Money Markets
By REUTERS
In Summary
- The governor said there had to be a strengthening of Kenya's fiscal position and he was working with the Treasury on this issue although he did not give details.
Kenya's central bank governor said on Tuesday the
bank was working with Treasury to strengthen the country's fiscal
position, in a financial year when the budget deficit is forecast to
rise to 8.7 per cent of gross domestic product.
Patrick Njoroge also said the bank was working to minimise
volatility in the exchange rate and had enough foreign currency
reserves, which have dipped below four months of import cover, the level
it usually seeks to maintain.
"We have ample reserves in case of any foreseeable
shocks," the governor told his first news conference since taking office
in late June, adding that a $688 million stand-by facility with the
International Monetary Fund provided an additional cushion.
The central bank's weekly bulletin, published on
September 25, put foreign reserves at $6.180 billion, equivalent to 3.93
months import cover. It fell from $6.195 billion the previous week and
$6.658 billion at the start of July.
The governor said there had to be a strengthening
of Kenya's fiscal position and he was working with the Treasury on this
issue although he did not give details. In July, he had said "fiscal
prudence" was needed to restore macro stability.
Kenya's budget deficit has climbed from a forecast 7.8 per cent of GDP in fiscal 2014/15. The financial year starts on July 1.
The shilling has weakened about 16.5 per cent
against the dollar this year, but Njoroge said the central bank did not
have a target for shilling exchange rate and was committed to a flexible
exchange rate.
Kenyan government debt yields have also been rising
in recent weeks. Njoroge said the increase in short-term debt was in
line with the bank's tighter monetary policy.
The central bank has raised its rates by 300 basis points since June to 11.50 per cent.
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