T-bills: Yields to decline further; Government got GH¢136.87bn in quarter one

Story By: myjoyonline.com

The Fixed income Market is poised for gradual yield decline amid aggressive treasury stance and possible bond issuance.

According to Databank Research’s Quarterly Report, it anticipates a broad-based downward trend in yields across the LCY yield curve from the second quarter of 2025 year-end, underpinned by improving macroeconomic fundamentals and more constructive investor sentiment

“We anticipate a broad-based downward trend in yields across the LCY yield curve from Q2 ’25 [quarter 2] year-end, underpinned by improving macroeconomic fundamentals and more constructive investor sentiment. However, elevated T-bill [treasury bills] maturities and the prevailing negative real return could keep yields ranging between 16.50% and 15.00% in Q2 [quarter 2] 2025”.

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It also said the high Open Market Operations (OMO) interest rates continue to pose a risk, providing a competitive alternative for key players in the T-bill market, like the commercial banks.

It pointed out that investor optimism is expected to strengthen on the back of market-friendly policy reforms and a clearer fiscal consolidation path.

“Given the government’s commitment to fiscal discipline, outlined in the 2025 budget with a GHS10bn cut in expenditure and revenue increased by GHS37bn is expected to reduce reliance on short-term funding and support a sustained improvement in sovereign risk re-rating. Disinflation is expected to persist, aided by base effects, improved commodity prices, and a relatively stable exchange rate may likely anchor investor expectations for lower yields, particularly at the front and belly of the yield curve”, it added.

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Outlook of Bond Market Uncertain

On the bond market, Databank Research maintained a cautiously optimistic outlook.

“While the 2025 budget signals the possibility of issuance by year-end, we do not envision any issuance in Q2 ’25 [quarter 2, 2025] as prevailing yields at the front of LCY remain too high to support cost-effective long-term issuance. Investors are likely to require a steep risk premium, making long-tenor issuance unattractive at this stage. As such, we expect the treasury to maintain a cautious stance on long-term bond issuance while aggressively trimming T-bill yields”.

Government got GH¢136.87bn in Quarter 1

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Meanwhile, total bids for T-bills were estimated at GH¢136.87 billion across the 91-day to 364-day bills. This is against a target of GHS83.74 billion

The Treasury accepted GH¢95.01 billion.

Notably, demand for the 364-day bill surged 171% quarter-on-quarter to GH¢19.77 billion, as investors sought to lock in relatively higher yields amid a broad decline in interest.

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