Fines in Kenya’s banking sector are not routine, at least not at scale. In 2024, the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) fined 11 commercial lenders for breaches tied to lending, capital adequacy and governance, collecting KES 191 million ($1.48 million) in penalties; before that, the last major public sweep was in 2018, when five big banks were hit with KES 392.5 million ($3 million) in fines over the National Youth Service scandal.
Guaranty Trust Bank Kenya (GTBank Kenya), the subsidiary of the Nigerian tier-1 lender, has found itself in regulatory crosshairs.
On Tuesday, the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK), the country’s competition watchdog, fined GTBank Kenya KES 33.18 million ($257,000) and ordered the bank to refund KES 13.21 million ($102,000) to ASL, its corporate client since 2001.
The regulator is sending banks a blunt memo: how you treat a locked‑in corporate borrower is now a competition issue, not just a contractual spat.
Between the lines: The case began as a routine renewal of 2021 facilities: overdrafts, letters of credit, guarantees, working‑capital lines. Instead, ASL was met with months of silence, a three‑month stopgap extension, reduced limits (one trading line cut from $5.5 million to $3.5 million and later slashed by another $3 million), and fresh security demands.
When ASL decided to move to I&M Bank, another Kenyan lender, GTBank issued a default notice, backdated default interest to August 2023, and levied KES 13.2 million ($102,000) in charges as the client scrambled to clear overdrafts of KES 417.8 million ($3.2 million) and $197,802 to avoid disruption.
In its ruling, CAK’s language is damning: “false and misleading representations,” “unconscionable conduct,” and abuse of “superior bargaining power” by presenting materially-altered terms as standard renewals.
GT Bank insists everything sat within its offer letters and risk appetite. CAK’s response is the real story: in a market where the CBK usually polices capital and prudential risk, competition law is now being weaponised to police process, leverage, and opacity in corporate lending.
If this precedent holds, banks’ once‑discreet restructuring tactics may start reading like case studies for regulators and rival lenders.
Crédito: Link de origem
