Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Kenya sells bond over mobile phones in world first

-

Kenya began selling a government bond exclusivel­y via mobile phones on Thursday, a world first aimed at expanding the pool of investors in a country that needs money for infrastruc­ture projects and where many people don’t have a bank account. The three-year bond, called M-akiba, can be bought by phone users without any need for a bank account. The issue is likely to be monitored by treasuries in other emerging economies, most of which would like to broaden sources of borrowing beyond banks and other financial institutio­ns. The government made a limited offer of 150 million shillings ($1.5 million) on Thursday to test the system before a bigger offer of 4.85 billion shillings planned for June. A large screen in the main boardroom of the treasury in downtown Nairobi showed about 200 investors had put in about 600,000 shillings within an hour of the start of the sale. Kenya has borrowed heavily in the past four years to fund an ambitious developmen­t programme, including new roads and a new coast-capital railway, and the government wants to raise more cash. But few ordinary Kenyans bought government bonds, scared off by the minimum investment of 50,000 shillings and the need for a commercial bank account.

Investors can buy the bond for as little as 3,000 shillings, earning a tax-free interest of 10 percent. They will be able to trade it on the secondary market.

“The sale of government bonds in very small amounts through the mobile phone with no need of a bank account is a first in the world,” said Mehnaz Safavian, the lead financial sector specialist at the World Bank’s Kenya office.

Only 38 percent of adults have a bank account in the country of 44 million people, compared with 77 percent in South Africa, according to FSD Kenya, a U.k.funded developmen­t programme working to expand access to financial services.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka