Money Markets
By REUTERS
In Summary
- Speaking on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday, Dr Njoroge said he was not worried about the exchange rate of the Kenyan shilling.
- The currency has already weakened 1.5 per cent against the dollar so far this year, mainly due to seasonal demand from importers and a firmer greenback globally.
Kenya's central bank is committed to a flexible
exchange rate regime and will not deviate from that policy despite the
recent weakening of the shilling, according to governor Patrick Njoroge.
Speaking on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in
Davos on Thursday, Dr Njoroge said he was not worried about the exchange
rate of the Kenyan shilling.
The currency has already weakened 1.5 per cent
against the dollar so far this year, mainly due to seasonal demand from
importers and a firmer greenback globally.
"We are fully committed to flexible exchange rate
regime. We know the benefits of that and we are not deviating from
that," said Njoroge, adding that the bank only intervened to smooth out
excess volatility.
The weakness of the currency has prompted fears
that the depreciation could feed into consumer prices. But Njoroge said
inflation was "well within margin" and that the pass-through from a 2.5
per cent currency depreciation was not material.
Data released at the end of the year showed that
Kenya's inflation rate fell to 6.35 per cent year-on-year in December
from 6.68 pc year-on-year in November.
Kenya's central bank has a short-term inflation target of 5 per cent, with a 2.5 per cent band either side of that.
Some investors have expressed concerns about the
strength of inflows from exports and tourism due to an ongoing drought
and a presidential election set for August. Tourism along with tea,
horticulture and remittances are Kenya's leading sources of foreign
exchange.
Official reserves stood at $6.94 billion at the end of last week, equivalent to 4.55 months' worth of import cover.
The governor said he expected the current account
deficit to be "in the order of 5.3 per cent", although the numbers were
yet to be finalised and were due to be released within weeks. The
deficit was at 6.8 per cent in 2015.
The central bank's Monetary Policy Committee will
hold its next meeting on Jan 30. The bank held its benchmark lending
rate at 10 per cent at its last meeting, in November.
Njoroge said that a rule imposed by the government
last September capping commercial bank lending rates - a move he opposed
- was a "temporary aberration" and that it was too early to gauge its
effect.
The cap, set at 400 basis points above the central
bank rate, was intended to spur personal and corporate investment by
holding down interest rates. The rule, which was imposed in September,
sent bank shares tumbling.
No comments :
Post a Comment