Demand For Treasury Bills Wane, CBK receives Bids Worth Ksh 13.66 Bn Against A Target Of Ksh 24.0 Bn

During the week, there were significant outflows in the settlement of government securities and reverse repos which pushed the interbank rates higher, indicating a more lopsided distribution of liquidity.
The average interbank rate rose to 12.69%, from 12.17% while the average traded volumes fell 3.79% to KES 23.12bn from KES 24.03bn, a week earlier.
With expectations of tighter liquidity conditions, the Central Bank injected KES 89.22bn worth of liquidity through a double 7-day and a single 3-day reverse repo purchase at an average rate of 13.41%.
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Meanwhile, demand for Treasury bills waned as the Central Bank received bids totaling KES 13.66bn against the projected weekly target of KES 24.0bn. The overall subscription came in at 56.91%, down from 84.07% the previous week.
80.6% of the bids were geared towards the 91-day paper which recorded a 275.19% subscription, down from 401.67% recorded in the previous week. The subscription rate for the 182-day and 364-day papers came in at 8.09 and 18.41%, respectively. KES 4.52bn was accepted, translating to an acceptance rate of 33.07%, the lowest in more than three years.
Bond turnover in the domestic secondary market jumped 232.90% during the week ending 28th September, supported by significant sell/buy-backs – with investors moving their Available-for-Sale portfolios to Held-to-Maturity (potentially to avoid Mark-to-market losses).
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Meanwhile, the September tap sale was highly undersubscribed partly due to the tightened liquidity in the money market. Investors bid 3.45bn against the KES 15.0bn target offered with FXD1/2023/02 receiving most of the bids (76.35%).
In September, the general prices of goods and services rose by 6.8% y/y, extending four months of disinflation, an indication that prices have been rising at a slower pace. The performance was influenced by two main factors:
A higher base effect – inflation in September 2022, came in at 9.2%. The high starting point potentially sets the stage for lower percentage changes and may not fully reflect the actual changes in prices of goods and services.
A slowdown in the major indices of the inflation basket – major components of the consumer price index, experienced a deceleration in price increases except the transport index, which accelerated while the restaurant and accommodation index remained stable.
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