Money Markets
Cash tends to be concentrated among large banks to the detriment of small and medium-sized ones. PHOTO | FILE
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
Commercial banks cut their deposits at the central
bank by half last week as they sought to meet liquidity needs, thereby
partly avoiding the interbank market.
The deposits — which do not earn interest — stood at Sh4.8
billion down from Sh9.7 billion the previous week, this being the excess
reserves above the 5.25 per cent requirement.
Commercial banks must keep 5.25 per cent of their
total customer deposits with the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) for
prudential purposes, namely to mitigate the risk that comes with all
cash being held only in the individual financial institutions.
“The money market was relatively tight during the
week ending August 17, 2016 with commercial banks’ excess reserves above
the 5.25 per cent averaging requirement by Sh4.8 billion compared with
Sh9.7 billion the previous week,” said the CBK in its latest weekly
bulletin.
Liquidity was mainly coming from government payments to contractors or suppliers and redemptions of Treasury bill securities.
There were no T-bill rediscounts or redemptions
from Treasury bonds nor were there maturities from repurchasing
agreements (repos).
Even then liquidity injections into the system were
less than withdrawals, leading to the need for rollover of maturing
reverse repos (equivalent to injection of money) to ensure there was
cash circulating for optimal banking operations.
“Liquidity flows comprised mainly government
payments and Treasury bills redemptions. These were more than offset by
withdrawals through taxes, Treasury bills issues and reverse repos
maturities, leading to a net withdrawal of Sh2.5 billion from the
market,” said the CBK.
“The central bank rolled over some of the maturing
reverse repos to improve liquidity distribution in the money market,”
the regulator added.
The CBK floated Sh35 billion worth of reverse
repos, but it only accepted Sh10.6 billion, leaving some of the
institutions to take cash from the interbank market.
The CBK has been saying that distribution of
liquidity is the main cause of the frequent tightness in the market,
rather than actual lack of money among the banks. Cash tends to be
concentrated among large banks to the detriment of small and
medium-sized institutions.
CBK governor Patrick Njoroge is on record saying
that 80 per cent of the liquidity in the market is concentrated among
seven banks.
As a result of the fall in commercial banks
deposits at the CBK, the institutions were partly able to avoid the
interbank market that in turn saw their rates fall by 1.13 percentage
points to 4.25 per cent.
“The average interbank rate declined by 112.8 basis
points (1.13 percentage points) to 4.25 per cent from 5.38 per cent on a
slightly lower volume of Sh18.6 billion compared to Sh19.0 billion
transacted the previous week,” said the CBK.
The interbank rates were pressured down by the fact that the volumes traded were low.
“Despite tight liquidity in the market, high volumes traded
at below the previous week’s average weighed down the interbank rate,”
said the central bank.
The highest rate hit realised in the bank-to-bank
money market last week was 4.37 per cent compared to the highest of 6.2
per cent in the previous week
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