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CMA summoned over irregular shares trade

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By Nation Correspondent
Posted  Wednesday, September 1  2010 at  22:00

The Capital Markets Authority has been summoned to court to explain how an investor lost millions of shillings through unauthorised trading of his shares.

Chief executive officer Stella Kilonzo is required to give evidence on behalf of Mr Abdalla Salim, who has sued CFC Financial Services over the loss of his money.

Mr Salim claims he bought 58,840 KenGen shares at Sh11,90 each for Sh640,696 and instructed CFC to sell them at Sh35 each.

However, he says, the stockbroker instead bought more than100,000 shares without his authority at Sh37 per share, generating Sh3.7 million.

In addition, CFC also bought shares in a number of other entities and traded them without his approval, resulting in a huge deficit in his account.

He reported the matter to the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission and was advised to direct the complaint to the CMA.

Mr Salim said he lost over Sh1 million but accuses the CMA of exonerating the broker.

In February 2008, CFC was found guilty of illegally trading in stocks without investors’ authority and, in a landmark ruling, the High Court ordered the broker to reverse the sale of a client’s shares.

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Juja Road Fancy Stores had sued CFC for the loss of more than Sh2 million after buying shares without authority.


Add a comment (6 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by tpeteh

    what's the point of having CMA as a regulator if they are not up to the task. Based on the moents hers, surely it seems CFC Stanbic is guaranteed to self destruct as an institution

    Posted  September 04, 2010 12:02 AM  
  2. Submitted by Mathogoramakwenji

    I have just had a nasty experience with CFC. Sale of shares took close to 30 days to compplete and this cost me money in market and foreign currency flactuations.Even after writing to the MD, I got no response, or even an apology. This is bad for investor confidence, but I also find it discriminatory against small investors. They should remember how the "big banks" mistreated us, and now they beg for our money. Lawsuits can bring down a bank.(emkeiem2000@yahoo.com)

    Posted  September 02, 2010 09:30 PM  
  3. Submitted by Mathogoramakwenji

    In my experience, CFCStanbic has no regard to the customer or the fact that securities transactions are time sensitive.

    Posted  September 02, 2010 09:26 PM  
  4. Submitted by Bobby2010

    We ask, where do Kenyans get money to buy all those huge cars and expensive homes? I say, very few Kenyans can afford these things through hard work and sweat, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Show me a clean stoke broker!

    Posted  September 02, 2010 12:48 PM  
  5. Submitted by eric2010

    this is scary n lowering the confidence in the bourse.someone should surely go to jail 4 this

    Posted  September 02, 2010 10:30 AM  

See all 6 comments