As of December 2013[update], it was the largest deposit-taking microfinance bank in the country, with an asset base valued at about US$220 million (KES:21.75 billion).
In order to comply with CBK regulations, KWH began to sell shareholding to the KWFT Board, staff, and foreign institutions.
In July 2015 it sold 25% equity to 60,974 KWFT members, thereby reducing its own shareholding to the required 25% maximum.
[3] In 2016, print media reported that the lender had plans to expand to Rwanda and South Sudan by the third quarter of 2017.
[4] The shares of stock of Kenya Women Microfinance Bank are held by Kenyan and foreign institutions and individuals, as depicted in the table below:[3] The microfinance bank has branches in rural and urban areas of Kenya.