Site icon Nairametrics

CBN incurs N1.55 trillion interest from T-Bills sales in first half of 2024 

CBN, forex

The Central Bank of Nigeria has incurred an estimated N1.55 trillion in interest payments for the 12 successful Treasury Bills (T-Bills) auctions conduced in the first six months of 2024. 

The interest costs in 2024 were approximately 654.7% higher than the N205.63 billion recorded the same period of the previous year. 

This is based on an analysis of the amount of T-Bills sold, the interest payments, and tenor in the period under review. 

Data from the apex bank reveals that the apex bank has sold Treasury Bills worth N8.4 trillion in the first half of the year for tenors ranging from 91-days, 182-days and 364-day bills. 

According to our findings, the stop rate, which is the interest rates accepted from the bids on offer, ranged from as low as 2.44% for some 91-day bills to as high as 21.49% for 364-day bills within the period under review. 

The high interest cost is largely due to the central bank’s hawkish monetary policy aimed at curbing rising inflation rate. The central bank jacked up rates aggressively early in 2024 as part of its policy tools to mop up money supply from the economy.  

What the data is saying 

The oversubscription indicates how much demand was available for risk free high interest yielding securities. 

Further Breakdown 

What you should know 

The N1.55 trillion interest cost raises concerns about the sustainability of government borrowing and its impact on the national budget. 

With such high interest obligations, the government may face challenges in allocating resources to critical sectors such as infrastructure, healthcare, and education. 

Additionally, the high yields required to attract investors suggest that confidence in the economy remains tentative, with inflationary pressures and exchange rate volatility contributing to risk perceptions. 

Nairametrics earlier reported that Nigeria has a total Treasury Bills (T-Bills) debt of N10.4 trillion, a 60% rise in just three months, according to data from the Debt Management Office (DMO).  This is the largest T-Bills debt balance on record based on an analysis by Nairalytics, the research arm of Nairametrics, dating back to at least 2010 per central bank records.  

Treasury Bills have grown to be a major source of short-term expenditure for the government, especially under the All Progressives Congress (APC), growing from a balance of N2.8 trillion under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government of Goodluck Jonathan to N10.4 trillion currently.   

It was N5.8 trillion at the end of the second quarter of 2023, largely accumulated under the Muhammadu Buhari administration.  

Moody’s Ratings recently noted that Nigeria’s interest spending may rise by 1% of the country’s GDP, costing about 36% of government revenue in 2024 

PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) also warned that the continuous increase in debt issuance by the federal government without a corresponding increase in revenue will worsen the country’s debt profile in the long run. 

Exit mobile version