Business World

Gov’t makes partial award of T-bills as rates rise

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THE GOVERNMENT made a partial award of the Treasury bills (T-bill) on offer yesterday, even with yields climbing across all tenors as investors await the possible rate hike by the local central bank following the faster-thanexpect­ed August inflation print.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised just P13.47 billion during the T-bills auction on Monday, falling short of the P15 billion it intended to borrow.

This, even as the offer remained oversubscr­ibed as total tenders amounted to P21.9 billion, lower than last week’s P27.5 billion.

Broken down, the government partially awarded the 91-day T-bills on offer, borrowing just P2.47 billion out of the P4 billion it wanted to raise. Total bids from banks reached P5.78 billion and the average rate picked up to 3.549%, 32.4 basis points (bps) higher than the 3.225% logged in the previous auction.

Meanwhile, the BTr awarded P5 billion as planned in the 182day debt papers versus tenders totaling P8.075 billion. The average yield ended 25.2 bps higher at 4.353% from last week’s 4.125%.

The Treasury also borrowed the programmed P6 billion via the 364-day T-bills, with demand reaching P8.051 billion. The papers were quoted at 5.137%, up 23.8 bps from the 4.899% booked the previous offer.

At the secondary market ahead of the auction yesterday, the three- and six-month papers were quoted at 4.2804% and 4.4054%, respective­ly, while the yield on the one-year T-bills was at 5.4179%.

At the close of trading, all tenors rallied to fetch lower rates. The 91-day papers yielded 3.5298%, the 182-day debt fetched 4.368% and the 364-day T-bills were quoted at 4.9662%.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said rates climbed across-theboard as the inflation figure triggered bets of another hike from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

“What do you expect? [Investors] are already saying that the BSP should be hiking by another 50 basis points,” Ms. De Leon told reporters following the auction.

The average rise in prices of widely used goods picked up to a nine-year high of 6.4% in August due to higher food and oil prices. This was faster than July’s 5.7% as well as the 2.6% tallied in the same month last year.

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