The Kenya shilling appreciated slightly towards the end of last
week, but some market players said it was inclined to a depreciation
towards the 101.70/102.00 level against the dollar in the short term.
The
shilling had opened last week with a weakening bias due to normal end
month dollar demand from importers, but as that abated, inflows from
horticulture exports offered support and led to modest gains against the
greenback.
“We
expect the shilling to consolidate within the 100.70–102.00 range in
the interim as the market remains flow-driven,” said Commercial Bank of
Africa in an update released on Thursday.
“Dollar inflows from the agricultural sector turned the tide in favour of the shilling.”
The Kenyan financial markets remained closed on Friday for the Madaraka Day holiday.
The
shilling averaged 101.48 units to the greenback at the opening of the
market on Thursday having appreciated from 101.60 recorded on Wednesday,
when the latest depreciation streak reached its peak before the slight
appreciation.
However, quoting traders, Reuters reported that the currency had firmed up further on Thursday, helped by dwindling importer demand.
The
news agency said that by mid-afternoon, commercial banks quoted the
shilling at 101.30/50 per dollar, compared with 101.40/60 at Wednesday’s
close.
Support has also come in from diaspora inflows,
which have been rising month on month to record levels. Central Bank is
also holding a sizeable chest of foreign reserves of $9.1 billion,
which can be deployed to iron out volatility in the exchange rate.
ALSO READ: CBK likely to delay further policy cut
No comments :
Post a Comment