On a year-to-date basis, the shilling has depreciated by 3.1 percent against the dollar compared to the 3.6 percent depreciation recorded in 2021.
The increased demand from merchandise traders as they beef up their hard currency positions in anticipation of more trading partners reopening their economies globally will continue piling pressure on the local currency.
The Kenyan shilling depreciated by 0.2 percent against the US dollar to close the week at 116.7 shillings from 116.4 shillings recorded the previous week, partly attributable to increased dollar demand from the oil and energy sectors.
Key to note, this is the lowest the Kenyan shilling has ever depreciated against the dollar. On a year-to-date basis, the shilling has depreciated by 3.1 percent against the dollar compared to the 3.6 percent depreciation recorded in 2021.
Pressure on the shilling will come from the rising global crude oil prices on the back of supply constraints and geopolitical pressures at a time when demand is picking up with the easing of COVID-19 restrictions and as economies reopen.
The increased demand from merchandise traders as they beef up their hard currency positions in anticipation of more trading partners reopening their economies globally will continue piling pressure on the local currency.
An ever-present current account deficit due to an imbalance between imports and exports, with Kenya’s current account deficit, estimated to come in at 5.1 percent of GDP in the 12 months to April 2022 compared to the 4.8% for a similar period in 2021.
The wider deficit reflects a higher import bill, particularly for oil, which more than offset increased receipts from agricultural and services exports, and remittances will affect the shilling.
The aggressively growing government debt, with Kenya’s public debt, has increased at a 10-year CAGR of 18.6% to 8.2 trillion shillings in December 2021, from 1.5 trillion shillings in December 2011 thus putting pressure on forex reserves to service some of the public debt.
It is worth noting that the average GDP growth over the same period has been 3.9 percent, an indicator that the increase in debt is not translating into GDP growth.
The shilling is however expected to be supported by the High Forex reserves currently at USD 8.2 bn (equivalent to 4.9-months of import cover), which is above the statutory requirement of maintaining at least 4.0-months of import cover, and the EAC region’s convergence criteria of 4.5-months of import cover.
In addition, the reserves were boosted by the USD 750.0 mn World Bank loan facility received in March 2022 and are expected to be boosted further by the expected USD 244.0 mn from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The improving diaspora remittances are evidenced by an 18.6% y/y increase to USD 355.0 mn as of April 2022, from USD 299.3 mn recorded over the same period in 2021which has continued to cushion the shilling against further depreciation.
In the recently released April 2022 diaspora remittances figures, North America remained the largest source of remittances to Kenya accounting for 61.7 percent in the period, followed by Europe at 17.2 percent while the rest of the world accounted for 21.1 percent of the total.