
Kenya looks to privatise state assets to draw private-sector investments, says President Ruto
The government plans to start with listing the Kenya Pipeline Company via an IPO on the Nairobi Securities Exchange this year, Ruto said.
"We are committed to a structured, time-sensitive programme that identifies and prepares a robust pipeline of key government assets to be privatised through the stock exchange or improved through private sector participation," he said.
Ruto also said that well-functioning domestic capital markets could reduce reliance on external debt.
Kenya has been seeking new sources of funding since deadly nationwide protests last summer forced it to pursue austerity measures and scrap planned tax hikes worth more than 346 billion Kenyan shillings ($2.68 billion).
Separately, at the Africa Debate event later on Wednesday, Ruto said that following shocks such as U.S. President Donald Trump's elimination of USAID this year, Kenya is working to rely on its own resources, and private investments, rather than "resources that we do not have any control over."
He cited plans to partner with the private sector to provide hospital equipment on a fee-per-use basis and said Kenya had raised $1.3 billion by securitising assets such as roads to raise funding.
"We are now going to be listing some of those bonds in the securities exchange so other investors can have a bite of the cherry," he said.
($1 = 128.9500 Kenyan shillings)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Broker hails City's resilience despite wave of takeovers and defection
Peel Hunt hailed fresh signs of life in the City as market conditions 'improve' and investor confidence proves 'increasingly resilient' in the face of global uncertainty. As anxiety over the health of the London stock market spreads through the Square Mile and Westminster, the investment bank said it has enjoyed 'a strong start' to its new financial year. And it said revenues for the three months to the end of June were 'comfortably ahead' of the same period last year – sending its own shares up 5.4 per cent by late morning. And it said revenues for the three months to the end of June were 'comfortably ahead' of the same period last year – sending its own shares up 5.4 per cent by late morning. The upbeat tone is particularly notable because Peel Hunt has been vocal in raising concerns over an exodus of companies from the stock exchange. In a report on Wednesday, it said the UK was on course for 'the biggest year of takeovers since 2021' after a flurry of merger and acquisition (M&A) activity in the first six months. Many of the bids have come from private equity and the United States as bargain-hunting predators swoop on undervalued firms on the London Stock Exchange (LSE). At the same time, London has been rocked by a wave of defections to other bourses with reports this week suggesting AstraZeneca – the UK's largest listed company with a value of £162billion – could move its listing to New York. A lack of new listings through so-called initial public offerings (IPOs) means these companies are not being replaced – sparking fears of terminal decline. But in an update at the company's annual general meeting yesterday, Peel Hunt bosses, led by chief executive Steven Fine, were on bullish form. 'We have had a strong start to our new financial year as market conditions have begun to improve,' they said in a statement. 'Whilst the macroeconomic background is hard to predict, investor confidence appears to be increasingly resilient.' The firm highlighted 'higher revenue generation' across key arms of the business and – perhaps unsurprisingly given the wave of takeover activity – 'a significant contribution from M&A transactions' as it advised companies on deals. It added: 'We continue to have a strong pipeline of M&A transactions, with a number of situations both announced and in process.' However, bosses expressed fresh concern about the lack of new listings, a key revenue stream for investment banks such as Peel Hunt that earn fees working with firms to bring them onto the stock market. 'It remains to be seen whether a more general pick up in equity issuance and IPO activity will follow,' they said. Set up in 1989, Peel Hunt listed on the LSE's Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in 2021. It now acts for 55 FTSE 350 companies, including 50 in the FTSE 250 and five in the FTSE 100.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
We sorely need another McCrone Report on education
It came as something of a shock to find that I, as a headteacher, was regularly working a 50-60-hour week. The Report's findings and recommendations, which included a 35-hour working week, a maximum class contact time and a generous pay settlement of 10%, were warmly welcomed even by the EIS who commended on the 'unique process of discussion and dialogue among employers, teacher representatives and the Scottish Executive…. to create a package of conditions and pay on which to build a confident and highly regarded teaching profession.' Another national inquiry is long overdue. Then there is the need for a guaranteed (and centrally funded) level of staffing for our schools. My generation was brought up in the era of the famous Red Book. This was a very detailed set of calculations prepared by the then HMI that enabled schools and local authorities to work out a customised staffing for each establishment. On top of a basic staffing entitlement based on pupil numbers, additional staff allocations were funded by the Government to support, for example, probationary teachers and what were then referred