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Saturday 24 May 2014

EAST AFRICAN CURRENCIES WEAKEN, UGANDAN SHILLING BEST PERFORMER

Bank of Uganda. The Ugandan shilling is the best performing unit among the region’s four major currencies.

IN SUMMARY

  • While all the currencies have been weakening, the Ugandan shilling has posted the least decline.
  • Ugandan shilling declined 0.2 per cent against the dollar compared with Rwanda’s one per cent.
  • Kenyan and Tanzanian units are the weakest performers losing 1.3 per cent and 2.7 per cent respectively in the wake of falling exports and concerns over insecurity.

All the regional currencies have faced pressure from the continued monetary easing by the US government, with Uganda’s central bank saying it was keeping an eye on the shilling.


The Ugandan shilling is the best performing among the region’s four major currencies since January, new data shows.
While all the currencies have been weakening, the Ugandan shilling has posted the least decline — only 0.2 per cent against the dollar — since January, compared with Rwanda’s one per cent.
The Kenyan and Tanzanian units are the weakest performers losing 1.3 per cent and 2.7 per cent respectively in the wake of falling exports and concerns over insecurity.
The Kenyan unit has come under pressure following a series of terrorist attacks in the country over the past three months, which have led to volatility in the currency and impacted on tourism, the country’s second leading export earner.
The Tanzanian unit has lost ground to the dollar, partly due to falling export earnings from gold and rising imports, especially of oil, that have widened the country’s current account deficit. The deficit widened by 35 per cent last year to stand at 17 per cent of GDP. Kenya’s current account deficit stands at 9 per cent.
“Given the overall macro-economic trends, the logical outcome points to further depreciation of the Kenyan shilling… we see it trading at Ksh89.5 at the end of this year and Ksh93.50 at the end of next year,” said David Cowan, the chief economist at Citibank.
Forex traders said the upcoming Eurobond issue will have an impact on the local currency, with investor attention increasingly turned towards the sovereign bond.
On Thursday, Kenya’s Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge told Bloomberg News that the country plans to sell its $2 billion inaugural Eurobond by mid-August, when its $600 million syndicated loan is scheduled to mature after it agreed to a three-month extension with lenders.
The Bank of Uganda (BoU) said that although it does not expect foreign investors to liquidate a substantial amount of the $400 million that they hold in government securities any time in the short-term, it would not hesitate to intervene should easing impact the local unit.
“Obviously, if this money were to exit the market all at once, it would put pressure on the exchange rate. However, with Uganda’s foreign exchange reserves of about $3.4 billion, BoU is in a good position to contain the exchange rate volatility associated with such an exit,” said BoU Deputy Governor Dr Louis Kasekende.
The US had over the past year bought back its government bonds, forcing yields to fall and pushing investors to scour emerging markets for better returns. The prospect of less easy monetary policy in the US comes at an awkward time for many countries in Africa.
One, slower economic growth in China has lowered the prices of  commodities like copper and gold, affecting their key export earners, which provide most of the foreign currency used to support their local units. For example, copper and gold prices are trading at four-year lows.

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