Money Markets
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Tuesday, September 29 2015 at 18:43
Posted Tuesday, September 29 2015 at 18:43
In Summary
- The interbank average lending rate stood at 13.44 per cent on September 10, but scarcity of liquidity has been pushing up the short-term price of money among banks.
The rate at which commercial banks lend to each other
overnight has doubled in three weeks reaching an average of 26.75 per
cent as at 2.45pm Tuesday, thanks to the concentration of tea bonus cash
in a few banks.
According to the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) data, the
interbank average lending rate stood at 13.44 per cent on September 10,
but scarcity of liquidity has been pushing up the short-term price of
money among banks.
The concentration of liquidity in a few banks has
left many others starved of cash. The CBK did not reveal the financial
institutions in which the money was locked, but market insiders said the
payment of the tea bonus by a few banks was a critical factor.
“With distribution of excess liquidity skewed to a
few banks the interbank rate increased to 24.9 percent in the week
ending September 23 from 17.9 percent in the previous week,” said the
CBK in its weekly report.
The volume transacted during the week increased by
Sh6 billion to Sh28.9 billion, while the number of deals increase to 73
from 67 in the previous week.
The tea bonus is usually paid through a few banks
for distribution to other lenders, where outstanding loan or overdraft
facilities are settled before eventually reaching farmers.
Tea farmers have earned over Sh60 billion in the
tea bonus. “We have seen the interbank rate rise in just a few days yet
it had begun to fall in the second week of this month. There is the tea
bonus factor with money locked in a few banks,” said a dealer who chose
anonymity to speak candidly.
The dealer said that Tuesday’s rise in the
interbank rate coupled with the previous day’s was a continuation of a
trend witnessed from the past week.
Another market insider said the higher rate that
banks are charging each other for overnight cash was also one of the
major factors giving support to the shilling.
This is because it has made shilling-denominated liquidity scarce in the market relative to the dollar.
The CBK has also been using the liquidity-mopping
instruments such as the repurchasing agreements and term auction
deposits in a bid to contain further weakening of the shilling.
Whereas there were maturities of term auction
deposits that should have made the market liquid, the monetary authority
said mop-up and tax remittances to the government “sterilised” (or
removed) the liquidity.
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