Tag: Directline Assurance

  • Ruto-Linked Amaco Overtakes Directline to Dominate Kenya’s Matatu Insurance Market

    Ruto-Linked Amaco Overtakes Directline to Dominate Kenya’s Matatu Insurance Market

    Africa Merchant Assurance Company (Amaco), a firm with significant ties to President William Ruto’s family, has emerged as Kenya’s largest public service vehicle insurer, dethroning media mogul Samuel Kamau Macharia’s Directline Assurance from a position it has held for years.

    The dramatic shift in Kenya’s multi-billion shilling PSV insurance market saw Amaco’s market share surge to 54.71 percent by March 2025, up from 37.51 percent in December, according to data from the Insurance Regulatory Authority. Meanwhile, Directline’s dominance has crumbled, with its market share falling from 47.97 percent to 35.67 percent over the same period.

    This represents the first time Directline has surrendered its leadership position in the lucrative matatu insurance sector, marking a significant victory for President Ruto’s business interests. The President’s family holds a substantial stake in Amaco through Yegen Farms Limited, where First Lady Rachel Ruto and daughter Charlene Ruto are listed as shareholders, owning 190,000 shares or 15.83 percent of the company as of October 2024.

    The family’s investment in Amaco has grown substantially, with their current shareholding nearly four times the 50,000 shares they held in July 2022. Additionally, Charles Tela Alusala, an accountant who manages the family’s business affairs, holds 130,000 shares representing 10.83 percent of the company.

    President Ruto’s close associate Silas Kibet Simwato, who chairs the Digital Health Agency, also has significant interests in the insurer, directly owning 40,600 shares while his family controls an additional 240,000 shares through two companies, Vomorono Limited and Joubert & Borman Ltd.

    The meteoric rise of Amaco has been reflected in its financial performance, with quarterly premiums jumping 98.9 percent to reach Sh755.61 million by March 2025, compared to Sh379.91 million in the same quarter the previous year. Conversely, Directline has experienced a sharp decline, with its commercial PSV premiums dropping 39.8 percent to Sh492.64 million from Sh818.12 million.

    Industry analysts attribute Directline’s market loss to ongoing shareholder disputes that have plagued the company and created uncertainty among policyholders. The situation reached a crisis point in March 2024 when Macharia announced that all workers were fired and insurance policies were invalid, prompting regulatory intervention and court action to force him to retract the statements.

    The PSV insurance market shake-up has also been influenced by the near-collapse of Invesco Assurance, another major player that slipped into statutory management in 2024, effectively barring it from underwriting new policies. Invesco had previously held 10.79 percent of the market before its downfall.

    A new competitor has also emerged in Definite Assurance Company Limited, owned by Quiver Lounge & Grill’s Peter Mbugua and Sportpesa’s Ronald Karauri. Licensed in December 2024, Definite has already captured 2.35 percent of the market, becoming the fourth-largest matatu insurer after GA Insurance.

    The political undertones of this business rivalry cannot be ignored. Ruto and Macharia have historically found themselves on opposite sides of Kenya’s political divide, with the media mogul consistently backing opposition leader Raila Odinga in presidential contests, including the 2022 election where Odinga unsuccessfully challenged Ruto.

    This market transformation underscores the challenges facing Kenya’s motor vehicle insurance sector, which the IRA describes as problematic at the underwriting level. The PSV insurance segment, exclusively covering vehicles like matatus, represents a crucial component of the country’s transport ecosystem, making control of this market particularly significant for both business and political influence.

    As Amaco consolidates its newfound dominance and Directline grapples with internal turmoil, the landscape of Kenya’s PSV insurance market appears to have permanently shifted, reflecting broader changes in the country’s business and political dynamics under President Ruto’s administration.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Ruto-Linked Amaco Wins Billions in Matatu Insurance Cover, Cutting SK Macharia’s Dominance

    Ruto-Linked Amaco Wins Billions in Matatu Insurance Cover, Cutting SK Macharia’s Dominance

    A dramatic shift is reshaping Kenya’s lucrative matatu insurance market, with Africa Merchant Assurance Company (Amaco) – an insurer with ties to President William Ruto’s family – capturing billions of shillings in business at the expense of media mogul SK Macharia’s Directline Assurance.

