By Duncan Miriri
In January Kenya said the preliminary deal would give 98% of its exports duty-free access to the large Chinese market.
East Africa's biggest economy has been forging closer ties with China, with Ruto making a state visit to Beijing last year during which a number of financing and cooperation agreements were signed. The two countries' bilateral trade is currently heavily tilted in favour of China.
"We have this week finalised negotiations with the Government of the People's Republic of China on a bilateral trade agreement," Ruto told a conference aimed at attracting international investment.
Kenya is also a close ally of Washington and is negotiating a separate bilateral trade accord with the Trump administration.
Ruto has defended his administration's courting of China against criticism from some U.S. officials, saying Kenya has to export more goods to the huge Asian economy to close the trade gap.
Ruto said on Wednesday that the Kenyan economy had been resilient in the past year, with inflation and the shilling currency KES= stable.
Foreign direct investment exceeded $2 billion for the first time in 2025, up over 15% on the previous year, he added.
(Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Writing by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by Alexander Winning and Aidan Lewis)

Kenyan President William Ruto. (Photo: Maja Hitij / Getty Images)