Troubled Amaco Insurance fights to stay a float
News
By
Wainaina Wambu
| Dec 05, 2020
Africa Merchant Assurance Company (Amaco) says it has paid almost half of the Sh10.2 million claim that nearly saw it liquidated.
The underwriter, linked to Deputy President William Ruto, is teetering with outstanding liabilities, saying it has paid out Sh4 billion in claims and legal liabilities in the last three years.
This is as it emerged that the firm’s current asset base is at Sh4 billion. “With specific reference to this case, Amaco has honoured its responsibility to settle the claim and has paid Sh4.3 million out of the figure of Sh10.2 million claimed,” said the underwriter in a notice.
“In addition, the company has initiated an amicable settlement with the petitioners with the view of reaching an agreement.”
Amaco was almost wound up after the High Court ruled in favour of an insolvency petition filed by six individuals owed Sh10.2 million.
READ MORE
Kenya's push to maximise Sh95 billion circular economy
Interest income, foreign exchange trade: Where banks cut earnings in 2025
Domestic workers push for rights as Kenya eyes key labour reforms
Britam profit jumps 10pc to Sh5.5b despite rise in claims
What is the future of trade unions in the current world?
PS lauds Safaricom for advancing AI to boost job creation, spur digitisation
CAK raids Foam Mattress firms in probe into anti-competitive practices
For SMEs, health protection is business protection
Kenya finalises aquaculture policy to boost fish production
Inside Afreximbank's Trade Push to Shield Africa from Global Shocks
However, last month, the insurer received some reprieve after a judge issued a temporary stay order pending an appeal by Amaco against the ruling. Amaco says it has “initiated” an amicable settlement with the petitioners.
The firm admitted having outstanding liabilities, noting that it was working to pay the genuine ones. “From 2017 to date, Amaco has paid out Sh4 billion in claims and legal liabilities despite the prevailing economic conditions,” said the firm.
The insurer said it was restructuring its balance sheet to meet its immediate genuine claims liabilities.
Statistics from the Insurance Regulatory Authority show that Amaco was this year one of the top insurance firms with many cases of customer complaints.
Delayed claim settlements was a major concern. Auctioneers raided Amaco’s offices over a Sh15 million debt owed to a health facility in June this year.