The entrepreneur mogul moving tables behind the scenes - Capital Business
Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Jimnah Mbaru /FILE

Kenya

The entrepreneur mogul moving tables behind the scenes

NAIROBI, Kenya, Dec 3 – Entrepreneurship is a long journey. Sometimes nobody knows when it will come to an end. Sometimes those who choose to embark on this journey fall, not once but many times. Some, after falling, rise and continue with the journey, while some fall and fall forever.

The power of an entrepreneur lies in never giving up. It is in the will to always move on, no matter what. It is the will to always bounce back with rejuvenated energy and move on as though nothing happened. It is about pushing hard, sweat, blood, and resilience.

Meet Jimnah Mbaru, a name not so new within Kenya’s economic circles but one that has tales of resilience and success, an inspiration not just to existing entrepreneurs, but upcoming ones too. The 75-year-old entrepreneur has refused to grow old and has beaten retirement as his mind resists every attempt to rest as he constantly thinks about the economy and how to improve it. As the young Kenyans say, mambo ndio mengi, masaa ni machache which loosely translates to there’s a lot to be done and not much time.

His entrepreneurial journey started way back in the 1970s when he left the civil service and studied for his MBA at IMEDE. Since then, he embarked on a journey that has seen him forge a career in finance that will remain a reference for generations to come.

“I am always thinking. Right now, I am thinking of what is required for this environment given the huge gap in venture capital. What if I set up a venture capital fund and get as many young people as possible to move into the Fintech Industry?”

That is Jimnah Mbaru. Always thinking. One wonders when he finds time for fun. In the 1980s, Jimnah with other financial institutions set up the Union Bank that had a vision of establishing a “financial supermarket.” He moved on and bought an established brokerage company, Dyer and Blair, overseeing its growth and development into a fully-fledged investment bank.

“The language of money is an interesting one. It is mostly a silent one. If you rush into it, you might misunderstand it. It is a language of patience, studying, and predicting,” says the who was once the Chairman of the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in the 1990s and the co-founder of the African Stock Exchange Association.

The inspiration to set up the African Stock Exchange Association emanated from the fact that there were about 22 stock exchanges from West Africa, Southern Africa, and Eastern Africa, and some from the Arab North.

“We wanted to find a way of working with these people, bring them together, and communicate.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

According to Jimnah, a good business leader should be ready to learn. He or she should not always be the smartest in the room for nobody was born to know everything. He says that communication with other members of the team who have different and varied sets of skills will equip one with the knowledge and power to guide the rest of the team.

“One can be a chief executive, you are producing products, the engineering department has to come and brief about the need for maybe a new kind of technology. The CEO may not necessarily understand everything technically, you still have to provide guidance and the leadership of the whole organization,” he says.

Jimnah Mbaru has played a great role in developing and changing the stock market the way we know it today. He liberalized and laid it bare, making it possible for millions of Kenyans to own shares in big companies that they wouldn’t have imagined and making it possible for companies to scale and grow.

The stock exchange has handled major IPOs including Safaricom PLC. His company, Dyer, and Blair played a major role in catapulting MTN Uganda into Kenya when they rolled out an IPO.

He says that one of his great moments of pride is to see a vibrant debt market in Kenya, both the government bond market and the corporate bond market. “The corporate bond market has not fully developed, but the treasury bond market has.”

With all this rich history of success, one would expect Jimnah Mbaru to retire, to be somewhere in Dubai, enjoying his holiday and retirement in peace. But no. He is here. He always has more challenges to solve and retirement seems far, far away from him.

Advertisement

More on Capital Business

Kenya

NAIROBI, Feb. 1 (Xinhua) — Kenya approved the commencement of secondary bond trading outside the Nairobi Securities Exchange Thursday. The over-the-counter trading will be...

Aviation

NAIROBI, Kenya, Jan 3 – Trading of Kenya Airways (KQ) shares at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) has been extended. NSE said that the...

Kenya

NAIROBI, Kenya, Sep 8 – Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) Chairman Kiprono Kittony has been shortlisted to be the next chair of the World Chambers...

Kenya

NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug 8 – The Kenya Development Corporation (KDC) will get Sh20 billion from the World Bank (WB) under a new agreement. The...

Top Story

NAIROBI, Kenya, June 26 – Young entrepreneurship builder Anzisha Prize has launched a digital resource library to boost entrepreneurship amongst young people across the...

Kenya

NAIROBI, Kenya, May 19 – Mars Wrigley, the world’s top chocolate and chewing gum maker, says it plans to expand its innovative distribution model...

Markets

NAIROBI, Kenya, April 28 – TransCentury Group Plc (TC) commenced the trading of its new ordinary shares from the recently concluded rights issue on...

Kenya

NAIROBI, Kenya, April 19 – The Nairobi Securities Exchange(NSE) lost Sh229 billion in investor wealth in the quarter ended March 31 2023 as investors...