Summary
· Kenya’s foreign exchange reserves dropped to a near 10-year low, further breaching the critical level of four months’ import cover in the wake of huge foreign debt repayments.
Kenya’s commercial banks are running
out of US dollars and as a result some Kenyan firms have started sourcing
dollars from neighbouring countries, especially Tanzania.
The shortage of the US currency, has
made it difficult for manufacturers and general goods importers to meet their
obligations.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has
directed commercial banks to ration dollars following a shortage of the
currency and the race to protect reserves.
A number of currency traders and
importers say banks have imposed a daily cap on dollar purchases of as little
as $5,000 as firms struggle to obtain adequate forex to meet their supply
needs.
This has forced industrialists to
start seeking dollars daily and from several lenders for their monthly hard
currency needs as the shortage puts a strain on supplier relations and the
ability to negotiate favourable prices in spot markets.
Having banks, including the top tier
lenders, run out of the greenback suggests an escalation of the currency woes
that started mid-last year with lenders rationing scarce dollars.
“We are now scavenging for dollars.
Only half of every six banks we call daily for dollars will have something for
us. Three of the banks will ask us to check later,” said a top executive of a
manufacturing firm who sought anonymity for fear of reprisals from the Central
Bank of Kenya (CBK).
“What is available at banks is
between $5,000 and $10,000. One will be fortunate to get $20,000 and extremely
lucky to get $50,000 from a single bank. This is crazy for a business that
requires $1 million monthly for supplies and we are getting each dollar at
Sh137,” he added.
Importers say they cannot access the
dollar at the official buy rate of Sh127.39, forcing them to buy at a rate of
Sh137 or higher.
Top firms have started trading in
dollars among themselves, with hotels and aviation firms attracting interest
from those in need of hard currency.
This is creating a parallel shadowy
market, which is in breach of the law and has the potential to trigger a range
of economic problems including discouraging foreign direct investment (FDI),
encouraging rent-seeking and reducing the interbank FX market.
Multiple bankers admitted the caps
on dollar purchases but declined to come on record fearing retaliation from the
CBK.
Industrialists say the lack of
access to adequate hard currency was negatively affecting their ability to
settle obligations to overseas suppliers in a timely manner.
The industrialists’ lobby said the
dollar crunch has strained relations with suppliers at a time competition for
raw materials has intensified globally due to rising demand amid lingering
supply chain constraints.
The shortage is the product of
rising dollar demand being driven by increased shipments of raw materials and
equipment in the wake of the recovering economy.
There was no immediate comment from
the CBK on the shortage of dollars.
But the regulator has repeatedly
maintained that Kenya has sufficient foreign currency to meet demand, brushing
off manufacturers who continue to warn about the shortage of dollars.
Importers reckon that the scarcity
of dollars is worsening despite earlier comments from the banking lobby that it
was temporary due to strong demand from companies remitting dividends and
manufacturers importing components.
“Banks would previously dispense
$10,000 in a single visit and this ration has come down to $5,000,” said an
executive at a top international logistics firm.
“When you have an appetite of
$250,000 but can only get $5,000 at a time, how many trips is one going to make
to meet the order? It stops making sense at some point.”
Analysts have blamed the CBK for the
dollar crisis, saying the regulator introduced tough rules on the foreign
exchange interbank market, crippling market operations.
Through the interbank forex market,
banks are able to trade hard currency among each other and at rates which
determine the official or spot rate.
A muted interbank market has, for
instance, forced banks to seek dollars from companies and individuals, forcing
retail transactions to happen at weaker rates.
“Liquidity in the interbank FX
market has dried up and shifted to the bank-client market where forex
transactions are executed at a much-depreciated rate,” the IMF observed in
December.
As spreads between the interbank and
market rate widen, banks have shied away from selling dollars to each other on
the increased margins on clients' business.
“There has been a huge disconnect in
the interbank market. No bank is willing to sell dollars to the other at the
interbank rate when the retail rate is as high as Sh137,” said the banker.
Muathi Kilonzo, the Frontier Equity
Sales and Head of Equities at EFG Hermes, says the chickens have come home to
roost for the CBK, which has been blamed for severing the interbank forex
market.
Banks such as Absa and Ecobank were
reprimanded for breaches of the Prudential Guidelines on Foreign Exchange
Exposure Limits, which in part demand that a lender’s foreign exchange exposure
must not surpass 10 percent of its core capital.
“We have been talking about the
failure of the interbank FX market for a really long time. The clamping down of
the market by the CBK which preceded the Covid-19 and Ukraine crises is now
catching up with us,” said Mr Kilonzo.
“If you go to the market and you are
looking for tomatoes but the biggest farmer refuses to sell tomatoes to other
sellers, everyone else will be going around looking for just one tomato and
prices will go up.”
The situation is compounded by the
weakening of the shilling against the dollar, which means that it is costing
companies a lot more to buy forex.
It has also meant that firms are
hedging against further weakening by stocking up on dollars or holding on
tightly to their greenback reserves.
The shilling was on Thursday
exchanged at an average of Sh127.29 units to the dollar, having depreciated
from Sh104.44 at the end of March 2020.
Kenya’s foreign exchange reserves
dropped to a near 10-year low, further breaching the critical level of four
months’ import cover in the wake of huge foreign debt repayments.
Reserves currently stand at Sh872.5
billion ($6.860 billion), equivalent to 3.84 months import cover, which is the
lowest since April 4, 2013.
The reserves are used by countries
to meet their international financial obligations such as paying foreign debts,
influencing monetary policy and supporting the importation of critical goods.
→ kmuiruri@ke.nationmedia.com
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