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Home»Mutual Funds»Why Kenya’s MMF boom is no bubble
Mutual Funds

Why Kenya’s MMF boom is no bubble

By CharlotteJune 22, 20264 Mins Read
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There is a long-running debate on TikTok and other social media platforms about the massive growth of Money Market Funds (MMFs) in Kenya in recent years. On one hand are those who attribute this growth to the higher yields that MMFs offer when compared to ordinary bank savings accounts and deposits.

On the other hand, some are convinced that the massive growth of MMFs is a bubble that may burst.

Reality is, awareness of MMFs and investment options has grown tremendously across the country, especially after the Covid-19 pandemic, when people realised the need to increase their savings and investments.

Financial influencers on platforms such as X and TikTok have made investment knowledge accessible. As a result, retail investors have flocked to these funds, making them one of the leading short-term savings options for retail investors, especially Gen Z and millennials.

According to the Capital Markets Authority’s Collective Investment Schemes Quarterly Report for the period ended March 31, 2026, MMFs manage over Sh442 billion, representing approximately 52 percent of the Collective Investment Scheme (CIS) market. This is a significant rise from Sh56.5 billion in assets under management in 2019.

Such a rapid growth rate has understandably raised questions about the sustainability of the pace of inflows. A closer look suggests that MMF growth may eventually moderate as the majority of investors house their savings in MMFs. Then, shift some of their savings toward other CISs as they seek higher returns or diversification.

First, the massive capital inflow into MMFs has been driven by retail digitisation, improved financial literacy and structural shifts away from traditional bank savings accounts and deposits. Digital platforms have made onboarding easier and faster, lowered the entry barriers, allowing more Kenyans to start investing with ease through mobile phones and online channels.

Second, there is a growing public appetite for products that combine liquidity, stability, and yield returns.

For many investors, MMFs function like a current account, but one that earns interest.

You deposit money, it earns interest, and you can usually access it within two to three days to address an emergency. Innovative industry players have gone further by providing customers with real-time withdrawals and easier visibility of returns through the USSD platform and mobile App.

Third, distribution models have also played a major role. Today, insurance agents, financial advisers, digital platforms, and even content creators have become important intermediaries in explaining CISs such as MMFs to Kenyans in a simple and accessible format. What was once seen as a complex investment product is now part of everyday financial conversations, helping to democratise a product that was once viewed as inaccessible for investors with lower investment amounts.

Liquidity of the MMFs is based on their investments in relatively stable, liquid and short-term instruments such as Treasury bills, bank deposits, government securities and selected corporate instruments. This structure is designed to preserve capital, provide liquidity, and generate steady income.

Calling the phenomenal growth of MMFs a bubble may be misleading. A bubble normally involves speculative buying, inflated asset prices, and a rush into products whose prices are detached from their real value. MMFs are different. They are not built on hype around future prices. They are pooled funds invested in income-generating instruments, short-term, highly liquid and stable.

These funds are among the lower-risk investment options available to retail investors. They are diversified across several instruments, regulated by the Capital Markets Authority and structured with checks and balances involving fund managers, trustees and custodians.

Plus, they are incorporated as Trusts with Trustees looking after the investors’ interests. While this does not entirely eliminate risks, the governance framework makes MMF very different from speculative investments that are more susceptible to market and governance risks.

MMFs have also generally delivered stronger yields with net annual returns often ranging between 7.5 percent and 10.6 percent over the last few years. In an environment where Kenyans are looking for ways to protect the value of their money, such returns are naturally attractive.

So, will the growth of MMFs flatten? Possibly. As awareness increases, the pace of growth may moderate. Some investors may eventually move into fixed-income funds, pension products, equities or other long-term investment vehicles depending on their goals and risk appetite. That is an expected market development. It is market maturity.

Kenya’s money market fund growth is not about a new investment trend. It is about savers discovering a regulated, liquid and relatively low-risk way to grow their money.



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