Connect with us

Kenya Today

Kenya’s Domestic Debt Marks a High of KSh 3.67 Trillion

Enterprise Team

Published

on

The Central Bank of Kenya

According to released data from the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), Kenya’s domestic debt rose to KSh 3.67 trillion as of 28th May 2021. This is compared to KSh 3.63 trillion as of 30th April 2021.

Treasury bonds increased to KSh 2.83 trillion from KSh 2.80 trillion.

Treasury bills rose to KSh 759 billion from KSh 747 billion on 30th April 2021.

Overdraft at the Central Bank fell to KSh60.17 billion at the end of May compared to KSh65.84 billion at the end of April this year.

An estimated 51.45% of the government domestic debt was held by Kenyan commercial banks, 30.59% by pension funds, 6.64% by insurance companies, 5.43% by state corporations, and 5.9% by other investors.

The number of foreign currency reserves held by the Central Bank rose for the first time in three weeks to $7.51 billion on 3rd June 2021 from $7.48 billion on 27th May 2021.

The reserves are adequate to provide 4.59 months of import cover, above CBK’s statutory requirement of at least 4 months of import cover.

According to CBK’s Weekly bulletin report, excess reserves held by commercial banks stood at KSh 15.4 billion at the end of last week. The average interbank rate, which is the rate of interest charged on short-term loans between Kenyan banks, dropped to 4.77% on 3rd June from 5.01% on 27th May.


By Joy Ngoiri

Kenyan Enterprise is Kenya's most incisive and informative platform to learn about business news, technology, markets, companies, startups, leadership advise, curated business and industry opinion, and affluent lifestyles.

Enterprise Magazine is Owned by The Carlstic Group Ltd. Copyright © 2016—2024. Site Developed and Maintained by Carlstic