The Treasury Building in Nairobi. Treasury has moved to shift investors’
preference for short-term bills by floating a second 15-year bond this
year at a higher interest rate. Photo/FILE
NATION MEDIA GROUP
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU
In Summary
- Bond dealers said the higher indicative interest rate is meant to lure investors to the longer end of the yield curve.
- The 15-year bond will go for 12 per cent coupon. Another five-year paper is to be sold at a market-determined coupon. CBK information shows that both issues are intended to raise Sh25 billion.
Treasury has moved to shift investors’
preference for short-term bills by floating a second 15-year bond this
year at a higher interest rate.
Bond dealers said the higher indicative interest rate is meant to lure investors to the longer end of the yield curve.
The average maturity of Treasury debt has been
falling as it has taken in more short-term paper at a time when interest
repayments have also tripled to about Sh75 billion, compared to the
level at the end of last September.
From CBK’s most recent weekly update the average
maturity stands at five years, down from five years and four months nine
months ago.
The 15-year bond will go for 12 per cent coupon.
Another five-year paper is to be sold at a market-determined coupon. CBK
information shows that both issues are intended to raise Sh25 billion.
The Treasury has had a lot of redemptions in the
past few months and needs to redirect the liquidity in the market to
issues where it won’t have to pay too much interest.
“It seems due to the high debt redemptions,
Treasury is trying to rollover the debt onto the longer end of the yield
curve,” said Alexander Muiruri, a fixed-income trader with African
Alliance Investment Bank.
Mr Muiruri noted that the coupon rate on the
15-year paper has been rising since September when it stood at 11 per
cent, before rising to 11.25 per cent in February to now stand at 12 per
cent. He, however, noted that in 2008 and 2009 the 15-year paper had
coupons at 12.50 per cent.
In its weekly bulletin dated April 12, the CBK
said the success of raising cash through T-bills was behind the rapid
rise in domestic debt, causing the average maturity to fall.
“During the week ending April 5, 2013, gross
government domestic debt increased by Sh18.6 billion on account of
Treasury bills,” said the CBK.
Mr Muiruri said the government had lately been
able to raise cash from the market, even if this was through
shorter-dated securities.
“We estimate Treasury has raised Sh155.2 billion
in domestic versus their Sh137.2 billion mentioned in the January 2013
Budget Policy Statement. So I won’t say that they’re desperate to raise
cash but targeting the long end for new borrowings,” said Mr Muiruri.
The CBK weekly bulletin said the regulator had
mopped through repos and term auction deposits Sh52.4 billion against
maturity Sh42.7 billion — a net removal of cash of about Sh10 billion
from circulation.
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