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RTRS: UPDATE 1-Kenyan shilling holds gains vs dollar, shares edge up
 
* Shilling targets 83.50 per dollar on exports
* Stocks edge above the 3,800 points support

(Adds markets close, stocks)
By Kevin Mwanza
NAIROBI, Aug 14 (Reuters) - The Kenyan shilling was
steady against the dollar on Tuesday, retaining the previous
day's gains, and was seen firming further on dollar inflows from
agricultural exporters.
On the stock market, Kenyan shares edged back above the
3,800 point support level.
At the 1300 GMT market close, commercial banks quoted the
shilling at 83.75/85 per dollar, unchanged from the close on
Monday when it strengthened by 0.3 percent on the day.
"We expect it to strengthen further on agricultural
exporters selling (dollars), mostly the tea guys," said John
Muli, a trader at African Banking Corporation. "83.50 is the
target now."
During Tuesday's session, the bank mopped up 3.5 billion
shillings via repurchase agreements, after it received bids
worth 4.9 billion shillings.
The east African nation is the world's biggest exporter of
black tea and the crop is one of its largest foreign exchange
earners, raking in $1.27 billion last year.
The shilling has gained 1.5 percent this year due to the
central bank's tight monetary policy stance and traders said the
bank was likely to keep draining shilling liquidity.
The bank has stepped up its open-market operations this year
to absorb persistently high levels of shillings due to debt
redemptions, adding longer-tenure repurchase agreements of up to
28 days to its range of policy options in June.
In stocks, the benchmark NSE-20 Share Index inched
up 0.2 percent to cross back over the 3,800 support level after
dipping below yesterday.
The index closed at 3,800.23 points as investors trickled
back into shares as yields dipped in the debt market.
"The fall we saw was a momentary blip on profit taking on
banks' stocks and Safaricom," said Samora Kariuki, an analyst at
NIC Securities.
"There is a lot of support on (the) macro economic
perspective with interest rates and inflation coming down. The
3,800 mark remains a key support level."
Standard Chartered Bank recovered its previous
session's loses, jumping 4.7 percent to 196 shillings a share,
while Safaricom, the country's leading telecom
provider and the most capitalised firm on the bourse, rose 1.3
percent to 3.80 shillings.
In the bond market, government and corporate bonds worth 1.7
billion shillings ($20.3 million) were traded, up from 1.3
billion shillings on Friday.
Source