The shilling gained against the dollar last week as the pressure that had seen it hit a record low of 108.03 units to the greenback eased. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Currency traders said the end-month dollar demands from merchandise and oil importers had cooled off after two weeks of raising their hard currency stock levels to match demand after the government started phased reopening of the economy.
- The current exchange level is however still 5.2 percent in the negative in the year-to-date, given that the shilling opened the year averaging 101.34 units to the dollar.
- The shilling had come under pressure especially after Kenya reported its first case of Covid-19 on March 13, leading to disruptions in the economy.
The shilling gained against the dollar last week as the pressure
that had seen it hit a record low of 108.03 units to the greenback
eased.
The shilling opened Friday averaging 106.61
against the dollar, extending the gains that followed the record low
seen on July 23. This means that the shilling gained 1.42 units or 1.3
percent last week.
Currency traders said the end-month
dollar demands from merchandise and oil importers had cooled off after
two weeks of raising their hard currency stock levels to match demand
after the government started phased reopening of the economy.
The
current exchange level is however still 5.2 percent in the negative in
the year-to-date, given that the shilling opened the year averaging
101.34 units to the dollar.
The shilling had come under
pressure especially after Kenya reported its first case of Covid-19 on
March 13, leading to disruptions in the economy.
The fall was more pronounced since July 6 when President Uhuru
Kenyatta opened up Nairobi, Mombasa and Mandera counties and announced
resumption of air transport.
The CBK maintains,
however, that its forex reserves of $9.35 billion or 5.67 months import
cover are an adequate arsenal to deal with volatilities.
CBK
Governor Patrick Njoroge said last week in a post-Monetary Policy
Meeting that when the performance of the shilling and other currencies
is weighed against the dollar, “we are closer to the middle.”
“This is what the market is saying and all we want to do is to minimise volatility,” said Dr Njoroge.
Foreign
investor outflows have increased and CBK has used its forex reserves in
a bid to support the shilling, investment bank AIB Capital noted in an
end of week brief.
net importer
The
head of research for Africa at Standard Bank Group Jibran Qureishi had
tipped the CBK to ride on forex reserves to stabilise the shilling below
107 units.
“There is a lot of liquidity in the market and CBK has enough ammunition to sell dollars and slow down the moves we are seeing.
“I think the move is temporary and I don’t see it becoming a one-way street,” said Mr Qureishi.
Kenya
is a net importer and a weak local currency to the dollar has an impact
on the import bill for commodities such as oil and industrial inputs.
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