Nigeria’s fixed-income market turns its attention to Wednesday’s primary market, where the Central Bank of Nigeria will seek to raise N750 billion through Treasury bills split across three maturities — a sale that market operators widely expect to draw bids far in excess of the amount on offer.
The breakdown assigns the smallest slice, N100 billion, to the 91-day tenor, while the 182-day window carries N150 billion. The dominant tranche is the one-year paper: the apex bank has set a N500 billion target for 364-day bills, underscoring where institutional demand has been most concentrated in recent sessions.
The conditions underpinning oversubscription expectations are straightforward.
Banking system liquidity closed last week at N3.84 trillion, sustained in part by heavy placement at the CBN’s Standing Deposit Facility — a sign that lenders hold more cash than they can immediately deploy.
Into that environment, analysts project a further N1.6 trillion in system inflows from maturing Treasury bills, Open Market Operations instruments, and bond coupon payments before Wednesday’s auction closes.
The net effect is a financial system awash in naira balances hunting for yield. Treasury bills, with their sovereign backing and predictable duration, remain the default vehicle for that liquidity.
At the preceding auction, the CBN trimmed spot yields on the 182-day and 364-day papers while holding the 91-day rate flat. The 182-day bill moved to 16.19 percent from 16.42 per cent — its second successive downward adjustment — while the one-year rate fell to 16.199 per cent from 16.43 per cent.
Those cuts reflect the CBN’s deliberate response to strong demand: when investors compete aggressively for paper, the cost of borrowing for the sovereign falls.
The trend is expected to produce “mixed” rate outcomes at Wednesday’s sale, with the short end likely steady and marginal pressure possible on the longer tenors depending on the volume of bids.
One tension hanging over the auction is the erosion of real yields. Nigeria’s Monetary Policy Rate currently stands at 26.5 percent, well above headline consumer inflation of 15.38 percent.
That gap implies a positive real interest rate of approximately 11.12 percentage points — a buffer that has attracted offshore and domestic positioning in naira assets.
Yet Treasury bill spot rates, at around 16 percent on the longer tenors, sit materially below the MPR.
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