    Insurance Regulatory Authority data reveals that Amaco has more than doubled its market share in public service vehicle insurance within just one year, jumping from 14.95 percent to 37.51 percent of the Sh5.29 billion matatu insurance market by December 2024.

    This aggressive expansion has come directly at the cost of Directline Assurance, which has seen its long-held dominance erode dramatically.

    The company’s market share plummeted from 61.56 percent to 47.97 percent over the same period – marking the first time Directline has fallen below 50 percent market share since regulators began tracking PSV insurance as a separate category.

    The numbers tell a stark story of market redistribution.

    Amaco gained Sh1.15 billion in PSV premiums, reaching Sh1.98 billion – a staggering 139.7 percent increase.

    Meanwhile, Directline hemorrhaged Sh860 million in business, with its PSV premiums falling 25.4 percent to Sh2.54 billion.

    Political undertones

    The business battle carries significant political undertones, given the historical rivalry between President Ruto and SK Macharia.

    The media mogul consistently backed opposition leader Raila Odinga in successive presidential campaigns, including the 2022 election where Odinga unsuccessfully challenged Ruto for the presidency.

    Amaco’s ownership structure reveals deep connections to the first family.

    Business Registration Services records show President Ruto’s family holds 190,000 shares (15.83 percent) through Yegen Farms Limited, where First Lady Rachel Ruto and daughter Charlene Ruto are listed as shareholders.

    This represents a nearly four-fold increase from their 50,000 shares in July 2022.

    The president’s close associates also maintain significant stakes.

    Charles Tela Alusala, who manages the family’s business affairs, owns 130,000 shares (10.83 percent). Dr. Ruto’s friend Silas Kibet Simwato, who chairs the Digital Health Agency, controls shares worth 23.33 percent through direct ownership and family companies.

    Directline’s troubles

    SK Macharia.
    SK Macharia.

    Industry analysts attribute Directline’s market losses to internal turmoil that reached a crescendo in 2024.

    The company became embroiled in shareholder disputes, with SK Macharia claiming unauthorized alterations to the share registry through forged documents had diluted his ownership stake.

    The conflict escalated when Macharia ran public advertisements declaring all Directline insurance policies “invalid” due to what he termed “illegal” shareholding changes.

    This unprecedented move rattled policyholders and drew regulatory intervention, with the Insurance Regulatory Authority successfully obtaining court orders to stop the campaign.

    The dispute intensified when Macharia withdrew Sh400 million from the company amid the boardroom battles, prompting regulatory action in October 2024 seeking reversal of the withdrawal.

    Amaco may have also benefited from the collapse of Invesco Assurance, another PSV insurer that entered statutory management in 2024 after defaulting on claims payments. Invesco previously held 8.15 percent of the PSV market, worth Sh138.5 million in premiums.

    The two dominant players now control 85.5 percent of Kenya’s PSV insurance market, with smaller competitors including First Assurance (9.45 percent), GA Insurance (2.62 percent), and others sharing the remainder.

    Beyond PSV insurance, Amaco has expanded aggressively across motor insurance segments. Its commercial vehicle premiums (excluding PSVs) jumped 2.7 times to Sh657.4 million, while private motor cover premiums rose 29 percent to Sh515.4 million.

    The transformation of this critical insurance sector reflects broader shifts in Kenya’s business landscape, where political connections increasingly influence market dynamics in strategic industries.

    As matatu insurance remains essential for the country’s public transport system, the concentration of market power between these two rivals bears watching for both economic and political implications.

    The battle for matatu insurance supremacy appears far from over, with billions of shillings in annual premiums at stake and the added dimension of Kenya’s complex political rivalries driving the competition.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Boardroom Blowout: Sh500M Shareholder Feud Threatens Kenya’s Newest PSV Insurer Definite Assurance

    Boardroom Blowout: Sh500M Shareholder Feud Threatens Kenya’s Newest PSV Insurer Definite Assurance

    A fierce boardroom and shareholder battle is rocking Definite Assurance Company Limited, Kenya’s newest insurance firm targeting the lucrative public service vehicle (PSV) sector, barely two months after it received its operating licence from the Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA) on December 11, 2024.

