Foreign investors accelerated their exit from the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in the second week of September even as the market delivered its strongest rally in more than a decade.
Foreigners recorded net outflows of KSh 527.3 million in Week 2 (Sept 8–12), after KSh 1.18 billion in Week 1 (Sept 1–5), bringing September outflows to KSh 1.7 billion.This has already erased August’s KSh 1.65 billion inflows—the highest monthly foreign buying in four years—and marks the heaviest foreign sell-off since July 2023 (–KSh 3.02B), excluding the December 2024 Bamburi-driven exit (–KSh 15.4B).The selling wave signals profit-taking by offshore funds despite sustained local-driven momentum.
Selling has been concentrated in large caps. Safaricom accounted for over half of foreign sales in Week 1 and remained dominant in Week 2. Banks including Equity, KCB, and DTB have also seen heavy churn.
For real time market updates and analysis, join our WhatsApp Channel.
Market Rally Broadens
Local investors have sustained strong buying, pushing the NSE 20 Share Index up 50.1% year-to-date, its best performance since 2003 (+101.5%).
The NSE All Share Index is up 44.7% — its best year since its 2008 inception, the NSE 10 has gained 36.4%, and the NSE 25 has climbed 36.0%, while market capitalization has expanded from KSh 1.94 trillion to KSh 2.82 trillion in 2025.
A record 11 NSE stocks have each more than doubled in 2025, highlighting the rally’s breadth.
Sameer Africa leads with 480%, followed by Home Afrika at 357% and Kenya Power at 199% (also up 914% since January 2024)
Only five stocks remain negative:
Umeme (–43.0%)NBV (–17.9%)Bamburi (–14.2%, suspended pending buyout)Limuru Tea (–11.4%)Nation Media (–4.2%).