The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) building in Nairobi. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Improved liquidity coupled with a dearth of short-end primary
bond issues has seen a rebound in Treasury bill performance in recent
auctions.
During last week’s sale, the Treasury bills
were oversubscribed with the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) getting bids of
Sh25.12 billion against an offer of Sh24 billion.
This was the second consecutive auction where yields on all the tenors declined.
“Treasury
bills performance recorded an overall 104.68 per cent subscription. The
182-day tenor recorded an under-subscription at 84.26 per cent, which
we view as just investors’ preference for the other two tenors,” said
analysts from Genghis Capital on Friday.
The subscription rates for the 91-, 182-, and 364-day papers
came in at 124.17 per cent, 84.26 per cent, and 117.32 per cent
respectively.
The
91-day paper attracted bids worth Sh4.96 billion against an offer of
Sh4 billion. The Treasury absorbed the entire bids offered by investors.
The 182-day paper attracted bids worth Sh8.42 billion against an offer of Sh10 billion. The Treasury absorbed the entire bids.
The
364-day paper attracted bids worth Sh11.73 billion against an offer of
Sh10 billion with the government accepting bids worth Sh10.81 billion.
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