Guaranty Trust Bank Kenya (GTBank Kenya), the subsidiary of the Nigerian tier-1 commercial lender, has appealed the KES 33.18 million ($257,000) fine from the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK).
The bank pushed back against a ruling that accused it of misleading a long-time corporate client, ASL Limited, and abusing its bargaining power. “The decision to appeal reflects the Bank’s view that the Authority’s findings are not supported by the facts and evidence presented during the investigation,” GTBank said.Â
The regulator disagrees. Its investigation found the bank cut ASL’s credit limits, imposed fresh conditions, backdated default interest, and presented materially altered loan terms as routine renewals, while the client was effectively locked in.
The case signals a shift in who polices bank behaviour. Traditionally, Kenya’s central bank focused on stability: rightly obsessing over capital ratios, liquidity, and solvency. The competition regulator is stepping in to question process, leverage, and fairness. It is no longer enough for banks to stay solvent. They must also prove they stayed fair.
Why does this matter? Corporate borrowers often depend heavily on a single bank. Switching lenders is slow, expensive, and risky, especially when millions of dollars in facilities are involved. That dependency creates leverage. Kenya’s regulator is saying that leverage cannot be used to rewrite the rules mid-relationship.
The bigger picture: This case could permanently change the power dynamics between banks and businesses. It could set a precedent for participants in the banking sector: more protection for borrowers, and better clarity and explicit loan and re-negotiation terms for banks, knowing that watching out for legal and fairness risk is now a crucial part of this process.














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