Kenya's trade landscape in Q3 2025 reveals a puzzling disconnect. Total trade volume climbed to KSh 1,014.4B from KSh 957.3B year-over-year—solid growth on paper. Yet here's the catch: money isn't staying put. The current account deficit nearly tripled, ballooning from KSh 43.5B to KSh 135.3B in the same period.
What's happening? Despite higher trade activity, capital is flowing out faster than it's coming in. This widening gap signals that Kenya's import bills are outpacing export revenues, or foreign investors are pulling back. For emerging markets watching this pattern, it's a reminder that headline trade numbers can mask underlying structural imbalances. When deficits widen this sharply, it often forces policy recalibration—affecting everything from currency stability to asset allocation strategies across the region.
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Kenya's trade landscape in Q3 2025 reveals a puzzling disconnect. Total trade volume climbed to KSh 1,014.4B from KSh 957.3B year-over-year—solid growth on paper. Yet here's the catch: money isn't staying put. The current account deficit nearly tripled, ballooning from KSh 43.5B to KSh 135.3B in the same period.
What's happening? Despite higher trade activity, capital is flowing out faster than it's coming in. This widening gap signals that Kenya's import bills are outpacing export revenues, or foreign investors are pulling back. For emerging markets watching this pattern, it's a reminder that headline trade numbers can mask underlying structural imbalances. When deficits widen this sharply, it often forces policy recalibration—affecting everything from currency stability to asset allocation strategies across the region.