Stanbic Bank Kenya launches a China trade platform with ICBC, enabling Yuan‐financing and forex hedging to boost exports into Asia and cut trade deficits.

Stanbic Kenya Launches Africa–China Trade Platform

Stanbic Bank Kenya launches a China trade platform with ICBC, enabling Yuan‐financing and forex hedging to boost exports into Asia and cut trade deficits.

Stanbic Bank Kenya has launched the Africa–China Trade Platform, a new digital solution designed to strengthen Kenya’s trade ties with China. The platform was unveiled during the Chinese Economic Forum in Nairobi, in collaboration with the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC)—the world’s largest bank by assets.

This platform offers Kenyan businesses:

  • Access to Chinese markets
  • Yuan-denominated loans
  • Foreign exchange risk management tools

“This platform is about real access—not just financial, but strategic—for African businesses looking to grow into China,” said Muya Guo, Head of the Chinese Segment at Stanbic Bank Kenya.


Why This Matters: Fixing the Trade Imbalance

China is Kenya’s biggest import partner, making up over 20% of imports in 2024. However, only 4% of Kenya’s exports go to China, highlighting a deep trade imbalance
(Kenya National Bureau of Statistics).

Stanbic hopes to fix this by offering tools that make exporting easier, safer, and faster.

🔗 Related: Why Kenya Needs More Value-Added Exports


A Strategic Move with Global Backing

Stanbic Bank is part of Standard Bank Group, which is 20% owned by ICBC. This gives it a powerful global trade network. Kenya’s growing digital finance sector and solid transport links make it the perfect launchpad.

“Yuan-based trade and real-time forex settlements are no longer optional—they are strategic necessities,” Guo added.

🔗 Learn more: How Standard Bank Supports Africa–China Trade


Protecting Businesses from Currency Shocks

With the Kenyan shilling down 8% in the past year, and interest rates expected to fall in late 2025, local businesses face rising risks.

The platform allows SMEs and mid-size firms to:

  • Lock in exchange rates
  • Use currency swaps and hedging tools
  • Get faster payments from Chinese buyers

“The demand is there—what was missing was trust and infrastructure. This platform delivers both,” said a senior banker at Stanbic Kenya.

🔗 Related: Kenya’s Forex Pressure and How Banks Are Responding


Policy Support and National Impact

In early 2025, the Central Bank of Kenya raised concerns over the growing trade deficit with China. It recommended more focus on value-added exports and finding new export markets.

Stanbic’s platform may help on both fronts—especially by giving Kenyan producers access to faster financing and stable payments.

“Finance alone isn’t enough,” says Faith Muendo, trade economist at Sterling Research. “Businesses must meet Chinese standards and improve logistics to succeed at scale.”

🔗 Explore: Africa–Asia Logistics Bottlenecks


Big Stakes in the Africa–China Trade Game

With Africa–China trade expected to hit $300 billion by 2026, banks that provide cross-border tools and financing are racing to lead.

“We are creating the pipes of trade,” said a source at Stanbic. “Whoever controls those pipes will shape the future of African exports.”

🔗 Explore: South–South Finance Trends in Africa


✅ Internal Links to Deepen Engagement

How Banks Are Helping SMEs Access Global Trade

Kenya–China Economic Forum 2025 Highlights

Value Addition in Kenyan Exports: The Missing Link

Digital Finance in Kenya: Trends and Innovations


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