Now Reading
Higher yield fails to spoil T-bills auction
Dark Light

Higher yield fails to spoil T-bills auction

Avatar

By Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral

@ipcigaral

Higher borrowing costs due to recent hawkish signals from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) did not stop the government from borrowing as planned during Monday’s sale of Treasury bills (T-bills).

Auction results showed the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised its target amount of P15 billion in short-term debt despite rates going higher for the fifth straight auction.

Total demand for the T-bills amounted to P35 billion, more than twice the original size of the offer albeit lower than the P43.19 billion bids received during the previous week’s auction.

Michael Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said yields went higher after BSP Governor Eli Remolona Jr. said that a rate cut in the first half of the year was “possible, but not likely.”

“Inflation risks remain, especially higher rice prices and other supply-related shocks that could risk missing the BSP’s inflation target of 2 to 4 percent target range (inflation not yet out of the woods),” Ricafort said in a commentary.

Rates for the 91-day T-bill averaged 5.306 percent, higher than the 5.226 percent seen last week.

See Also

Meanwhile, the 182-day debt securities fetched an average yield of 5.766 percent, more expensive than the 5.685 percent charged for the comparable tenor in the previous auction.

Rates sought by local creditors for the 364-day T-bill averaged 6.037 percent, higher than last week’s 5.999 percent.

Documents from the budget department showed the Marcos administration planned to borrow P1.85 trillion onshore in 2024.

Of that amount, P51 billion will be raised via T-bills while P1.8 trillion will come from weekly auctions of Treasury bonds. INQ


© The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Scroll To Top