<span class="gmail_quote"><br></span><a href="http://www.bdafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3001&Itemid=5810">http://www.bdafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3001&Itemid=5810
</a><br><br>Written by James Makau - Business Daily<br>13-September-2007: The poor penetration of Internet services coupled<br>with low levels of computer literacy in Kenya are holding back the<br>country's emerging data vending industry.
<br><br>The data vendors, who sell and distribute financial and business news,<br>are targetting rural populations as well as Kenyans in the diaspora.<br><br>Mr Bildad Kagai , the managing director of data vending firm<br>
MediaCorp Limited, told the Business Daily that while data vending has<br>the potential to be a major industry in the financial services sector,<br>more needed to be done to ensure computer services reached majority<br>of the people.
<br><br>"Kenyans, especially those outside Nairobi, have been waiting eagerly<br>for the Real Time data, but inability to access the Internet remains<br>a big challenge," says Mr Kagai<br><br>He said traders did not have to physically go to the bourse to get
<br>financial data, but they could do this in the comfort of their offices<br>through the Internet.<br><br>He said the highest potential for growth in data vending was in rural<br>towns and that lack of Internet services was limiting the uptake of
<br>online financial news and data.<br><br>MediaCorp earlier this month launched its data vending services in<br>Mombasa to increase its presence in the country.<br><br>Data from the Communications Commission of Kenya estimates that as of
<br>March, this year, only 3.2 per cent of the country's population had<br>access to Internet up from 200,000 or 0.7 per cent of the population<br>in 2000.<br><br>Internet Service Providers have blamed the low penetration on high
<br>costs of Internet on satellite connectivity which costs up to 10 times<br>more than the fibre optic connectivity.<br><br>But once any of four planned international fibre optic cables land in<br>Mombasa, Internet connection costs should fall drastically.
<br><br>The Government's Digital Villages Project under the Ministry of<br>Information and Communication is also set to greatly boost access,<br>resulting in more subscribers for data vendors.<br><br> And with the Nairobi Stock Exchange set to switch onto a wide area
<br>network (WAN) in the next one month, the potential of data vending<br>services may well be on its way to be unlocked.<br><br>Mr Symon Ndirangu, the chief executive officer of Information<br>Convergence Technologies ICT Ltd, says that with the signing of an
<br>average of 50 to 100 new users every month, most of the six data<br>vendor currently operating in the market should break even within the<br>next 12 months.<br><br>"Although it is taking time for many investors to appreciate the value
<br>of data, we are upbeat that revenue will pick up very soon."<br><br>Currently, the cost of a data vending license from the NSE is valued<br>at Sh170,000 (US$2500) while ISPs are charging about Sh50,000 per<br>month for connection.
<br>With an estimated Sh180,000 in other costs, data vendors are paying at<br>least Sh400,000 a month or Sh4.8million annually to stay afloat.<br><br>Mr Ndirangu however projects that with the developments in the ICT<br>sector as well as the Capital Markets, the data vendors should have at
<br>least each have 10,000-20,000 customers utilizing their services.<br><br>At an annual charge of Sh5000 per customers, data vendors could easily<br>rake in Sh50 million in a year.<br><br>"The need for investment decisions based on sound finanical
<br>information and data rather than speculation as is often seen today<br>will spur the growth of data vending services," says Mr. Ndirangu.<br><br>With the chairman of the NSE Jimnah Mbaru estimating that the<br>watershed Safaricom IPO slated for later this year will bring the
<br>number of investors at the bourse to 3 million, the need for real time<br>data on the stock markets will clearly be there.<br><br>Foreign interest in the Kenyan capital markets which has picked up in<br>last one year following a string of high profile IPOs is an also seen
<br>as a major driver to the success of data vending services.<br><br>"Kenyans in the diaspora and international investors who do not have<br>the luxury of popping into Nation Centre to see the market Viewer will<br>
definitely drive this industry." Reckons Mr. Kagai<br><br>It may not be unfathomable then, that local data vendors could enter<br>the big league of Reuters, Bloomberg and CNBC sometime in the future.<br><br>--<br>--<br>
Bildad Kagai<br>MD - MediaCorp Limited<br>Nairobi Stock Exchange [NSE] - Authorised Information Vendor<br>Suite B2 Tetu Apartments StateHouse Avenue<br>P. O. Box 20311-00200<br>Tel. 254 20 272 8332<br>Fax. Rendered Obsolete
<br>URL. <a href="http://www.mediacorpafrica.com">www.mediacorpafrica.com</a><br>--<br>