KENYA · MARKETS
Key Facts
—A landmark listing: Family Bank won regulatory approval on 11 June 2026 to list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, with trading expected to begin on 23 June.
—No new shares: The bank is listing by introduction, meaning its existing shares simply begin trading publicly — it is not raising fresh capital.
—A drought broken: No company floated on the Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam or Kigali exchanges in all of 2025. Family Bank is part of a 2026 revival.
—Strong earnings: Family Bank’s first-quarter 2026 profit rose 52.6% to 1.6 billion shillings, after a 55.4% jump in full-year 2025.
—A record market: The Nairobi exchange’s value has crossed 3 trillion shillings, about $23 billion, for the first time, with its main index up more than 18%.
—Why it matters: For frontier-market investors, fresh listings signal that East Africa’s capital markets are reopening after years of firms choosing to stay private.
The Family Bank NSE listing, approved on 11 June 2026 and due to begin on 23 June, marks one of the clearest signs yet that East Africa’s long drought of new share offerings is ending. The Kenyan lender will float its existing shares on the Nairobi Securities Exchange just as the market reaches record highs.
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What the Family Bank NSE listing involves
Family Bank, a mid-sized Kenyan lender founded by the businessman Titus Muya, received approval from Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority on 11 June 2026 to list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
Trading in its shares is expected to begin on 23 June. The bank is listing by introduction, which means its roughly 1.3 billion existing shares start trading publicly without any new shares being issued.
That structure raises no fresh capital. Instead, it gives the bank’s thousands of existing shareholders a regulated, transparent place to buy and sell, after years of trading their holdings over the counter.
The bank has grown quickly. Its total assets rose 32.3% to 230.3 billion shillings, about $1.8 billion, in the first quarter of 2026.
For the bank, the milestone is as much about visibility and credibility as it is about money.
A drought that lasted a year
The listing matters because of how quiet the region’s markets have been. Not a single company floated on the stock exchanges of Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania or Rwanda in all of 2025.
Firms increasingly chose to raise money privately, avoiding the cost and disclosure that a public listing demands. The result was a slow draining of new life from East Africa’s bourses.
That began to change in 2026. In March, Kenya Pipeline Company made its debut on the Nairobi exchange in the country’s largest share sale since Safaricom’s landmark listing in 2008.
That offer was heavily oversubscribed, a sign that local investors had cash waiting for the right opportunities. Family Bank now follows, turning a single bright spot into something that looks more like a trend.
A market hitting record highs
The timing is striking. The Nairobi Securities Exchange has been one of the region’s strongest performers, with its total value crossing 3 trillion shillings, or about $23 billion, for the first time.
The exchange’s All-Share Index has climbed more than 18%, helped by easing inflation and falling interest rates across the region.
Regulators have been trying to keep the momentum going. The Capital Markets Authority has opened an electronic listing window meant to cut the time and cost of going public.
The exchange’s chief executive, Frank Mwiti, has tied the revival to a broader strategy aimed at bringing both state-owned and private companies to market.
Why it resonates beyond Kenya
For international investors hunting frontier-market returns, the reopening of East African listings is a meaningful signal. It suggests companies once again see public markets as worth the scrutiny.
Family Bank’s strong profits add to the appeal. Its first-quarter 2026 earnings rose 52.6% to 1.6 billion shillings, building on a 55.4% increase the year before.
The bank has signalled ambitions to expand across the region. A public listing gives it a currency, its own traded shares, that it can use to fund that growth over time.
The story fits a wider pattern across Africa, where deepening capital markets are part of the contest for global investment alongside critical minerals and infrastructure.
It is also a test of whether African savings can be channelled into African companies, rather than waiting on foreign capital.
What to watch next
The first question is how the shares trade once they list on 23 June. A smooth debut would encourage other Kenyan firms still weighing a float.
The second is whether the rest of the region follows. Exchanges in Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda are watching Nairobi closely for proof that the appetite for listings has truly returned.
For now, Family Bank’s arrival is a modest but telling marker. After a year of silence, East Africa’s markets are making noise again.
Frequently asked questions
When will Family Bank list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange?
Family Bank received regulatory approval on 11 June 2026, and trading in its shares is expected to begin on 23 June 2026. It is listing by introduction on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
Is Family Bank raising money through its NSE listing?
No. The bank is listing by introduction, meaning its existing shares begin trading publicly without any new shares being issued or fresh capital raised.
Why is the Family Bank NSE listing significant for East Africa?
No company floated on the Kenyan, Ugandan, Tanzanian or Rwandan exchanges in all of 2025, so Family Bank is part of a 2026 revival. It follows Kenya Pipeline Company’s March debut, the country’s largest listing since Safaricom in 2008.
How is the Nairobi Securities Exchange performing?
The exchange’s total value has crossed 3 trillion shillings, about $23 billion, for the first time, and its All-Share Index is up more than 18%. Easing inflation and falling interest rates have supported the gains.
Connected Coverage
This report is part of The Rio Times’ expanding Africa coverage. For more on Kenya’s economy, see our coverage of the country’s central bank and inflation; for another African market revival, our report on Ghana’s record-breaking Kasapreko IPO; for the wider regional picture, our Eastern Africa coverage; and for the great-power contest shaping the continent, our pillar on Africa’s new scramble.
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