Markets reward discipline long before they reward noise. In the first half of 2026, Mansa-X Special Fund delivered a performance profile that speaks to exactly that discipline: positive quarterly returns, a stronger second quarter, and a half-year run-rate that gives serious investors a reason to look more closely. The KES fund delivered a net return of 5.95% in Q2 2026, lifting H1 2026 performance to 10.97% net and translating into a compounded annualized net return of 23.15%. The USD fund delivered a net return of 3.56% in Q2 2026, lifting H1 2026 performance to 6.54% net and translating into a compounded annualized net return of 13.51%.
In plain language, the shilling strategy showed strong local-currency compounding, while the dollar strategy gave investors a hard-currency return profile that is difficult to ignore. That combination matters because investors are not all looking for the same thing. Some want to grow Kenya shilling capital with speed and discipline. Others want dollar exposure, purchasing-power protection, and a return profile that can sit beside global cash or near-cash alternatives. Mansa-X is speaking to both conversations at once.
The strongest investment stories are rarely built on one isolated spike. They are built on repeatability. The twelve-month quarterly data presented by SIB Global Markets shows the KES fund posting 5.09% in Q3 2025, 4.71% in Q4 2025, 4.74% in Q1 2026 and 5.95% in Q2 2026. The USD fund posted 3.52%, 3.24%, 2.88% and 3.56% over the same reported quarters. Every quarter shown remained positive. For investors, that is the part that deserves attention: the story is not merely that Q2 was strong, but that Q2 came after an already positive sequence.
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Figure 1: The quarterly line shows the KES fund stepping up sharply in Q2 2026, while the USD fund also rebounded from Q1. The key investor signal is consistency: all four reported quarters are positive.
What stands out in the line is the acceleration. The KES fund moved from 4.74% in Q1 2026 to 5.95% in Q2 2026, adding velocity to an already positive half-year. The USD fund moved from 2.88% to 3.56% over the same period. That matters because a strong H1 is more persuasive when the second quarter improves rather than fades. It tells investors that the period did not close on weakness; it closed with momentum.
To make the numbers easier to feel, imagine an indexed value of 100 at the beginning of Q3 2025 and then apply only the quarterly net returns shown on the performance cards. By the end of Q2 2026, the KES index would stand at about 122.11, while the USD index would stand at about 113.87. This is not a projection and it is not a promise. It is a visual translation of the published quarterly returns into the language investors understand best: compounding.
Figure 2: An indexed view turns the quarterly percentages into a simple capital path. Starting at 100, the published quarterly returns compound to 122.11 for KES and 113.87 for USD over the four quarters shown.
This is the core of the Mansa-X investment argument. A return is not just a number on a marketing card. When it is preserved and extended across time, it becomes a force. A 5.95% quarterly net return on the KES fund is powerful because it builds on prior positive quarters. A 3.56% quarterly net return on the USD fund is powerful because it adds to a hard-currency track record in a period when investors are increasingly alert to currency, inflation and liquidity risk.
The annualized numbers also need to be understood correctly. Annualization does not say the future is guaranteed. It simply converts the actual half-year performance into a full-year compounded run-rate. That is why the KES fund’s 10.97% actual H1 net return becomes 23.15% annualized, and the USD fund’s 6.54% actual H1 net return becomes 13.51% annualized. For a serious investor, the point is not blind excitement. The point is that the reported first-half performance has created a return conversation that deserves due diligence.
Figure 3: The chart separates actual H1 performance from the annualized run-rate. The KES fund delivered 10.97% net in six months, while the USD fund delivered 6.54% net in six months.
Even more importantly, the H1 2026 run-rate sits in a wider return context. The KES performance card shows a 3-year average net return of 19.67% and a 5-year average net return of 17.97%. Against that backdrop, the 23.15% annualized H1 2026 run-rate is not just a headline; it is above the published multi-year averages shown. On the USD side, the 13.51% annualized H1 2026 run-rate is also above the published 3-year average net return of 12.49%. This gives investors a more useful lens: the current half-year performance is strong, but it is also connected to a broader record presented by SIB Global Markets.
Figure 4: The KES annualized H1 2026 run-rate is above the published 3-year and 5-year averages; the USD annualized H1 2026 run-rate is above the published 3-year average.
For individuals, companies, SACCOs, family offices, diaspora investors and institutions holding idle cash, the message is direct: capital that sits still is not neutral. It is quietly tested by inflation, currency movement, opportunity cost and time. Mansa-X offers investors a regulated fund structure through which they can evaluate whether part of that capital should be put to work. The KES option speaks to investors who want local-currency growth with a strong reported H1 2026 profile. The USD option speaks to investors who want dollar-denominated exposure with a documented hard-currency return record.
That does not mean every investor should rush in emotionally. It means investors should ask sharper questions. What role should Mansa-X play in a diversified portfolio? How much liquidity does the investor need? What currency should the investor hold? What redemption terms, fees, risks and mandate details apply? Strong performance is the beginning of a serious conversation, not the end of it. The investor who treats performance as a due-diligence trigger, rather than a slogan, is the investor who allocates capital with maturity.
Mansa-X’s H1 2026 performance is therefore more than a fund update. It is a signal. It says that disciplined capital can still find growth. It says that both Kenya shilling and US dollar investors have a product worth studying. It says that in a market where many people complain about uncertainty, serious investors can still choose structure, process and compounding. In the end, wealth is rarely built by money that merely waits. It is built by capital that is placed deliberately, monitored carefully and allowed to work.
To invest in Mansa-X or learn more, visit https://sib.co.ke/mansa-x/
