The Guardian (Nigeria)

Debt instrument­s soar as value of TBS rises by 579% in one month

- By Helen Oji

AS the hawkish tone of the Monetary Policy Committee ( MPC) continues to worsen risk sentiments in the local bourse, the scramble for government debt instrument­s is currently pushing yield to unpreceden­ted heights across segments.

Following the Central Bank of Nigeria's ( CBN) decision to raise the benchmark interest rate by 200 basis points ( bps) to 24.75 per cent, investors are reallocati­ng funds to the fixedincom­e market.

The recent rate hike marked the second consecutiv­e policy action by the reconstitu­ted MPC.

The rate hike is a monetary policy tool to tackle naira depreciati­on and pull excess money supply from the system and curb inflation.

Operators said the decision would further influence high participat­ion in sovereign instrument­s and trigger foreign investors’ interest in the domestic fixed- income market, as they seek higher rates on risk- free instrument­s.

They also anticipate­d an increase in banks’ activities in the fixed- income space, especially in the treasury bills market, noting this may support the case for higher participat­ion, demand and rates on government debt instrument­s.

Last week, average yield across all instrument­s contracted by six bps to 17.9 per cent due to higher demand as investors looked to cover for lost bids at the Nigerian treasury bill ( NTB) Primary Market Auction ( PMA) NTB PMA on Wednesday. Across market segments, the average yield dipped by 4bps and 6bps to 17.7 per cent and 18.5 per cent in the NTB and OMO secondary markets, respective­ly.

At the primary auction, the CBN offered instrument­s worth N161.33 billion – N17.61 billion of the 91- day, N1.56 billion of the 182- day, and N142.16 billion of the 364- day bills.

Demand was at the highest level on record at a total subscripti­on of N2.62 trillion ( bid- to- offer: 16.2x) with more interest on the longer- dated bill ( N2.48 trillion | 94.8 per cent of the total subscripti­on).

Eventually, the CBN over- allotted bills worth N1.19 trillion – N29.83 billion for the 91- day, N25.56 billion for the 182- day, and N1.13 trillion for the 364- day – at respective stop rates of 16.24 per cent ( unchanged), 17.00 per cent ( unchanged), and 21.12 per cent ( unchanged). Also, the value of treasury bills sold last month soared significan­tly, as the Debt Management ( DMO) sold treasury bills valued at ₦ 2,589.35 billion across its auctions in February 2024, representi­ng an increase of 579.23 per cent (₦ 2,208.13 billion) on the value of T- bills sold across its auctions in January 2024 (₦ 381.22 billion).

Similarly, the DMO sold FGN bonds worth ₦ 1,494.9 1 billion via new issuance of one seven- year and one 10- year FGN Bond in February 2024.

The total sale represents a 40.20 per cent under subscripti­on of the amount offered and a 275.46 per cent (₦ 1.08 trillion) MOM increase on the amount sold in January 2024 (₦ 418.20 billion) across three ( 3) 10- year and one ( 1) 15- year FGN Bond maturities.

In the primary market segment, ₦ 1.008 trillion worth of OMO bills were sold across its auctions in January 2024.

In the fixed income ( FI) market, a turnover of ₦ 10.71 trillion, representi­ng a MOM increase of 48.99 per cent (₦ 3.52 trillion) was recorded, from a turnover of ₦ 7.19 trillion recorded in January 2024.

The uptick in the FI market turnover was jointly driven by the 113.98 per cent (₦ 2.24 trillion), 59.44 per cent (₦ 1.36 trillion), and 154.09 per cent (₦ 0.05 trillion) increase in turnover across treasury bills and other bonds.

Head Equity, Planet Capital, Dr Paul Uzum, said the rise in yields across fixed- income instrument­s is natural, noting that whenever the anchor interest rate ( MPR) goes up, yields on all fixed- income instrument­s will rise as well.

“This means that prices of such existing bonds and bills will continue to fall. The bad news for investors who cannot hold such financial instrument­s to maturity as they will incur losses on their principal if they should sell. So, it is a bad time for portfolio managers who locked their funds in long- term bonds at 14per cent, when you now see t- bills offering 27 per cent yield to maturity,” he said.

Analysts at Vetiva Capital Management Limited said: “Our empirical analysis revealed that a unit increase in the standing deposit facility rate has a positive and significan­t impact on the average treasury bills rate.”

Cordros Capital said: “We expect the aversion to long- dated instrument­s to persist due to near- term expectatio­ns of a further moderate increase in interest rates. Thus, we recommend that investors stay at the short end of the yield curve rather than hold long- dated bonds.

“Furthermor­e, considerin­g our expectatio­ns of continued interest rate increases, we advise investors to exercise caution when considerin­g investment­s in long- duration instrument­s as they may not adequately compensate investors for the risks associated with rising interest.

"Following our expectatio­n of a possible lower liquidity in the system next week, we envisage moderation in demand for instrument­s in the T- bills secondary market and, thus, increased yields".

 ?? PHOTO: SUNDAY AKINLOLU ?? Group Head, Marketing and Communicat­ions, Access Bank, Toyin Henry – Ajayi ( left); Chief Executive Officer, Remitplus, Emeka Madu; Group Head, Consumer Banking, Access Bank, Njideka Esomeju and Head, Digital Channels, Oluremi Tinuola- Gabriel during the launch of 901connect in Lagos.
PHOTO: SUNDAY AKINLOLU Group Head, Marketing and Communicat­ions, Access Bank, Toyin Henry – Ajayi ( left); Chief Executive Officer, Remitplus, Emeka Madu; Group Head, Consumer Banking, Access Bank, Njideka Esomeju and Head, Digital Channels, Oluremi Tinuola- Gabriel during the launch of 901connect in Lagos.

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