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CBK, Investors Standoff Pushes Interest Rates to 16-year High

Posted on: Fri, Oct 13, 2023 | 7:57 pm
By: Joshua Okute


CBK Governor Dr. Kamau Thugge Speaking at a past event

A standoff between investors and the Kenyan government over interest rates escalated this week after the sale of the October Treasury bond raised less than 20% of the Sh35 billion on offer.

Latest data show that the State only raised Sh6.3 billion out of a target of Sh35 billion as investors sought higher returns, suggesting they have better alternatives.

The rates investors are seeking are the highest in over 16 years – surpassing the previous highs seen at the end of 2015 and early 2016 when they touched 16 percent.

Statistics from the central bank CBK indicate that investors encouraged to hold out for a premium by the government’s high fiscal deficit, demanded an average of 18.46% on the reopened five-year bond and 17.96% on the reopened two-year bond in the dual-tranche sale.

They offered the State a total of Sh12.3 billion in the sale, out of which just half was taken up at average yields of 17.99 percent for the five-year and 17.74 percent for the two-year tranches.

Analysts said that despite the government only floating short-dated bonds in recent months, investor preference has been to park their funds in the 91-day Treasury bills to avoid exposure to losses on bonds if yields keep going up.

This applies to investors such as banks that hold bonds for sale, with a rise in secondary market yields translating into lower prices for their paper.

Analysts reckon that investors are also keeping their powder dry to take advantage of a possible issuance of a tax-free infrastructure bond in the near term.

“The auction was significantly undersubscribed with a performance rate of 35.2 percent. This can be explained by… investors hedging against duration risk given rising interest rate environment preferring to invest in T-Bills,” said analysts at Sterling Capital.

“The CBK rejected aggressive bids by accepting 51.2% of total bids across both bonds as a signal to investors that it will not yield to investor pressure to accept expensive debt.”

The ability of the monetary regulator to keep fending off expensive bids has, however, been tested in recent bond sales, given the need to balance between this stance and meeting the government’s domestic borrowing targets.

This fiscal pressure, analysts say, is one of the reasons interest rates on bonds of a duration of between two and five years have steadily crept up to just below 18 percent from 14 percent in June.

While speaking to news agency Reuters on the sidelines of the ongoing World Bank and IMF annual meetings in Morocco, CBK governor Kamau Thugge revealed that Kenya was eyeing commercial loans worth between $500 million and $1 billion from the Trade & Development Bank and the African Export-Import Bank, to be used for buying back part of the Eurobond and for budgetary support.