RTRS:Kenya shilling slips vs dollar, euro zone woes weigh
NAIROBI, April 16 (Reuters) - The Kenyan shilling
weakened against the dollar on Monday as the greenback firmed on
global markets on the back of renewed euro zone worries, traders
said.
Market players said expectations that the dollar would gain
further against the European currency prompted some local
commercial banks to buy dollars in order to square off their
short positions, unnerved by a rise in global risk aversion.
Renewed concerns over the euro debt crisis, as Spanish
government bond yields rose above 6 percent for the first time
this year, eroded investor appetite for riskier assets, such as
the shilling, pushing them lower against the greenback.
"We've seen interbank demand for the dollar as people
squared positions because of the weaker outlook on the euro,"
Dickson Magecha, a trader at Standard Chartered Bank, said.
At 0724 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at
83.20/30 per dollar, slightly weaker than Friday's close of
83.10/20.
Traders said the shilling could, however, see support this
week if the central bank continued mopping up liquidity in a bid
to stabilise the interbank. Corporate VAT payments due later
this week rate might also lend support.
Those tax payments, though, may dampen banks' appetite to
take part in the repo market.
"The central bank might continue mopping up liquidity, but
the banks may not be keen on bidding because of tax payments by
corporates this week," a trader at one commercial bank said.
The Central Bank of Kenya soaked up a total of 31.1 billion
shillings ($373.6 million) in repurchase agreements over the
last five trading sessions, helping push the interbank rate up
to 13.8 percent on Friday from a low of 10.3 percent on April 5.