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A KES 6.87 Billion Profit Company At A KES 154 Billion Price Tag: The KPC IPO and the Anatomy of an Expensive Listing

BY Steve Biko Wafula · January 21, 2026 09:01 am

The proposed listing of Kenya Pipeline Company marks one of the most consequential capital-markets events in recent Kenyan history. On paper, it is positioned as a landmark privatisation: the government intends to sell a 65 percent stake, raise approximately KES 106.3 billion, and introduce roughly 11.8 billion shares to the public at an offer price of KES 9.00 per share. This structure implies a total equity valuation of about KES 154 billion, instantly placing KPC among the larger counters on the Nairobi Securities Exchange. The scale is undeniable. The question that refuses to go away is whether the price is.

At the core of the debate lies profitability. KPC’s latest reported profit after tax stands at KES 6.87 billion. This is not a speculative business; it is a mature, regulated pipeline monopoly whose earnings are largely derived from tariff-based income approved by regulators and ultimately shaped by government policy. Revenue growth is therefore not driven by innovation or pricing power, but by fuel volumes, pipeline throughput, and policy-aligned infrastructure expansion. This makes KPC stable, but it also caps upside in a way that markets typically price conservatively.

Yet the valuation metrics tell a very different story. At the proposed offer price, KPC comes to market on a price-to-earnings multiple of roughly 22 times. That single number already places it in rarefied territory on the NSE, especially within the energy sector. For context, Kenya Power trades at a P/E of about 1.2 times, KenGen at roughly 6 times, and TotalEnergies Kenya around 11.3 times. KPC would therefore debut as the most expensively priced energy stock on the exchange, despite being the most tightly regulated and policy-constrained of the group.

Read Also: Kenya Pipeline Company’s IPO Officially Goes Live

Return on equity sharpens the contrast even further. At approximately 7.6 percent, KPC’s ROE is modest, especially for a business being sold at a premium to book value. In fact, KPC would be the only major energy firm on the NSE trading above a price-to-book ratio of one, at around 1.66 times. Its peers, including Kenya Power and KenGen, trade well below book value despite in some cases generating higher absolute profits. The market is effectively being asked to pay a premium multiple for an entity whose capital returns are structurally limited by regulation.

The comparison with Kenya Power is particularly instructive. Kenya Power’s market capitalisation is roughly KES 29 billion, yet it delivered a profit after tax of about KES 24.4 billion, more than three times KPC’s earnings. Whatever one thinks of Kenya Power’s operational challenges, the valuation gap between profit and price across these two entities is stark. It underscores how aggressively KPC is being priced relative to earnings and asset returns.

From an income perspective, the picture does not improve materially. KPC’s earnings yield at the offer price is about 4.5 percent, with a projected dividend yield of roughly 3.9 percent. These figures might be defensible in a low-interest-rate environment. They are far less compelling in a Kenyan context where one-year Treasury bills are yielding close to 16 percent and money market funds are offering between 12 and 14 percent with daily liquidity and minimal risk. An investor choosing the KPC IPO over government paper is effectively accepting lower yield, higher duration risk, and policy exposure in exchange for equity participation in a regulated monopoly.

Process and disclosure issues have also contributed to unease around the transaction. While the IPO Information Memorandum has been released publicly, the valuation report underpinning the offer price was not included in the initial circulation. The IPO Open Day has been widely described as compressed and time-constrained, limiting meaningful interrogation of assumptions. Questions have been raised in public forums about the methodology used to anchor the KES 9.00 offer price, particularly given the divergence between KPC’s fundamentals and sector comparables.

These concerns are amplified by KPC’s structural characteristics as a state-owned enterprise transitioning to public ownership. Tariffs remain subject to government and regulatory oversight, capital expenditure decisions are influenced by policy priorities, and strategic direction is not purely market-driven. This does not make KPC a bad business; it makes it a predictable one. Predictability, however, is usually rewarded with lower multiples, not the highest P/E in the sector.

Stripped of sentiment and symbolism, the transaction reduces to a simple arithmetic that investors cannot ignore. A company earning KES 6.87 billion annually is being offered to the public at a valuation of roughly KES 154 billion, translating to a P/E of about 22 times and an ROE of 7.6 percent.

By any relative or absolute measure within the NSE energy universe, that is an expensive proposition.

The KPC IPO may still succeed on the strength of brand recognition, national importance, and the scarcity of large new listings. But success in subscription does not automatically translate into success in long-term shareholder value.

For investors, the real decision is not whether KPC is strategic or stable, but whether the price being asked today leaves sufficient room for returns tomorrow.

Read AlsoKenya Pipeline Company Unveils Detailed IPO Share Allocation Framework

Steve Biko is the CEO OF Soko Directory and the founder of Hidalgo Group of Companies. Steve is currently developing his career in law, finance, entrepreneurship and digital consultancy; and has been implementing consultancy assignments for client organizations comprising of trainings besides capacity building in entrepreneurial matters.He can be reached on: +254 20 510 1124 or Email: info@sokodirectory.com

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