Summary
- Local investors increased market participation at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in the second half of the year, as rising share prices attracted retail buyers back to trading in a market still dominated by foreigners.
- NSE data compiled by Standard Investment Bank (SIB) shows between January and June, monthly local investor participation (measured as a percentage of contribution to traded turnover) stood at just 27 percent.
- Foreign investors in the meantime were accounting for nearly three quarters of all traded turnover, at 73 percent on average.
Local investors increased market participation at the Nairobi
Securities Exchange (NSE) in the second half of the year, as rising
share prices attracted retail buyers back to trading in a market still
dominated by foreigners.
NSE data compiled by Standard
Investment Bank (SIB) shows between January and June, monthly local
investor participation (measured as a percentage of contribution to
traded turnover) stood at just 27 percent.
Foreign investors in the meantime were accounting for nearly three quarters of all traded turnover, at 73 percent on average.
Between
July and November, locals raised participation by 10 percentage points
to a monthly average of 37 percent — pushing the foreign share down to
63 percent.
In November, local investors accounted for
44.2 percent of the total traded turnover, the highest monthly share
since May 2018. The NSE’s total traded turnover in the 11 months to
November stood at Sh139.6 billion.
Local investors, who are classified as Kenyan and East African
retail and institutional investors, hold 79.09 percent of the 95 million
issued shares at the NSE while foreign investors hold 20.91 percent.
Some
local retail investors come into the market largely for capital gains,
hence are attracted to buy when prices look to be rising in the hope of
booking gains.
The return to the trading floor of
locals has thus coincided with a return to positive territory of the
market, which in the third and fourth quarters was able to recover the
losses in investor wealth seen in the first half of the year.
In
the year-to-date, NSE’s market capitalisation has gone up by Sh408
billion to hit Sh2.5 trillion, effectively reversing the loss by a
similar margin that investors endured in a bruising 2018 where many
firms recorded double-digit percentage falls in share price.
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