regain its top spot soon. As ransomware became more targeted, the number of ransomware-related cyber-insurance claims dropped last year. This is because those launching ransomware attacks have begun to target businesses and government organizations as opposed to consumers. The number of incidents may be lower but the attackers behind them are receiving larger payouts.

    As enterprise and government victims learn that they can offset losses by filing a cyber-insurance claim, AIG believes that the number of claims will go up despite the smaller number of ransomware infections recently. This trend has already become widespread globally and a recent investigation discovered that insurance companies are now advising victims to pay the ransom demand and then file a cyber-insurance claim afterward.

    AIG also found that GDPR has affected the number of cyber-insurance claims filed as businesses can no longer hide data breaches and have to disclose them under the regulation. Now companies are publicly revealing their data breaches and filing a cyber-insurance claim to help cover some of their costs and any fines levied against them under GDPR.

    A fifth of all the cyber-insurance claims AIG received in 2018 included a public GDPR notification. However, the firm found that these claims included costs that were significantly higher than those did not include a GDPR data breach notification.

    Here is a source highlighted and review of the best antivirus software of 2019.

     

  • Airtel Kenya Gets First New SIM Numbers From Communications Authority of Kenya

    Airtel Kenya Gets First New SIM Numbers From Communications Authority of Kenya

    Airtel Kenya has won over their main competitor telco giant Safaricom after they were given the first prefix numbers by Communications Authority of Kenya. Airtel customer will now have new mobile numbers bearing the new 01 prefixes.

    This comes months after CA rolled out new numbers and Airtel Kenya was offered three million of the new numbers. Bharti Airtel Limited an Indian global telecommunications services company based in Delhi, India the owners of Airtel Kenya will be the first telco to roll out new prefix number series of 0100, 0101 and 0102 to their customers.

    Airtel’s main competitor Safaricom had applied for the same but was allocated two million lines with the prefixes 0110 and 0111. The move by the CA was necessitated by the exhaustion of existing prefixes including 0722, 0723, 0733 and 0734.

    Image result for Airtel Kenya CEO Prasanta Das Sarma

    Airtel Kenya CEO Prasanta Das Sarma urged subscribers to take advantage and be the first ones to have access to the new numbers by registering with Airtel.

    “We are glad to be the first telco to roll out the new prefix numbers and we urge Kenyans looking for new connections to visit any of our SIM selling outlets or Airtel shops and get their new numbers,” Mr. Sarma said.