Faulu attributes profitability to revenue diversification

Business
By Selina Mutua | Apr 30, 2026

 

Faulu Microfinance Bank has signalled a strong turnaround in its 2025 financial performance, reducing losses by over 60 per cent.

In the latest financial results, the bank’s loss before tax narrowed sharply from Sh1.04 billion to Sh386.9 million, with total operating expenses dropping from Sh4.04 billion to Sh3.46 billion.

Chief Executive Officer Julius Ouma said this was made possible through disciplined cost management and a strategic shift towards MSME financing.

Ouma said the bank’s focused approach to the MSME Segment, which has better cash flows and deposits and a disciplined cost management, saw it reduce its interest expenses from Sh1.7 billion to Sh1.5 billion.

Beyond cost-cutting, Ouma said Faulu also successfully diversified its revenue streams, recording notable growth in fees, commissions, and non-funded income.

“Our 2025 performance reflects a deliberate and disciplined transformation journey that is now delivering results,” said Ouma, adding, “We have significantly reduced our cost base while strengthening the quality of our balance sheet. Faulu is now firmly on a path to sustainable profitability and long-term value creation.”

The de-risking strategy marked a shift away from high-risk portfolios toward a more robust focus on the MSME book.

Mr Ouma said the bank maintained a healthy liquidity ratio of 25 per cent, comfortably above the 20 per cent regulatory minimum.

With the fundamentals now stabilised, he said the bank is pivoting its focus toward digital expansion, innovation, and customer service transformation to drive growth in the coming year.

Share this story
Borrow smart or not at all
Debt is shaping Kenya’s economy but knowing when to borrow or walk away can determine financial survival or collapse.
Consumption outpacing recycling of waste, data shows
Kenya’s e-waste surges as consumption outpaces recycling, exposing gaps in disposal systems and rising pressure on a fragile circular economy.
Del Monte's growing footprint in kenya's farm economy
Del Monte Kenya drives jobs, taxes, and exports but faces land disputes, climate pressures, and shifting consumer demand.
Why AI and biometrics will be key to stopping fraud in digital economy
AI strengthens verification by identifying inconsistencies, detecting manipulations, and adapting to emerging fraud patterns in real time. 
Why Kenya's public service must rethink power, accountability and the human workplace
Institutions must also confront the underlying issues whether they be excessive workloads, unclear mandates, or environments where employees feel unheard.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS