Money Markets
By REUTERS
In Summary
- Traders have said some banks had taken short dollar positions to meet demand for shillings by the offshore investors seeking a government bond last week, but were now seeking dollars.
The Shilling weakened on Monday as banks bought
dollars, with traders saying it would remain under pressure due to new
travel warnings that could hurt the ailing tourism sector.
By 0817 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at 92.30/40 to the dollar against Friday's close of 92.15/25.
One trader at a Nairobi-based commercial bank said
the shilling lost ground at the start of the trading session as banks
bought dollars on the interbank market, to cover their short positions.
"We've seen early dollar demand which pushed the shilling down," said the trader.
Traders have said some banks had taken short dollar
positions to meet demand for shillings by the offshore investors
seeking a government bond last week, but were now seeking dollars.
Joshua Anene, a trader at Commercial Bank of
Africa, said the shilling is likely to remain under pressure as travel
warnings issued by Western countries further dent the tourism industry
and put pressure on hard currency inflows.
"Those travel warnings - they are quite effective
in keeping visitors away," said Anene, who added the shilling is
expected to be rangebound between 92.25-92.75.
The shilling lost ground steadily since last year,
partly due to a downturn in tourism following attacks by Islamist al
Shabaab militants in the country. Tourists are a leading source of hard
currencies for East Africa's biggest economy.
Britain and Australia on Friday issued separate
travel warnings to their citizens, advising caution in capital Nairobi
and popular resort town on Kenya's Indian Ocean coastline. Nairobi
criticised the advisories, saying the security situation on the ground
was improving.
CBK action
TheCentral Bank of Kenya (CBK) said on
Monday that it planned to mop up Sh17 billion ($184 million) in excess
liquidity from the money markets using repurchase agreements and term
auction deposits.
Mopping up excess liquidity makes it more costly to hold dollars, which partly lends support to the shilling.
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