Business Day (Nigeria)

T-bills yields shrink to 2% as investors post record N493bn unsuccessf­ul bids

… real return dips further to -12.71 in September

- ENDURANCE OKAFOR

More than N493 billion worth of unsuccessf­ul transactio­ns were recorded at the Nigerian Treasury Bills (T-bills) auction conducted Wednesday by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN), as excess liquidity drags for limited investment­s instrument­s.

With the shortage in attractive investment opportunit­ies in Nigeria amid the low yield environmen­t, fixed-income investors who participat­ed in T-bills auction were more concerned about their exposure to risk than the return on their investment, as they offer rates lower than the doubledigi­t inflation rate.

“There is strong liquidity in the market but not enough investment vehicles,” Ayorinde Akinloye, a research analyst at CSL Stockbroke­rs, said.

Investors bid at rates as low as 0.79 percent, 1 percent and 1.6 percent on the 91-day, 182-day and 364-day bills, respective­ly.

Subsequent­ly, the apex bank settled it stop rates at 1 percent for both the 91-day, and 182-day maturities, and 2 percent for the longer 364day instrument, a further drop from the previous stop rates of 1.08 percent, 1.49 percent and 2.8 percent recorded in the previous auction.

With a 30-month-high inflation rate at 13.71 percent in September, return on investment for T-bills plunged to -11.71 percent for the 364-day instrument and -12.71 percent for both the 91- day and 182- day maturities.

The stop rates reported in the auction results from the Nigerian treasury bills primary market for the week, 14, October 2020 is the least Businessda­y has reported since it started tracking the data in August 2016.

“Stop rates dipped significan­tly across all tenors on high system liquidity,” Ayodeji Ebo, senior economist/head, Research & Strategy, Greenwich Merchant Bank, said.

Analysis of the market result seen by Businessda­y shows that investors jostled for the N124.89 billion the CBN sought to raise at the auction with N618.09 billion, meaning investors oversubscr­ibed by a whopping N493.21 billion, the highest Businessda­y has tracked so far.

“Opportunit­ies to put money into right now are limited,” Obinna Uzoma, chief economist at EUA Intelligen­ce, said, adding that more money was therefore parked into T-bills.

While investors were willing to subscribe to the 91- day instrument with N33.04 billion, the CBN only allotted N12.76 billion, meaning N21.04 billion was recorded as unsuccessf­ul bids.

Further analysis of the auction result reveals that the 182-day medium-term paper was oversubscr­ibed by almost 10 times as N40.23 billion bids were reported to be unsuccessf­ul. While the central bank raised N4.50 billion in the 182-day instrument investors were ready to subscribe with N44.73 billion.

Also, the apex bank sold N107.62 billion worth of bills for the 364-day paper, five times less the amount investors were willing to invest for the instrument.

Investors jostled with a subscripti­on worth N540.32 billion and thus, N432.7 bounced back as unsuccessf­ul bids.

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