By Reuters
Market participants said the benchmark NSE 20 share index eked out its gains due to foreign investor demand for big firms like brewer EABL, which rose 4 per cent to close at Sh333 per share.
However, they said it was too early to tell if the
shares had fully turned a corner following sustained losses this month.
The index has fallen 8 per cent in June but is still up about 11 per
cent so far in 2013.
"I wouldn't say we have hit the bottom just yet,"
said Kuria Kamau, an analyst at Kestrel Capital, citing thin volumes
during the session.
EABL had lost a quarter of its value since late
May, offering a chance for investors to start getting into it again.
Tobacco firm BAT Kenya inched up by a third of a percentage point to close at Sh543 per share.
This month's drop in the main index was driven by
profit-taking concerns over prospects of tapering of the US stimulus
programme and jitters about the government's plan to re-introduce
capital gains tax.
On the foreign exchange market, the shilling edged
up against the dollar to close at 85.80/90 from 85.90/86.10 on
Thursday, as the market continued to experience thin liquidity,
following the tax payments season.
Traders said they were turning their focus on the
next rate-setting meeting of the central bank scheduled for July 9, to
determine where the bank wants to see the exchange rate.
Inflation rose to 4.91 per cent in June
from 4.05 per cent in May, the statistics office said on Friday, but it
remained firmly within the government's preferred band of 5-7 per cent.
"Most likely they will leave lending rates on hold," said Ignatius Chicha, head of markets at Citi Kenya.
In the debt market, securities worth Sh18.17 billion were traded this week, up from Sh12.88 billion last week.
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