to as 'remedial pupils'. A Government determination to re-establish agreed national staffing levels for our schools with additional allocations for indicators of deprivation and the integration of special needs youngsters would do much to restore confidence in a service that currently is under siege. A commitment by the Scottish Government to establish these major inquiries as a matter or urgency is not going to bring about any significant results before next year's elections for the Scottish Parliament, but it would set out a clear direction of travel which might remove some of the current pressure and hold out promise for an education system better suited to the challenges of the 21st century. Eric Melvin, Edinburgh. Read more letters Stop the gangs to stop the boats What would be your response if, sitting at home one day content that your home was secure, a young man broke in? Would you put him up in your spare room, give him food and pocket money, and in the coming days arrange for him driving lessons and visits to leisure centres? Or would you possibly try to restrain him and definitely call the police? Astonishingly, our Government favours the former response to the migrants breaking in to the UK illegally by crossing the Channel in small boats, whilst pontificating that the numbers are 'clearly unacceptable" ('Record number of migrants crossing English Channel for first half of year", The Herald, July 2). No wonder these migrants keep coming in ever-increasing numbers. When will the Government accept that paying the French police and trying to 'smash the gangs" simply doesn't work? One sure way to stop this migrant invasion would be to deter them from attempting to cross the Channel by making that crossing pointless. Why does the Government not legislate that anyone arriving here illegally will be disqualified automatically from staying, killing both the migrants demand and the gangs' business? Alan Fitzpatrick, Dunlop. The lesson of Dounreay Charles Scott (Letters, July 2) says he is not part of the pro-nuclear lobby. Unfortunately he displays the same head-in-the-sand attitudes with regard to financial and environmental costs of this dirty industry. The decommissioning of Dounreay, which has been under way for years, is not expected to be completed until at least 2070. Also, the highly dangerous waste produced will need to be stored for thousands of years. Such legacies would be even more of a "major mistake by our Government". David Hay, Minard. • In his plea for atomic power, Charles Scott writes of the need to "reduce harmful emissions in the (energy) sector". Well, if radioactivity isn't harmful I don't know what is. Two miles from my abode the irradiated hulls of submarines still have to be kept well away from the public, and power stations produce lethal waste which has to be guarded for many decades if not centuries, either on-site at Torness or at Sellafield, both of which are potential war targets. But of course for most folk these places are far away, someone else's problem. George Morton, Rosyth. The decommissioning of Dounreay will last decades (Image: PA) Are turbines elegant symbols? In a consultation document for the proposed Torfichen wind farm – 18 turbines, 180m high near our World Heritage Site of Edinburgh – there is a very revealing comment: "...particularly given user experience is a subjective concept with some users viewing wind turbines as incongruous and intrusive structures in rural locations, whilst others consider them to be elegant symbols of sustainable energy provision". Should we not have a serious discussion as a nation to see how many members of the public see turbines as symbols as we continue with a planning system based on the Scottish Greens' manifesto? During the SNP/Scottish Greens pact the Government voted for the two National Parks and National Scenic Areas to be protected from wind farms but 'where impacts are localised and/or appropriate design mitigation has been applied, they will generally be considered to be acceptable". The developer in the above case considers the effect "localised for national planning purposes"; "the significant landscape and visual effects would only extend out to a maximum of some 5.6km". For comparison, the Glasgow Tower is 127m tall. Celia Hobbs, Penicuik.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Reeves makes surprise appearance with PM after tears in Parliament
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has made a surprise appearance alongside Sir Keir Starmer, one day after she was seen crying at Prime Minister's to unveil the government's 10-year plan for the NHS, she was smiling and embraced the prime minister as they jointly set out the government's 10-year plan for the NHS. The pound plummeted and government borrowing costs rose after the incident in Parliament on Wednesday, when Sir Keir initially failed to guarantee that Reeves would keep her fall was partially reversed after Sir Keir insisted he was "in lockstep" with his chancellor, who he said would be in her job "for a very long time to come". In a bid to put on a united front, the chancellor joined Sir Keir and Health Secretary Wes Streeting at a hospital in East London to launch plans for new neighbourhood health Keir praised his chancellor, telling the audience that decisions made by Reeves had allowed the government to "invest record amounts in the NHS".Asked if he had been aware that his chancellor had been crying next to him in the House of Commons, Sir Keir said he "hadn't appreciated what was happening" as he was "literally up and down" answering questions.