So would I; but the thrust of their positions always hedge against USD/KES depreciation, hence losing money should the contra happens.
Best practice by CFOs has moved from playing forex badly, to just running core business well while covering near term obligations. Hope KK are fully aligned.
guru267 wrote:muganda wrote:A little wary with the improving USD/KES exchange rate - today at 84.90; it always seems to catch KenolKobil, KQ, Total, a little flat footed.
I actually thought a strengthening USD/KES is good for oil importers??