T-bills auction: Interest rates fall for first time in 37 weeks

Story By: myjoyonline.com

Interest rates fell for the first time after 36 weeks, confirming some analysts’ assertion that yields on Treasury bills are expected to peak around 30% to 33.5%.

According to auction results from the Bank of Ghana, the government secured 29.03% oversubscription of the sale of short-term securities to the tune of about ¢4.006 billion.

For the first time in about nine months, interest rates went down across the yield curve. This is in anticipation that inflation would ease further.

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The yield on the 91-day T-bill declined to 29.84% from the previous 29.96%.

That of the 182-day bill also took a nose dive to 31.87% from 32.14% the preceding week.

The 364-day bill also declined to 33.44% from 33.70%.

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Analysts argued that nominal yields would ease once inflation declines sufficiently. Meanwhile, demand for short-term securities surged despite the government increasing its target for the auction.

Overall, the government accepted ¢3.90 billion of bids, higher than the target of ¢3.105 billion.

The majority of the bids came from the 91-day bill. This was to the tune of ¢3.24 billion, representing about 80.9% of the total bids.

For the 182-day bill, about ¢410.99 million were tendered. The government, however, accepted ¢409.66 million.

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About ¢353.90 million was, however, tendered for the one-year bill, but the government accepted ¢348.33 million.

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