The Treasury has opted to reopen 10- and five-year bonds issued
last year to avoid an aggressive market that reads desperation in recent
moves to increase domestic borrowing targets.
The government will test the market appetite with the Sh50 billion sale, which is the first of the year.
“A
new issue with investors putting in bids would have been more
aggressive and a reopened bond will see bids around the coupon where the
bond is currently trading.
“This was their way of
curbing aggressive bidding because the market sees the Treasury is under
pressure,” Churchill Ogutu, senior research analyst at Genghis Capital,
said.
The Treasury issued a supplementary budget last year that signalled net additional borrowing of Sh85 billion.
As a result, it increased domestic borrowing targets to Sh514
billion even as the World Bank warned that 43 percent of the Sh2.87
trillion public debt owed to local investors will mature in September,
increasing the pressure and refinancing cost.
More
pressure has also come from the lifting of the rate cap. Banks had been
avoiding long term debt in anticipation of higher yields.
In
December the Treasury issued a 10-year Sh50 billion bond but only
received bids worth Sh38.3 billion. It then tested the market appetite
with a five-year Sh25 billion bond that was oversubscribed at Sh28
billion.
Staying away from auctions has, however, built
up idle cash with Sterling Capital research head Renaldo D’Souza
expecting the bond to be oversubscribed.
“I expect the
aggregate bond issue to be oversubscribed on account of the favourable
tenors, high market liquidity and considerably high yield on the two
issues when evaluated against other investment alternatives available
and risk exposure,” he said.
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