Money Markets
Shilling hits new low amid fresh political wrangles
The Shilling’s liquidity makes the currency more vulnerable to the shocks in the global financial markets. Photo/FREDRICK ONYANGO
Posted Wednesday, February 17 2010 at 00:00
The gradual recovery of the key sectors that are the source of dollar inflows is expected to hold the Kenya shilling steady despite recent political developments that have rattled the local currency.
The shilling on Tuesday touched an eight-month low against the US dollar but later recouped some losses, sparking concerns that unfolding events in the political arena could lead to a repeat of the wild currency swings last seen in early 2008.
In early morning trades commercial banks quoted the shilling at Sh77.50-70 to the dollar, compared with Monday’s close of Sh77.40-50 and Sh77.75-95, its weakest since June last year.
Currency dealers say that strong fundamentals that were virtually absent in the heady days following the post-election turmoil are evident as the Kenyan economy recovers.
The steady revival of Kenya’s tourism industry, resurgent global prices for tea and coffee and the resumption of demand for Kenya’s horticultural products in the EU stand to form a soft landing cushion for the Shilling.
“If we’re going by Kenyan politics, then there will always be some sort of noise. This never changes,” says Dickson Magecha, a member of the governing committee of the Financial Markets Association.
Still, political uncertainty remains a chink in the Kenyan economy’s armour with foreign investors quick to unwind their investment positions in East Africa’s largest economy leading to wild swings in the currency.
The Kenyan shilling is the second most liquid currency in Africa after the South African rand. Kenya also boasts of the having among the most developed stock and capital markets in the region.
The shilling’s fall however shows just how fragile business sentiment in the country is and highlights the heavy bearing political risk has on the country’s economic trajectory.
Vulnerable to shocks
The recent spat between President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga over the suspension of two Cabinet ministers is the latest in a series of cracks witnessed within the grand coalition government.
“After the movements in 2007 and onto 2008, currency traders have been more averse,” says Mr Magecha.
The Kenya Shilling’s liquidity makes the currency more vulnerable to the shocks in the global financial markets.
According to Chris Muiga a senior dealer at KCB Bank, a 30 per cent depreciation in the value of the Kenya shilling back in 2008 could be attributed to a combination of offshore players exiting short US dollar positions after the Safaricom initial public offering coupled with a flight to safety by the same offshore players due to the global economic crisis.
While Kenya remains a net importer of oil, industrial machinery and vehicles – which would favour a strong Shilling, a weak currency means a higher value of earnings for exporters.




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