RTRS:Kenya shilling gains vs dollar, policy meeting eyed
NAIROBI, Nov 1 (Reuters) - The Kenyan shilling gained
on Tuesday as banks sold dollars ahead of a rate-setting meeting
and after the IMF said it could release further funds to boost
the country's foreign exchange reserves.
The International Monetary Fund said late on Monday it has
provisionally approved an extra $250 million to top up Kenya's
$500 million Extended Credit Facility, meant to boost the
country's foreign exchange reserves to help tackle a widening
balance of payments gap.
At 0649 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at
99.10/50 against the dollar, stronger than Monday's close of
99.30/70.
"We saw the shilling move down because of what IMF said
yesterday. Central bank has been supporting (the shilling) all
along and we expect them to keep doing that," said a trader at
one commercial bank.
"We've seen better dollar inflows from corporate guys,
probably because of the high interest rates they are trying to
play cautious."
Kenya's central bank has been tightening shilling liquidity
in the market by mopping up the local currency through
repurchase agreements, while on the other hand supporting
greenback supply by selling dollars directly to commercial
banks.
Analysts also expect the central bank to raise the benchmark
lending rate at a monetary policy meeting later on
Tuesday by 100 basis points to 12 percent, in a further
tightening of monetary policy.
In the money market, the average interbank lending rate rose
to 21.7706 percent on Monday from 20.8507 percent on Friday, as
banks competed for the few shillings available in the market.
Traders said the shilling could gain further against the
dollar helped by reduced dollar demand by importers and the
tight shilling liquidity squeeze in the market.
"With end month now out of the way we expect the shilling to
continue applying pressure on the greenback," Bank of Africa
said in a daily report.
"Should Central Bank continue selling the dollar the
shilling should be in line to cross the resistance level at
99.00."