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Inflation and Treasury Bill Yields in Kenya: Why Rising Prices Could Raise Government Borrowing Costs

Ryan Macharia by Ryan Macharia
May 22, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

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Kenya’s recent inflationary pressures are increasingly emerging as a key driver of Treasury bill yield movements, signaling a possible reversal of the sustained decline in short-term government borrowing costs witnessed over the past year. The relationship is particularly important because inflation directly affects investor real returns, monetary policy expectations, and the pricing of government securities.

 

Kenya’s headline inflation rose to 5.6% in April 2026, moving above the Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) 5.0% midpoint target for the first time since the easing cycle began, largely driven by higher fuel and transport costs linked to external energy price pressures. A rise in inflation reduces the real return earned by investors in fixed-income instruments, forcing investors to demand higher nominal yields as compensation for eroding purchasing power.

This dynamic appears to be reflected in the latest Treasury bill auction results, where yields posted mixed but upward-biased movements. The 91-day paper recorded the sharpest increase, rising by 6.9 basis points to 8.6% from 8.3% during the week, while the 364-day paper rose by 2.5 basis points to 8.59% from 8.56%. The 182-day paper remained relatively unchanged at 8.2%, declining marginally by 0.1 basis points. The rise in short-end yields suggests that investors are increasingly repricing inflation risk, particularly in shorter tenors that tend to respond faster to monetary policy expectations.

The recent repricing is also consistent with CBK’s shift to a more cautious monetary stance after pausing its aggressive easing cycle, having cut the Central Bank Rate significantly over the past year. During the easing period, Treasury bill yields declined sharply as investors priced in lower interest rates. However, rising inflation reduces room for further policy easing and may force the market to adjust upward in anticipation of tighter liquidity conditions or delayed rate cuts.

For the government, higher Treasury bill yields translate into increased domestic borrowing costs, raising interest expenses on short-term debt rollovers. For investors, however, rising yields improve nominal returns, although the real attractiveness of these instruments will ultimately depend on whether yield growth outpaces inflation. If inflationary pressures persist, Kenya’s Treasury bill market could enter a gradual repricing cycle, reversing the low-yield environment that has characterized much of 2026.

Start your investment journey today with the Cytonn Money Market Fund. Call + 254 (0)709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com

 

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