
Euro and pound gain as traders avoid US dollar
The shilling has depreciated by 2.34% and 2.4% against those currencies.
CBK Governor Kamau Thugge said the stability has strengthened because of diversified foreign exchange inflows.
In Summary
The Central Bank of Kenya has explained why the Kenyan shilling has continued to soar against the dollar.
CBK Governor Kamau Thugge said the stability has strengthened because of diversified foreign exchange inflows.
As of August 12, 2025, the Kenyan Shilling is being exchanged at 129 per US dollar according to the Central Bank of Kenya.
“The Kenyan shilling has remained stable, supported by diversified foreign exchange inflows from Diaspora remittances, offshore banks, coffee, and other export items. We expect this stability to continue into the near term,” Governor Thugge said during the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
Governor Thugge said findings from the July 2025 Market Perceptions Survey showed 77 per cent of bank respondents and 71 per cent of non-bank respondents expect the exchange rate to strengthen in the near term.
They believe that improved forex inflows, external support, and stronger investor sentiment driven by low inflation and stable macroeconomic conditions will help the shilling to continue stabilising.
“We took a market perception survey regarding the exchange rate and most respondents, 77 per cent of the banks and 71 per cent of non-bank respondents to the July 2025 survey, expect the exchange rates to remain stable or strengthen,” he said.
He further said that some respondents expect some pressure from increased imports, external debt service payments and volatile oil and commodity prices.
The Kenyan Shilling has continued to significantly gain against the dollar.
In 2024, the US dollar had risen from an average exchange rate of Sh125 against the shilling in the first quarter of 2023 to Sh162 posted in January 2024.
On January 15, 2024, the shilling officially crossed 160 unit points against the US dollar, the lowest level on record.
The Central Bank of Kenya blamed the depreciation of the shilling on the $2 billion (Sh300 billion) Eurobond.
The depreciation made imports more expensive while at the same time pushing up Kenya's debt.
However, the country successfully issued a new Eurobond worth $1.5 billion (Sh238 billion) to buy back the inaugural one due on June 24.
The shilling has depreciated by 2.34% and 2.4% against those currencies.