One more reason why KQ should be
suspended from the stock market
By MUNGAI KIHANYA
The Sunday Nation
Nairobi,
23 August 2015
When running a business, it is very important that you balance your
borrowings. Ideally, long-term debt should be used in acquiring
long-term assets and short-term debt for short-term assets.
Think about it: does it sound sensible to take a one-year loan for the
purchase of an item that you only intend to keep for six months? Why
would you want to be left paying a loan for something that you no longer
own?
Conversely, it is also not good to buy an item that you intend to keep
for five years with a loan repayable in six months. It might look like a
smart move at first, but remember that the shorter the term of a loan,
the higher its instalments are.
If you took out a one million-shilling loan to buy a car – which you’ll
probably keep for 5 years before selling – at, say 18 per cent interest
but planned to pay it back in 36 months (3 years), your monthly
instalments would be about Sh36,000.
However, if you wanted to clear this loan in, say, 6 months, you would
have to cough up Sh175,500 each month. Two questions arise immediately:
first, can you afford this kind of money. Second, if yes, why are you
taking the loan? Why not simply save the money and buy the car without
borrowing?
With that knowledge in mind, it is clear that a good business would
ensure that its short-term assets are at least equal to its short-term
liabilities. The difference between these two values is what accountants
call Working Capital.
I suspect that the name “Working Capital” arises from the expectation
that a normal general trader would be buying goods for sale with
short-term loans. After selling the goods, he would make a profit enough
to pay the loan instalment and leave a profit.
What about Kenya Airways?
Last week we saw that the company’s assets do not cover its liabilities.
Now we can ask whether the company has enough Working Capital. The
published audited accounts show that it has short-term assets worth Sh41
billion and short-term liabilities valued at Sh82 billion.
Let’s put that into perspective. Imagine you own a shop which has stock
valued at Sh410,000 and you know you need about a year to sell all off.
But you also owe suppliers, the land-lord, banks and others Sh820,000
which is payable during the same period.
In such a situation, there is a good chance that each time you sell, you
will use that money to pay off some debt. You will hardly ever have any
money to do anything else – not even to buy your own lunch!
That
is exactly where Kenya Airways is. The Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE)
listing rules state that companies must have “adequate working capital”.
Kenya Airways has NONE: Sh41bn minus Sh82bn is NEGATIVE Sh41bn.
So I ask again, why is the general public being allowed to continue
buying Kenya Airways share at the NSE? It should be suspended from the
exchange.
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