    The escalating conflict, pitting prominent businessmen Ronald Karauri and Peter Mbugua against each other, threatens to destabilize the fledgling insurer and expose the murky dealings behind its inception.

    At the heart of the dispute is Peter Mbugua, the Quiver Lounge & Grill owner, whose former allies in the company—including SportPesa CEO and Kasarani MP Ronald Karauri—are pushing for his exit. The fallout has spiraled into a high-stakes valuation war, with Mbugua demanding Sh500 million for his 22 percent stake, a figure his partners dismiss as outrageous, offering him Sh195 million instead—a sum they claim he had previously agreed to accept.

    The rift began brewing in early November 2024, when delays in securing the IRA licence left Mbugua disillusioned. Citing the prolonged uncertainty, he sought to cash out his initial Sh175 million investment, which included Sh75 million for setup costs and Sh100 million toward the firm’s capital.

    At the time, he requested an additional Sh20 million as a premium, notifying IRA Commissioner Godfrey Kiptum of his intent to withdraw on November 13. Karauri, holding a 10 percent stake and having injected Sh500 million into the firm, initially agreed to buy Mbugua’s shares, a move that would have elevated his ownership to 32 percent.

    But the deal unraveled when the IRA licence was finally granted in December. Emboldened by the firm’s newfound regulatory approval, Mbugua reversed course, hiking his asking price to Sh500 million.

    “How does he expect the value of my shares to be the same before and after the licence?” Mbugua said, “It’s like agreeing to sell a Range Rover without an engine, tyres, and gearbox for Sh1 million, then the buyer disappears for a month, resurfaces when I’ve installed everything, and still wants to pay the same amount.”

    Mbugua accuses Karauri and other shareholders, including businessman Kushian Muchiri—who holds a 30 percent stake—of sidelining him and running the company without his input. “I put in Sh175 million as seed capital, but I’ve been kept in the dark about operations,” he lamented, pointing fingers at Karauri as the mastermind behind his exclusion.

    Muchiri, however, paints a different picture, asserting that Mbugua voluntarily resigned and signed off on the sale of his shares for Sh195 million.

    “He resigned, signed shareholder and board resolutions, and share transfer forms,” Muchiri said. “The shares were sold to raise his requested settlement. The money is ready whenever he wants it.” Official records from the Business Registration Service (BRS) still list Mbugua’s Swingers Skypark as the holder of the 22 percent stake, adding fuel to the ownership dispute.

    The turmoil marks a shaky start for Definite Assurance, which aimed to disrupt the PSV insurance market—a Sh5.5 billion-a-year segment plagued by losses and the collapse of players like Invesco Assurance and Xplico.

    The firm had hoped to capitalize on Muchiri’s expertise in the matatu industry, gained from managing Kenya Mpya buses, and the financial muscle of Karauri, a betting mogul who reaped billions from SportPesa, and Mbugua, whose Quiver Lounge chain has become a nightlife staple in Nairobi.

    The partnership, once a promising blend of wealth and ambition, has soured into a bitter feud. Mbugua, who claims to have built his fortune from humble beginnings in the alcohol trade, alleges that his partners are manipulating the company’s directorship behind his back.

    Through his lawyer, Dunstan Omari, he has threatened legal action, warning that “additional persons/directors” unknown to him have been introduced into the firm. “We shall move to protect our client’s interest by instituting legal proceedings,” Omari’s letter to the company stated.

    Karauri, faces mounting pressure as the public face of the insurer. His Sh500 million investment was pivotal in meeting the Sh600 million minimum capital requirement for a general insurance company in Kenya, but the ongoing spat risks undermining Definite Assurance’s credibility before it can even establish a foothold.

    As the boardroom war intensifies, industry watchers warn that the fallout could jeopardize the company’s mission to revolutionize matatu insurance.

    With rival Directline Assurance, the market leader owned by media tycoon SK Macharia, already grappling with its own shareholder and regulatory woes, Definite Assurance’s internal chaos may leave the PSV insurance segment vulnerable at a critical juncture.

    For now, the firm’s future hangs in the balance as its founders battle over money, power, and control.