The Government in its latest Treasury Bill auction raised GH¢4.72 billion on Friday, May 2, falling short of the government’s GH¢6.32 billion target and marking a sharp reversal from the previous week’s oversubscription of GH¢548 million.
Investor demand totalled GH¢5.29 billion, of which GH¢4.72 billion was accepted. The auction recorded an undersubscription of GH¢1.59 billion, underscoring growing investor caution amid declining yields and persistent macroeconomic uncertainties.
The auction results, published by the Bank of Ghana, showed a strong appetite for shorter-term instruments, with the 91-day bill accounting for 63.1% of the total amount accepted. All GH¢2.98 billion tendered for the 91-day paper was accepted, suggesting investors continue to prefer liquidity and lower duration risk.
Yields across all maturities declined modestly, reflecting the central bank’s ongoing monetary stabilization efforts. The 91-day yield fell to 15.23% from 15.32%, the 182-day bill eased to 15.77% from 16.03%, and the 364-day instrument declined to 16.95%, down sharply from 18.37% a week earlier.
The next auction, scheduled under Tender 1954, aims to raise GH¢5.38 billion—lower than last week’s target of GH¢6.23 billion. Analysts suggest the government is likely to maintain its reliance on short-term borrowing to manage domestic liquidity needs, as investor appetite for longer-dated maturities remains subdued.
Norvan Reports