By John Gachiri
The shilling remained relatively stable at the
Sh85 level after the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) intervened by selling
dollars in the market to strengthen it.
Traders said that the shilling was flat in morning
trade but in the afternoon lost ground marginally to trade at 85-85.50
units to the dollar.
The drop was attributed to trading positions, but they expect the Shilling to trade at the 85 units level.
“It will trade within a range but maintain a
weakness bias,” said Duncan Kinuthia, of Commercial Bank of Africa’s
forex trading desk.
The CBK’s intervention had seen the Shilling drop to 84.80 units, which was a reprieve after it had touched a two-month low against the dollar.
“The Kenya shilling strengthened against the dollar on Wednesday after CBK intervened to sell dollars directly to the market to prop up the local currency,” said a forex report by ABC Bank. ABC Bank’s forex report indicates that the shilling was trading at between 84.70 and 85.10.
Heavy demand from the oil sector, end month demand and more than normal demand had seen it trade above the Sh85.60 level.
Analysts said that the dollar should lose ground
against major currencies due to the US stimulating the economy by
releasing more money in the economy.
“The Americans have been easing more aggressively
so the shilling is supposed to strengthen,” said Johnson Nderi, head of
research at Suntra Investment Bank.
The shilling had gained ground after the
conclusion of the March 4 general elections, which was settled by the
Supreme Court but has since lost ground.
Economists say that its strengthening or
weakening will be primarily determined by events on the political field,
which have an effect on the flow of capital.
The CBK still has room to intervene given that it
reserves have been rising. Kenya’s official usable foreign exchange
reserves rose for the fourth straight week to $5.821 billion. Last week
from $5.805 billion a week earlier.
No comments :
Post a Comment