Kenya has demonstrated relative macroeconomic stability in the wake of the US-Israel-Iran conflict, an outcome that is better explained by the strength of the country’s pre-shock positioning than by any structural immunity to external shocks. Moody’s upgrade of Kenya’s sovereign credit rating from Caa1 to B3 with a stable outlook in January 2026 was anchored on a meaningful improvement in the country’s external liquidity position specifically, a buildup in foreign exchange reserves and restored access to international capital markets. Those same factors have served as the primary buffers against the current shock.
The government’s Eurobond issuances over the preceding period achieved two objectives simultaneously: financing the fiscal deficit and extending the maturity profile of Kenya’s external obligations, thereby reducing near-term rollover risk. When the conflict erupted and global risk appetite contracted, Kenya entered the episode with a longer debt runway and a more credible external position than it had carried in prior years. International market yields on Kenyan paper have remained broadly consistent with the B3 rating, reflecting a market assessment that the fundamentals underlying the upgrade remain largely intact.
The fiscal position, however, warrants closer scrutiny. Revenue collections through May 2026 are tracking below projections, with the resulting shortfall expected to compress the base from which FY2026/27 targets will be set. The fiscal deficit is running marginally wider than anticipated, partly attributable to fuel-related expenditure measures and a softer growth outlook. Spending pressures are expected to intensify in the coming year, given the proximity of the electoral cycle and the elevated probability of weather or commodity-driven contingency expenditures. The political calculus around taxation has also shifted materially following the June 2024 civil unrest, narrowing the government’s room to pursue revenue-led consolidation. The adjustment path is therefore expected to be more gradual, relying on compliance and administrative improvements rather than new fiscal measures.
On the exchange rate, the shilling’s stability reflects a genuine improvement in external balances rather than reserve drawdowns or administrative intervention. The current account deficit has narrowed, and the recent uptick in inflation is attributable to external commodity price pressures rather than domestic demand or monetary conditions.
The central risk is that Kenya’s current resilience is cyclical rather than structural. The underlying fiscal vulnerabilities revenue underperformance, election-year expenditure pressure, and reliance on external financing remain unresolved. The country enters FY2026/27 with its buffers partially consumed and limited fiscal space to absorb further shocks. (Start your investment journey today with the cytonn MMF, call+2540709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com)














