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Good evening. It’s Brian from The Kenyan Wall Street.
These are our top financial stories today…
Kenya retains East Africa’s Banking Crown
By Harry Njuguna
Kenyan banks continue to dominate East Africa, but the latest global rankings tell a deeper story than regional bragging rights. Measured by Tier 1 capital, the core buffer that determines a bank’s ability to absorb losses, fund large projects and support future growth, three Kenyan lenders ranked among Africa’s 25 strongest. The results also highlight an increasingly competitive race between KCB and Equity, with only a narrow gap separating the country’s two banking giants and future rankings likely to depend on how quickly each builds capital. As regulation tightens and regional expansion becomes more capital-intensive, the strength of a bank’s balance sheet may prove more consequential than its annual profits.
Read the full story here >>>>>
Supermarkets win reprieve from NEMA’s Plastic Packaging rules
By Brian Nzomo
Kenyan supermarkets and retailers have won temporary relief from an environmental compliance regime that effectivelyrequired them to police the manufacturers supplying their shelves.The court found it unreasonable to expect retailers to verify whether thousands of products complied with complex Extended Producer Responsibility rules without access to NEMA’s promised compliance database or the legal authority to enforce those obligations. The ruling draws a clearer line between regulating producers and shifting that burden onto businesses further down the supply chain. The constitutional case ahead now turns on a broader question: where should environmental accountability end, and commercial responsibility begin?
OPINION : How Ethiopia is building Africa’s Newest Capital Markets
By Yesuf Hadji
Ethiopia’s fledgling capital market is designed to do far more than create a venue for buying and selling company shares. Its broader purpose is to redirect the country’s vast pool of savings away from state-directed lending and idle deposits toward businesses, infrastructure and private investment, fundamentally changing how economic growth is financed. That ambition is being pursued alongside sweeping macroeconomic reforms, from floating the birr to rebuilding public finances, in an effort to create the stability investors demand. The exchange may be new, but the larger experiment is whether market finance can gradually replace the state as the engine of capital allocation.
Read the full article here >>>>>
Happening Next Week…
On Wednesday, July 22, founder & CEO of Dubai-based ‘TwentySix Estates’, Ayman Al Suvaidi will join Andrew W. Barden, CEO of The Kenyan Wall Street, to discuss what Kenyan investors need to know before entering one of the world’s fastest-growing property markets.
📅 – Wednesday, July 22, 2026
🎥 – Live on LinkedIn, X, YouTube & Facebook
🔗 Register your attendance here »»»»»
REGULATION : Competition Watchdog Flags Predatory Lending in Digital Credit Market
Rapid innovation in Kenya’s digital credit sector has widened access but also created fertile ground for opaque pricing and aggressive recovery tactics.
CAPITAL MARKETS : CBK Reopens 20 and 25-Year Bonds in Second FY2026/27 Auction
CBK offers KSh 40Bn across reopened 20 and 25-year bonds on July 22, skipping the 10-year tranche that drew 71.9% of bids in FY2026/27’s opening auction.
INSIGHT : Kenya’s Wealthy Cautious of Residential Real Estate Market
Wealth managers attribute the subdued buying appetite among high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) to persistent structural challenges in Kenya’s housing market.
What You Should Watch!
Coming Soon
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