National Treasury cabinet secretary, Henry Rotich sees the
shilling attaining stability in the short term aided by the hike in the
Central Bank rate.
Speaking to Nation
Tuesday, Mr Rotich said policy measure such as raising the CBR will
attract more dollars into the country as foreign investors seek higher
returns in the local debt market, boosting the shilling.
“The
measures that have been put in place should restore stability. The
raising of the CBR should attract more capital flows into the country
and stabilise the shilling. Infrastructure spending using foreign
sources of financing should also help. Going forward, we should have
more stability because demand pressure will ease,” Mr Rotich said today.
Today,
the shilling has maintained relative stability, trading within Monday’s
range against the dollar despite concerns that Greece’s impending
default on its debt would cause the local currency to weaken.
The shilling opened trading today at 98.65/98.75 to the dollar and closed at 99.20/30 to the dollar.
END MONTH DEMAND
This,
coupled with end month demand for dollars from importers, weakening
exports against surging imports, would put the shilling under immense
pressure.
Most currencies across Africa and in
emerging economies have also been hit by the appreciation of the dollar
in the international currency markets. By comparison, the shilling has
not weakened substantially, according to Rotich.
“By
and large, our exchange rate has not weakened substantially. The actions
that we are doing both on the fiscal and monetary side should ensure
stability. We are doing this at a time when we are undertaking huge
infrastructure investment in constructing the standard gauge rail as
well as in the road and energy sectors. Going forward, this pressure
should ease,” the CS said.
This year, the shilling has
weakened by about 8 per cent to the dollar and it nearly touched the
100-mark to the greenback, prompting the Central Bank to raise its
policy rate by 1.5 percentage point to 10 per cent to provide support.
Forex analysts, however, expect the shilling to come under pressure in
coming days.
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