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Afreximbank provides $400m to the Export Trading Group to drive agricultural productivity and resilience

Three-year revolving global credit facility will strengthen African agricultural networks and bolster the continent’s food security Cairo, 26 August 2020: – The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Africa’s...
HomeRising Bond Yields Signals Investors’ Appetite for Fixed Income Windows

Rising Bond Yields Signals Investors’ Appetite for Fixed Income Windows

Investors in Nigeria’s securities are thronging towards  fixed income windows as uncertainties mount over the economy that has its share of the COVID-19 pandemic amid intermittent high liquidity.

Incidentally, Nigeria increased marginally the yield on its 1-year Treasury bond at an auction carried out Wednesday  as against  the rate it sold the 3-month and 6-month tenor paper.

Demand for the debt on offer also reflected the increased liquidity in the money market, which has driven interbank rate down in the week to Wednesday.

At the auction, the Debt Management Office (DMO) sold a total of N265.94 billion across all three tenors of Treasury bills on offer against N468.25 billion total subscriptions from investors.

The debt office sold N161.52 billion worth of the 1-year debt at 3.40 percent, which was higher than the 3.35 percent a similar tenor paper was sold at the previous auction.

It also sold N54.59 billion of the 6-month Treasury bills at 1.5 percent against 1.8 percent the paper was sold at the last auction, while it sold N49.83 billion in the 3-month paper at 1.20 percent compared with 1.30 percent the same tenor paper went for previously.

Demand from investors was heavier on the 1-year paper with a total of N215.09 billion subscriptions, followed by N158.78 billion demanded in the 6-month paper and N94.38 billion subscriptions for the 3-month debt.