A government wide intervention to save the Kenya shilling is yet to stop the slide after it weakened further on Thursday to exchange at Sh132.13 against the dollar.
This comes despite the introduction of a new foreign exchange code by the banking sector regulator placing stringent penalties against those caught manipulating the forex market.
Read: CBK whips banks to unlock dollars after Ruto warning
The local currency was exchanging at 132.13 units against the dollar from 130.62 when the code was effected on March 22.
The depreciation is set to put pressure on the cost of living due to more expensive imports like fuel, vehicles and machinery alongside higher costs of electricity and debt servicing distress.
The shilling has been depreciating amid the aggressive rise of US interest rates to tame inflation since last year which led to an appreciation of the dollar and sustained shortage in the local market. It has lost 7.1 percent or 8.7 units since start pf the year.
The Foreign Exchange Code was introduced in concerns that some players had taken advantage of the depreciation and the dollar currency constraints to manipulate the market for their gains.
It was issued in a period of heightened attention on the local forex market after the shilling hits new lows of 145 units to the greenback in the retail market and crossed the 130 mark on the official printed rate amid dollar supply constraints that have threatened imports of key economic inputs.
Market players are prohibited from making transactions, create orders, or providing prices with the intent of disrupting market functioning or hindering the price discovery process.
Read: Shilling depreciates further on day new forex code takes effect
The code also requires banks to immediately conduct a self-assessment and submit to the CBK a report on their level of compliance with the new code by April 30, 2023, and thereafter submit a detailed compliance implementation plan approved by their boards by June 30, 2023.
Failure to comply with the code will see banks face ‘administrative action including monetary penalties as provided for under the Banking Act’.
Bank executives have however said the code has damped the supply of dollars in the interbank market as banks remain reluctant to trade dollars with each other out of fear of falling foul of the regulator if the prices exceeded the expected range.
The country spends billions importing a wide variety of goods, including petroleum products, wheat, second-hand clothes, motor vehicles, vegetable oils and industrial machinery, whose costs are rising as the shilling weakens against the dollar.
Foreign investors have also been concerned about the increasing difficulty in accessing dollars in the Kenyan forex market, which makes it difficult for them to repatriate their sale proceeds and dividends offshore.
→ ekivuva@ke.nationmedia.com
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