NSE (Nairobi Securities Exchange) Market Activity hit by pause to breath this Tuesday after Monday’s broad-based rally. While most indices closed marginally lower, trading activity at the NSE strengthened significantly, suggesting that investor participation remains healthy rather than signalling a deterioration in market sentiment.
The NSE 20 Share Index was the only major index to finish in positive territory, reflecting continued resilience among select blue-chip counters despite broader profit-taking across the market.
Liquidity improved meaningfully, with 19.7 million shares changing hands, more than double yesterday’s volume, while market turnover rose sharply to KSh 647.6 million. This indicates that investors are still actively repositioning portfolios as the earnings season gathers momentum.
 NSE Gainers and Losing CountersÂ
The NSE top price gainer was East African Portland Cement(PORT), which rose 7.28% to KSh 99.50. It was followed by Britam which gained 7.12% to KSh 15.80; Kapchorua Tea which gained 6.48% to KSh 341.00; Unga whose share price increased 4.53% to KSh 28.85 and Standard Group Limited which gained 4.29% to KSh 6.32.
Top losers at the NSE this Tuesday were led by BOC Kenya whose share price declined by 4.58% to KSh 166.50 followed by Umeme which fell 2.97% to KSh 7.18, Bank of Kigali which fell 2.61% to KSh 56.00 and KCB which lost 1.84% to end the day at KSh 80.00.
Safaricom was the day’s top mover with a volume of 4,861,982 shares followed by KenGen which sold 2,593,708 shares, KCB with a volume of 2,464,530, Kenya Re Insurance Corporation with 1,476,648 and Kenya Power which moved a total of 1,356,894 shares.
BOC Kenya being top loser is particularly noteworthy. Following the extraordinary rally triggered by the withdrawal of the long-running takeover process, this Tuesday’s pullback appears consistent with profit-taking rather than a change in the company’s underlying fundamentals. Such retracements are common after sharp price appreciation.
BOC Kenya’s share price has more than doubled since the company walked away from its bid to acquire Carbacid Investments. Investors are rewarding the retreat, not the ambition. The market’s message is clear: capital preservation beat consolidation appetite this time around. When shareholders cheer a deal falling apart louder than they would have cheered it closing, what does that say about how the acquisition was priced in the first place
NSE Most Traded Counters
Safaricom remained the most actively traded counter by volume, with 4.9 million shares exchanged, reinforcing its role as the market’s primary liquidity anchor.
KCB Group led the market by value traded at KSh 197.3 million, highlighting continued institutional interest in the banking sector.
Market watchers maintain that the combination of higher trading volumes and only modest index declines paints a constructive picture.
Rather than broad-based selling pressure, the NSE appears to be rotating capital between counters as investors position ahead of corporate earnings announcements.
With the reporting season approaching, fundamentals are likely to become the primary driver of share price performance.
Investors, therefore, are advised to focus less on daily price fluctuations and more on companies capable of delivering sustainable earnings growth, resilient cash flows, and attractive shareholder returns.
The NSE may be taking a short pause—but the underlying investment narrative remains intact.
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