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Kenya's Shilling Hits Lowest Level in Almost Two Years

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Nyakundi Report

Newsroom 1 min read

This archive report was first published on 25 July 2019.

On July 25, 2019, Kenya's shilling hit its lowest level in almost two years, trading at 104.05/20 per dollar. This significant drop was attributed to the uncertainty caused by the announcement that Finance Minister Henry Rotich would be charged with financial misconduct.

According to traders, the shilling has lost 0.8 percent since the charges were announced. President Uhuru Kenyatta appointed Labour Minister Ukur Yatani as acting finance minister on Wednesday, a day after Rotich was charged with corruption.

Traders pointed out that banks had built up their dollar positions due to worries that the vacuum at the finance ministry could lead to further weakening of the currency. "This has been driven by forwards, banks and clients are holding long dollar positions seeing the shilling could weaken further, so they are covering for their future demands," said a senior currency trader at a commercial bank.

The charges against Rotich had also fuelled concerns that foreign investors could shun Kenyan assets, said a second trader. "It has affected the Eurobond yields and the whole perception, image of the country in the international arena...some investments must have been held back," said the second trader.

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