Development
Kenya Close To Agreeing Sh194 Billion Budget Support Loan From UAE, At 8.2pc Interest Rate
(Reuters)-Kenya’s government is close to agreeing a $1.5 billion (Approx KES194 billion) loan from the United Arab Emirates with an interest rate of 8.2% which will help bridge the East African nation’s financing gap, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.
“Kenya is diversifying its sources of budget support,” said the source, adding the “deal is as good as done.”
The UAE ministry of finance and the UAE central bank did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Kenya’s Finance Minister John Mbadi and other senior officials at the ministry were not immediately available for comment.
The country’s dollar bonds rallied after the news, with the 2048 maturity rising by as much as 1.89 cents to trade at 84.3 cents on the dollar, Tradeweb data showed.
The government has been struggling to find new sources of financing after deadly protests forced President William Ruto to discard planned tax hikes worth more than 346 billion shillings ($2.7 billion) in June.
A delay in funding from the International Monetary Fund has aggravated the situation.
Kenya is now expecting its overall budget deficit to widen to 4.3% of GDP this financial year, compared with 3.3% under the original, pre-protest budget.
Nairobi has had to pay a high price for the financial support it has received. In February Kenya issued a $1.5 billion Eurobond to help it manage maturities, but it paid a steep 10.375% yield for the seven-year bond.
Bloomberg reported earlier on Wednesday that Kenya was in talks on a loan deal with Abu Dhabi.
Under President Ruto, who took over in September 2022, Kenya has forged closer ties with the UAE.
The UAE’s Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) and Emirates National Oil Company were among three Gulf firms Ruto’s government picked last year to supply Kenya with oil on longer credit terms, in a shift from an open tender system.
The UAE provided Ethiopia with $1 billion in 2018 to help with a severe hard currency cash crunch, and the central banks of both sides announced an $817 million swap line in July.
The UAE also signed a deal with Egypt earlier this year to develop a prime stretch of its Mediterranean coast that was expected to bring $35 billion of investments into the Egyptian economy.
Kenya Insights allows guest blogging, if you want to be published on Kenya’s most authoritative and accurate blog, have an expose, news TIPS, story angles, human interest stories, drop us an email on [email protected] or via Telegram
-
News2 days agoBusinessman Philip Waithaka Kinuthia’s Minor Son Allegedly Drove Drunk, Killed Two Peponi Students in Ngong Road Horror Crash as Claims of Cover-Up Intensify
-
Business1 week agoInside NCBA’s Decline: How a Banking Giant Lost Its Strategic Edge
-
Investigations2 weeks agoCement, Cash and Courts: How the Hashu Dynasty Crushed the Ramji Brothers for Fourteen Years and Why the Walls Are Now Closing In
-
Business7 days agoStandard Chartered Ghosts Haunt Joshua Oigara At Stanbic As Whistleblower Spills Beans
-
Investigations2 weeks agoInside The Urban Planning Cartel That Owns Nairobi
-
Africa5 days agoSouth Sudan: Adut Salva Kiir’s Shadow Treasury Exposed
-
Business6 days agoWhy John Ngumi Is Running From the EACC and Why the Sh415 Million Payday May Be the Least of His Worries
-
Africa6 days agoThe President’s Daughter and The Missing Witness: How Adut Salva Kiir’s Shadow Treasury Silenced Its Most Dangerous Critic
