Inside the Sudden Fall of Intercontinental Hotel Nairobi as it Risks to be Auctioned

Intercontinental Hotels Corporation Ltd and Tourism Finance Corporation each own 33.83 per cent of Kenya Hotel Properties. KHP is technically insolvent since it cannot service its debts that stood at Sh717 million at the end of last year. The debt is owed to Stanbic Bank. The hotel has had to close the entire second floor since the rooms there are in unserviceable state and in need of major repairs.

According to a recent document, the luxury InterContinental Hotel in the heart of Nairobi is broke.The strategically located five-star hotel overlooking the mausoleum of founding President Jomo Kenyatta and Parliament buildings is in the red to a tune of more than Sh700 million as at the end of last year.

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The 389-bed hotel is now at risk of being auctioned by creditors. A letter dated February 7, 2019 from Mr Jonah Orumoi, the chief executive of Tourism Finance Corporation (TFC), to his Privatisation Commission counterpart Joseph Kosgey, lifted the lid on the sorry state of affairs at the top hotel. Intercontinental Hotels Corporation Ltd and TFC each own 33.83 per cent of Kenya Hotel Properties, the holding company that owns InterCon, as it is popularly known.

“We wish to bring to your attention the following facts,” Mr Orumoi wrote to Mr Kosgey, whose Privatisation Commission is mandated to sell government assets. “The company (KHP) is facing financial challenges to the extent that it cannot meet its obligations as they fall due.” Mr Orumoi said KHP is technically insolvent since it cannot service its debts that stood at Sh717 million at the end of last year. The debt is owed to Stanbic Bank.

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Mr Orumoi said that KHP is not able to service its long term facilities as they fall due which have attracted huge accrued interest and penalties. As a result of the financial difficulties, some creditors, such as Stanbic Bank, have threatened to have KHP blacklisted at the Credit Reference Bureau, which will make it difficult to access more credit, if it fails to service the loan within the next 90 days.

Other creditors have threatened to send in auctioneers. In October 2015, TFC lent KHP a loan facility of Sh124.7 million, which remains unpaid. The debt had risen to Sh207.7 million as at last December 31. Even more worrying is that the hotel has no insurance cover for incidents such as fire breakout, Mr Orumoi said. The hotel has not made a profit in 10 years, and it made a Sh113.7 million loss last year.

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