RTRS:Kenya shilling dips on interbank dollar covering
NAIROBI, Feb 10 (Reuters) - The Kenyan shilling
fell 0.8 percent against the dollar on Friday, after heavy
interbank short covering of the U.S. currency, and the market
anticipated the central bank would intervene to defend the local
currency.
The bank has been draining excess liquidity this week,
absorbing 13.3 billion shillings ($159.8 million), which has
lent support to the local currency and in a bid to curb
double-digit inflation at 18.3 percent.
At 0715 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at
83.55/75 per dollar, weaker than Thursday's close of 83.40/60.
"Most players are sitting short, so they were covering their
(dollar) positions," Solomon Alubala, head of trading at
Cooperative Bank, said.
"Most players had been selling dollars to fund shilling
positions since it was expensive to stay long on dollars."
With the central bank's tight monetary policy, traders said
the high interest rates made it costly to fund shilling
positions, forcing many banks to trim long dollar positions.
A Commercial Bank of Africa report said interbank players
had led the pack on profit-taking after the local currency
traded near one-year highs in the previous session.
Traders said the central bank was expected to continue
mopping up excess liquidity in the market, following government
disbursements into various projects. The interbank weighted
average rate has also eased to 10.7 percent with 8.9 billion
borrowed among commercial banks on Thursday.
"Interbanks were aggressively buying dollars, but customers
were also selling at those (dollar) levels that is why it has
retraced," Dickson Magecha, a trader at Standard Chartered said.