By GEORGE NGIGI, gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The CBK is set to implement an ‘interest corridor’ — setting the upper and lower limits — aligning the interbank rates with the Central Bank Rate (CBR), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) disclosed in a statement.
- The efficiency of the CBR on inflation and exchange rate has been at times limited by the free movement of the interbank rate which may still provide liquidity in the market at a time the CBK is mopping up cash to rein in inflation.
- Introduction of the interest corridor in a market involving two willing players will be a divergence by CBK from its advocacy against regulation of interest rates.
Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) is set to control the
rate at which banks lend each other (interbank) so as to make its policy
rate more effective in swaying inflation and helping lenders price
loans better.
The CBK is set to implement an ‘interest corridor’ — setting
the upper and lower limits — aligning the interbank rates with the
Central Bank Rate (CBR), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) disclosed
in a statement.
The efficiency of the CBR on inflation and exchange
rate has been at times limited by the free movement of the interbank
rate which may still provide liquidity in the market at a time the CBK
is mopping up cash to rein in inflation.
“To achieve their inflation objective, the
authorities will align the interbank rates with the policy rate and
formally announce and implement an interest corridor,” reads part of the
IMF statement. Banks usually lend to each other through the interbank
window with dominant large banks, which enjoy high liquidity, mainly
lending to rivals largely on own terms.
Introduction of the interest corridor in a market
involving two willing players will be a divergence by CBK from its
advocacy against regulation of interest rates.
The CBK had not responded to the Business Daily queries on the matter by the time of going to press.
“IMF has been pushing for this for some time. There
has been lots of volatility in the market making it hard for banks to
price their products as the interbank payments have to be factored in as
interest expense,” said a multilateral agency source who cannot be
named without compromising his position.
He noted the efficiency of the interbank market
depended on the CBK’s supervisory ability in assuring the market that
all players were safe and sound.
Large banks are usually selective on the smaller
banks they lend due to fears of a lender collapsing and failing to repay
as was the case with Dubai Bank and Imperial Bank.
As a result the interbank market has few players and its pricing swings wildly depending on the level of liquidity.
Tuesday banks were lending each other at 3.8 per
cent compared to 25.8 per cent six months ago in mid-September. The
policy rate has remained constant at 11.5 per cent.
The central bank which also lends to banks through instruments referred to as reverse repos was charging 11.55 per cent.
Analysts attributed the wide gap between the
reverse repo (banks get cash from CBK) and the interbank rate to
mistrust among lenders.
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