The maturity profile of domestic debt has lengthened to 5.7
years from 4.1 years two years ago on the back of a sustained effort to
issue longer-term securities, Central bank of Kenya (CBK) has announced.
CBK
governor Patrick Njoroge said during a virtual briefing following the
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting last week that the option of
having maturing Treasury bills rolled over using medium-term bond
offerings is another option that the regulator is considering as a means
of lengthening the maturity profile of local debt.
The
first such option was put on the table in May, where investors holding
Sh24.7 billion worth of maturing 364-day paper were exclusively offered
the chance to use these proceeds to buy a six-year, Sh25.8 billion
infrastructure bond — otherwise known as a switch bond.
The
CBK took up Sh19.3 billion from the offers of Sh21.2 billion, which
potentially signals such offers may become more common in future.
“This
is just one more option on the table for us…It also lengthens the
maturity profile of domestic debt. The overall maturity profile of our
portfolio of securities has increased to 5.7 years, from 4.1 years in
June 2018,” said Dr Njoroge.
“For the Treasury bonds alone, the profile is now 7.9 years from 6.1 years in June 2018.”
David
Rogovic, a senior analyst at Moody's Investors Service, said in an
earlier briefing it sees the switch bond as a means of managing
liquidity risk, rather than liquidity pressure.
Such
bonds, he said, are useful for lengthening the maturity profile of
domestic debt, something that the CBK and Treasury have been trying to
do.
“If the issue was a financing crunch, they
(Treasury) would normally turn to short-term paper, rather than rolling
over T-bills using longer-term bonds. We, therefore, see this debt
restructure as a positive,” he said.
The governor also
disclosed that the government is close to hitting its domestic borrowing
target for the current fiscal year ahead of schedule.
The
Treasury has obtained 97.1 percent of its domestic borrowing target of
Sh389.7 billion for the current fiscal year, sparing the government the
need to raid the market with any urgency in the next month.
“The expectation of government borrowing surging at the end of the fiscal year will not happen,” said Dr Njoroge.
This
could mean yields on government securities will remain stable in the
short term, considering also the relatively liquid interbank market, and
the dearth of other investment options for investors in the Covid-19
hit economy.
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