- Details
- Category: Diaspora News
- Written by Kim

The shilling rose against the dollar on Friday due to subdued demand and tight market liquidity.
Commercial banks quoted the shilling at 83.90 after gaining from 84.20 at the opening of trade on Friday morning.
The shilling had lost to trade at 84.20 from 83.85 on Thursday evening after the energy sector and manufacturing took advantage of favourable rates to buy dollars.
Traders said that the shilling could gain if the tightening of market liquidity continues.
"There is no sufficient demand to weaken the shilling given the prevailing high interest rates," said Kennedy Butiko, the head of trading at Bank of Africa.
The Central Bank has kept of out of the market in the better part of this week after persistent interventions in the previous weeks.
The average interbank rates increased to 23 per cent from 22 per cent the previous weak.
The current congestion problems at the port of Mombasa is reportedly hampering tea exports delaying foreign exchange earnings that expected to provide support for the shilling.
The Central Bank is banking on a strong shilling to contain inflation and eventually provide room to lower interest rates.
The CBK left its base lending rates at 18 per cent after inflation figures dropped by a small margin from 18.72 per cent to 18.31 due to a slight reduction in oil prices.
The onset of a dry spell is also expected to add another dimension to inflation as vegetable and milk prices start to rise increasing food inflation.
High returns on government paper are also expected to attract dollars that could help to put the shilling on the gaining path.
Nation Newspaper
-
Slap-stick farces, frivolous, escapist entertainment?
Asking whether there has been resurgence in Kenyan theatre in the last few years (or even months)
-
AP officer shoots woman, kills self in Embakasi
An Administration Police officer on Thursday night shot a woman before turning the gun on himself in a domestic brawl
-
Family mourns children killed by power line
A brother and a sister have been electrocuted as they waded a pool of water in Kisauni, Mombasa
Standard Newspaper
Topix
-
Catholic bishops body holds strategy workshop in Nairobi
The workshop agenda will discuss communication strategies for the implementation of the Papal exhortation document known as Africae Munus at regional and national level.
-
At G8 summit, US taps into Africa's 'cheetah generation'
For the G8 summit, Obama unveils a promise by private firms to invest $3 billion in raising Africa's farm productivity.
-
Kenya's 2012 tourism earnings to dip on euro crisis, attacks
While this may be good news for Europeans seeking escape from economic storms at home, it is bad news for Suresh Sofat's tour firm and other Kenyans hoping to cash in on hard currency earnings - especially after 2011 was year of plenty for them.






