Business World

Rates of Treasury bills, bonds to rise as inflation hits fresh peak

- Beatrice M. Laforga

YIELDS ON government securities on offer this week will likely continue rising after February inflation hit a 26-month high.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) wants to borrow P20 billion via the Treasury bills (T-bills) on Monday: P5 billion each from the 91- and 182-day debt papers and P10 billion via the 364-day instrument­s.

On Tuesday, the BTr will auction off P30 billion in reissued 10year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) with a remaining life of six years and one month.

The rates of the T-bills will likely inch up by up to five basis points (bps) at this week’s auction, Security Bank Corp.’s Chief Investment Officer for Trust and Asset Management Group Noel S. Reyes said, while a bond trader expects the short-term papers’ yields to rise by as much as 10 bps.

“Market is still fixated on inflation given rising oil and commoditie­s prices,” Mr. Reyes said via Viber on Saturday.

Consumer prices rose faster for a fifth straight month to a 26-month high in February as food prices continued to surge, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Friday.

Preliminar­y data from the PSA showed headline inflation at 4.7% last month, picking up from 4.2% in January 2021 and 2.6% in February 2020. The February inflation result marked the fastest pace since the 5.1% in December 2018.

The latest headline figure was a tad lower than the 4.8% median in a BusinessWo­rld poll but fell within the 4.3%-5.1% estimate given by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) for February.

Year to date, February inflation settled at 4.5%, beyond the BSP’s 2-4% target for the year.

Meanwhile, Mr. Reyes said the reissued 10-year T-bonds could fetch an average rate close to 4%, while the trader gave a 3.65-3.75% forecast range.

The trader said there continues to be ample demand for government securities despite the expected uptick in yields, but the volume of bids could be lower than the high tenders seen at the start of 2021.

The Treasury last week raised P20 billion as planned via the Tbills from P41.052 billion in bids, even as rates increased across the board.

Broken down, it borrowed the programmed P5 billion via the 91-day debt papers as tenders reached P7.595 billion. The threemonth papers fetched an average rate of 1.04%, up from the 0.875% seen at the Feb. 22 auction.

It also raised P5 billion as planned from the 182-day T-bills from P8.462 billion in bids. The average rate for the six-month debt went up to 1.226% from 1.067% previously.

Lastly, the government made a full P10-billion award of the 364-day debt papers from tenders worth P24.995 billion. The oneyear securities saw yields climb to 1.68% from the previous rate of 1.527%.

Meanwhile, the last time the BTr offered the series of reissued 10-year bonds on offer on Tuesday was on Jan. 19, when it raised P30 billion as planned after attracting P82.5 billion in demand. —

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