Business World

Term deposit yields decline on demand

- By Melissa Luz T. Lopez Senior Reporter

YIELDS FETCHED for term deposits declined this week amid strong demand, with banks willing to park more funds with the central bank even for longer periods.

Demand reached P119.08 billion during Wednesday’s auction, down from the P124.259 billion worth of bids received a week ago but still well above the P80 billion the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) wanted to sell.

All tenors remained oversubscr­ibed for the third straight week, with offers piling up under the month-long tenor. With the strong appetite, banks even asked for lower returns for their placements across the board.

The seven-day deposits fetched P66.002 billion in total demand, settling higher than the P50 billion on the auction block although lower than the P73.282 billion in offers received the previous week.

Market players asked for smaller yields from a narrow 4.68-4.7488% range to fetch a 4.7207% average, a tad lower than last week’s 4.7274%.

Tenders for the 14-day instrument­s also stood buoyant at P31.273 billion, slightly lower than last week’s P33.216 billion but still beyond the central bank’s P20-billion offer. Banks also tempered their requested returns, which drove the average lower to 4.765% from 4.7729% previously.

Meanwhile, appetite for the 28-day tenor improved to P21.805 billion compared to P17.761 billion the past week and more than double the P10 billion the BSP put up for this week’s exercise. The stronger demand also drove average returns lower to 4.8362% coming from 4.8549% during the Oct. 10 auction.

The term deposit facility (TDF) is the central bank’s primary tool to capture excess money supply in the financial system. The weekly auctions are meant to usher market and interbank rates to within the BSP’s desired range by setting the standard for short-term instrument­s using the margins that they pay to banks for these TDF placements.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines