Kenya’s gross domestic debt as at June financial year ends from 2000 to 2010 are:
Year – Billions (% growth)
2000 – 206 (+18.2%)
2001 – 212 (+2.8%)
2002 – 236 (+11.4%)
2003 – 289 (+22.6%)
2004 – 306 (+5.8%)
2005 – 315 (+2.7%)
2006 – 358 (+13.8%)
2007 – 405 (+13.1%)
2008 – 431 (+6.4%)
2009 – 518 (+20.4%)
2010 – 654 (+26.1%)
The focus in international markets has been on debt; the growth of Kenya’s domestic debt in 2010 has been phenomenal. The growth in the month of April has been especially high up 5.9% (36.5 billion) since March. The CBK decision to pursue an expansionary policy has meant they monetize the budget deficit by adjusting the monetary base (reserves). Below are example from the last six weeks that show CBK weekly injections and overnight lending.
Starting week – RRepo Injections (Overnight Window)
March 26 – 8.0 billion (5.476 billion)
April 01 – 10.5 billion (920 million)
April 09 – 7.8 billion (986 million)
April 16 – 12.8 billion (zero)
April 23 – 24.7 billion (584 million)
April 30 – 24.4 billion (222.5 million)
May 07 – 17.6 billion (280 million)
The oversubscription of Treasury auctions has been attributed to banks being too liquid-clearly the above figures show how much CBK is willing accommodate. Today’s reserve money at 177.2 billion is below CBK target, compare this to reserve money levels of 178.9 billion as at 31st March 2010-The funds raised by Treasury are not spent but accumulated. Q1 results from NIC Bank and KCB show huge investments in government securities (don’t have Equity results on me). KCB’s Q1 investment went up 47% (12b) in ‘10, while NIC’s was up 50% (2b) outperforming normal loan growth (we have already questioned credibility of household lending stats in other posts). It’s proved lucrative for banks, they receive support on value dates, NSE bond prices of certain 5 year papers are up 10% today since the end of 2009 while some of those 15 year bonds are up over 25%.
CBK may not have a bond auction in June, I’m guessing most emergencies are taken care of. Demand for T-bill will continue to be high, with funds being diverted to short term paper. Short term rates continue to fall, 91D trading at 4.498% today, cud possibly reach 3% in line with so-called inflation. Food inflation is down considerably, but the new CPI only covers the last 14 months so can’t compare food inflation to any stats b4 Feb 2009. Do we have a debt problem? Well domestic debt is up 31% y-o-y, GDP has to grow by 4.4% for debt to be productive at minimum & interest payments on domestic debt are already up 30%. To examine debt growth for yourself, read the CBK bulletin below:
http://www.centralbank.g...etin/2010/May/070510.pdf“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden