Nairobi Securities Exchange staff at the bourse in September. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Demand for government short-term debt has plummeted to fresh
lows in the wake of reduced
parastatals participation amid a tap sale of a 10-year bond.
parastatals participation amid a tap sale of a 10-year bond.
Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), the
fiscal agent in the debt markets, received bids worth Sh8.35 billion
against Sh24 billion it offered to investors, an equivalent of 34.81
percent uptake.
The subscription for the Treasury bills
was a further drop from 56.19 percent and 57.69 percent subscription in
the previous two weeks respectively.
The reopened
10-year bond, which targeted Sh21.65 billion but received just Sh8.11
billion (37.47 percent subscription) at an average interest of 12.28
percent, also offered competition for the T-bills sale.
“The
tap sale might have diverted some of the investors to go for the
longer-term paper and there may also have been an apathy by State
corporations following that circular for them not to participate in the
T-bills market,” Churchill Ogutu, a senior research analyst at Genghis
Capital said.
The CBK, however, rejected Sh3.36 billion or 40.26 percent of
bids by return-chasing investors during an auction last Thursday that it
deemed expensive.
“CBK is sending a signal that it
would like to see a gradual movement in the yield and also cemented to
that fact is that there was a 50-basis cut on CBR (Central Bank Rate),”
Mr Ogutu said. “Therefore, signalling it would want a gradual increase
in interest rate rather than a sporadic movement.”
Liquidity
during the week tightened with interbank rate — the rate at which banks
lend to each other — hitting 5.05 percent, the highest since November
5. This came at a time banks are consolidating books ahead of the end of
the financial year in December, that sometimes results in low
liquidity.
During the auction, demand for the 91-day
paper plunged to 23.42 percent of the Sh4 billion weekly quantum from
last week’s 92.86 percent subscription. Average interest for the
benchmark note edged up marginally to 7.16 percent from 7.13 percent a
week earlier, with the CBK accepting less than half (Sh445.55 million)
of the Sh936.76 million in bids.
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