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Coffee, Capital Flows, and Credibility: Why Uganda’s Shilling Has Rallied for 14 Straight Months

Fredrick Siminyu by Fredrick Siminyu
August 19, 2025
in News
Coffee, Capital Flows, and Credibility: Why Uganda’s Shilling Has Rallied for 14 Straight Months
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For fourteen consecutive months, the Ugandan shilling has strengthened, and the Bank of Uganda says that rise reflects fundamentals—not a hidden hand in the market.

Governor Michael Atingi-Ego has been explicit that “the exchange rate is market-determined,” warning that propping up exporters would only fuel inflation and raise interest rates.

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He has also clarified that “our last sale-side intervention was in June 2022,” underscoring that the central bank has not been selling dollars to steer the shilling’s gains.

The story behind the currency’s rally begins on the farms and trading floors where coffee and cocoa prices surged, fattening export receipts and deepening foreign-currency supply

Coffee is the headline act, with official reports showing domestic prices and volumes rising on robust international demand and weather-related supply constraints in bigger producers.

Uganda’s coffee sector notched historic milestones in 2024–25, including record monthly exports and sharply higher unit prices that filtered through to the balance of payments.

External research and trade press further indicate Uganda briefly out-exported regional rival Ethiopia in 2025, reflecting both volume gains and a favorable price mix led by Robusta.

When export dollars rise while policy stays disciplined, a market-priced currency tends to strengthen—and that is the macro pairing BoU has sought to preserve.

The monetary backdrop has been deliberately steady, with the policy rate held as inflation drifts near target and headline CPI easing to 3.8% year-on-year in July 2025.

A stable inflation pulse gives investors confidence that currency gains are not a prelude to policy whiplash, which helps sustain offshore portfolio interest. BoU also credits foreign-exchange market reforms and improved microstructure for reducing frictions and allowing price discovery to reflect underlying flows more cleanly.

Another tailwind has been a softer U.S. dollar for parts of 2025, which mechanically supports frontier currencies with solid external receipts and credible policy anchors.

Uganda’s experience stands out in East Africa, where currency paths have diverged sharply on the same global currents.

Across the border, Kenya’s shilling staged a comeback through late 2024 and into 2025 on stronger remittances, improved reserves, and policy normalization, highlighting how credibility and flows can reset FX narratives.

Tanzania’s shilling, by contrast, has contended with year-on-year depreciation pressures through mid-2025 tied to import demand and dollar strength, despite intermittent stabilization.

Rwanda’s franc has also drifted weaker in 2025, with the central bank reporting a roughly 3–4% slide year-to-date by early August and IMF documents noting a near-10% fall in 2024.

Regional dispersion underscores a basic point: export momentum and policy clarity are the decisive differentiators in a tight global funding cycle.

In Uganda’s case, the coffee super-cycle is not the whole story, but it is a powerful one.

USDA’s May 2025 Coffee Annual shows Robusta at roughly 85% of output and forecasts production edging up again in MY 2025/26, while domestic price charts capture a leap to about \$4.64/kg in 2024/25

Those unit-price gains amplify each exported bag, magnifying FX inflows without requiring heroic volume growth in a single season.

On the policy side, keeping the exchange rate free of artificial props is a conscious choice to avoid importing inflation and choking credit via higher interest rates.

That stance also shields the BoU’s balance sheet from the costs of prolonged dollar sales, which can deplete reserves and invite speculative tests.

The near-term inflation profile has cooperated, with the statistics agency recording 3.8% headline inflation in July 2025 and core drifting close to the 5% medium-term objective.

A currency rally always has winners and worriers, and Uganda is no exception.

Importers of fuel, machinery, and consumer goods welcome a stronger unit that trims landed costs and dampens inflation pass-through.

Exporters of tradables face thinner shilling revenues unless productivity and pricing power offset the FX move, which is why the governor cautions against “supporting exporters artificially.”

Manufacturers tied into imported inputs often benefit on net because cheaper components can outweigh FX translation on final sales in the domestic market.

Households gain purchasing power on imported staples and manufactured goods, reinforcing disinflation and freeing disposable income for investment and savings.

Financial markets typically reward this mix with lower risk premia, encouraging portfolio flows that, when healthy, deepen liquidity rather than destabilize it.

The open question is durability, because the same price tailwinds that lifted coffee can ebb if Brazil and Vietnam deliver bumper harvests that cool global prices later in 2025.

Uganda’s policy shield against such swings is to double down on stability—keep inflation anchored, maintain credible communication, and let the FX market clear without panic.

Medium-term growth assumptions from multilateral institutions still look constructive, which would support a stable macro platform even if commodity prices retrace.

History offers context for why this moment matters, because the shilling has weathered painful bouts of weakness when inflation spiked and droughts or external shocks hit the trade account.

The difference today is the alignment of export receipts, prudent monetary policy, and cleaner FX market plumbing.

Regionally, Uganda’s outturn now sits between Kenya’s managed stabilization and Tanzania and Rwanda’s depreciation pressures, a reminder that East Africa is not a monolith in FX dynamics.

For policymakers, the practical takeaway is to resist quick fixes that trade short-term relief for long-term credibility.

For exporters, the path forward is productivity, hedging where feasible, and moving up the value chain to defend margins through cycles.

For households and small businesses, a firm shilling is a window to invest and deleverage while inflation is tame.

Ultimately, the central bank’s message is continuity: keep the currency market-led, protect the inflation anchor, and let fundamentals—not interventions—do the heavy lifting.

As Governor Atingi-Ego put it, “our focus is preserving stability without distorting fundamentals,” and that philosophy is writ large in the shilling’s 14-month run.

If coffee receipts stay buoyant, inflation stays in the low-to-mid single digits, and reforms keep squeezing out FX market frictions, Uganda’s currency will remain less a mystery and more a macro mirror.

And even if the commodity tide turns, a credible framework is the best hedge any frontier market can own.

 

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Fredrick Siminyu

Fredrick Siminyu

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