
Audio By Carbonatix
Government rejected all the bids for the sale of Treasury bills from investors on Friday March 3, 2023.
Joy Business learnt that government rejected the offer because the 35% plus interest that the investors, largely banks were quoting were too expensive.
It was seeking to raise ¢2.78 billion from the T-bills this week to refinance maturing bills worth ¢2.55 billion, but it described the yield as too expensive
Joy Business further understands that the government wants yields of below 30%, hence rejecting all the bids from the investors.
It is believed that government is mindful of the rising interest costs on the short-term securities, particularly when it is trimming the cost of the debt instruments to be in line with the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme
Interest cost on government Treasury bills for the last three months (December 2022, January 2023 and February 2023) was estimated at ¢4.416 billion.
Government bought a total of ¢33.08 billion worth of T-bills in the last three months. The treasury instruments were sold by government at an average yield of 35%.
Meanwhile, government through the Bank of Ghana has reopened the tender for the auction, which is expected to close by noon March 3, 2023.
Already, it has received several bids for the offer of the treasury securities.
In recent times, the government has been borrowing heavily on the treasury market to refinance maturing debts and also build buffers amid the Central Bank zero financing.
Last week, government accepted all bids tendered for the T-bills auction and raised ¢5.07 billion. The uptake exceeded the auction target of ¢2.89bn by 75.66% and almost doubled the refinancing obligation.
However, analysts and market watchers expressed concerns about the rising interest costs.
Executive Director of finance firm, Dalex, Joe Jackson tweeted “should you be cautious in buying T-bills? Government of Ghana bought 33.08 billion in the last three months. The weighted average interest rate was 35.62% and will cost a whopping ¢4.42 billion”.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana and Ukraine: Defence rapprochement raises questions about transparency and mandate
1 hour -
PURC donates computers to UCC Institute for Oil and Gas Studies, assures university over electricity billing dispute
1 hour -
MSDA commissions 50,000-litre automated water project for Saltpond Municipal Hospital
1 hour -
Gov’t committed to protecting pension funds for Ghanaian workers – Vice President
1 hour -
Mastercard Foundation charges AIMS Ghana Class of 2026 to drive innovation, leadership and employment across Africa
2 hours -
Black Stars go again tonight
2 hours -
‘AIMS rewrites the equations of your life’ — Alumna Dr Perpetual Andam Boiquaye challenges graduates to pursue bold ambitions
2 hours -
Princess Marie Louise Children’s Hospital marks 100 years with call for greater investment in child healthcare
3 hours -
AIMS Ghana graduates record 130 students from 24 African countries at 14th graduation ceremony
3 hours -
Mahama assures Big Push contractors of prompt payment after project completion
3 hours -
Logba Klikpo faces telecommunications challenges
3 hours -
Chartered Institute of Taxation warns against unauthorised tax practice
3 hours -
Appeal already filed in Larry Dogbey contempt case — Lawyer
4 hours -
Government in talks with investor to restart Komenda Sugar Factory – Mahama
4 hours -
Man allegedly kills aunt’s boyfriend in Awutu Senya West
4 hours