Summary
- The shilling Tuesday weakened to a three-month low against the US dollar, mainly on increased demand of the foreign currency by importers in second week of government relaxing measures taken to contain the spread of Covid-19.
- The Kenyan currency closed the day averaging 107.25 units against the dollar compared with 107.15 units at the close of trading Monday.
- This is the weakest level since April 4 when it as at 107.27 and marked the third straight day of weakening despite Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) maintaining dollar import cover of over five months.
The shilling Tuesday weakened to a three-month low against the
US dollar, mainly on increased demand of the foreign currency by
importers in second week of government relaxing measures taken to
contain the spread of Covid-19.
The Kenyan currency
closed the day averaging 107.25 units against the dollar compared with
107.15 units at the close of trading Monday.
This is
the weakest level since April 4 when it as at 107.27 and marked the
third straight day of weakening despite Central Bank of Kenya (CBK)
maintaining dollar import cover of over five months.
Currency
traders said the shilling was under pressure from oil and merchandise
importers who are buying dollars to increase stock levels following the
easing of movement restrictions.
“The Kenyan shilling
lost ground on Tuesday due to dollar demand from players in the energy
sector and importers of merchandise,” news agency Reuters said, quoting
currency traders.
Traders expect the gradual reopening of the economy to boost
demand of commodities such as fuel and raw materials for many
manufacturing firms.
This is especially so after the
State lifted cessation of movement in and out of the Nairobi
Metropolitan Area, Mombasa and Mandera counties and announced resumption
of local air transport from today.
Standard Gauge Railway train resumed services on Monday, with inter-county road transport also gradually picking up.
Airlines such as Jambojet, a subsidiary of Kenya Airways
, confirmed that it would resume local flights today.
The
shilling returned to 107 units to the dollar last Friday, marking the
first time since May 28, despite foreign exchange reserves holding
steady.
Forex reserves last week dropped from $9.717
million (Sh1.04 billion) to $9.704 million (1.039 billion) or 5.83
months of import cover, CBK data showed.
Adequate cover
This is considered adequate since the CBK endeavours to have reserves of at least 4.5 months import cover.
The
shilling had weakened to an all-time low of 107.29 units to the dollar
on April 30-- about one and half a month since Covid-19 case was
reported in Kenya-- before strengthening to 106 units eight trading days
later.
Policy-makers are keeping a close eye on
Kenya’s Covid-19 case load with President Uhuru Kenyatta warning that
the country will impose stiffer measures should the situation worsen.
The
number of Covid-19 infections yesterday rose by 497 to take Kenya’s
total case load to 10,791. The virus has so far killed 202 people while
3,017 have recovered.
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