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Markets

Kenyan shilling boosted after central bank intervention

Published December 30, 2014 Updated December 30, 2014 02:30pm

imageNAIROBI: Kenya's shilling strengthened in thin trade on Tuesday, helped by the central bank entering the market to mop up excess liquidity, traders said.

The shilling closed at 90.55/65 against the dollar, compared with Monday's close of 90.70/80 - its lowest level since Nov. 2011.

"We had the central bank coming in after staying out for almost two weeks, and this helped the shilling recover," a trader at a major Kenyan commercial bank said.

The shilling weakened before Christmas, due in part to dollar demand from importers and slowing tourism - a key source of hard currency inflows for east Africa's biggest economy - after a series of Islamist attacks in the country.

Traders said they forecast the shilling, which has lost 4.5 percent against the dollar so far this year, to trade in a 90.50 to 90.90 range in coming days.

"The market is quite thin. Most corporates have closed for the Christmas and end-of-year festivities," said Joshua Anene, a trader at the Commercial Bank of Africa. "Even a small swing on either side can move prices significantly."

On the Nairobi Securities Exchange, the main NSE-20 Share Index rose 0.83 percent to close at 5091.60 points.

On the debt market, government bonds worth 1.64 billion shillings were traded, up from 362.1 million shillings on Monday.

Copyright Reuters, 2014

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