Its hard to answer your question without having you define "securely" in a precise manner. Are you talking about security against other apps? Security against other users? Security against theft of device? Or security against loss?
In addition, what level of security are you talking about? Is the data being encrypted under the given key sensitive enough to warrant serious considerations about how the key can be stored?
To my understanding, if the data is of highly sensitive nature, you should derive the key directly from the password using a password-based key-derivation function such as PBKDF #2, Bcrypt or Scrypt. In this way, the key material needs not be stored on your device directly.
If you intend to store the master encrypting key for whatever reason, encrypt under the password key and store as a Base64 string under SharedPreferences with MODE_PRIVATE
to protect it against other apps. Even if the key was recovered by a malicious user/device theft, without the proper password key, the key material itself is useless.
If you wanted to protect the key against loss, you shouldn't store the key on the device but rather on your own server, again encrypted under the password key so that database compromise will not result in data compromise as well.
In all, I'd suggest you try not to store any sort of private key onto the device itself and instead used the password-derived key as your master key for all cryptographic operations. Leave the keystores for private-keys generated in public-key cryptography and known public key certificates.