Tag: DMO

  • DMO raises about ₦1.1tn at first 2026 T-bills auction as stop rates rise

    DMO raises about ₦1.1tn at first 2026 T-bills auction as stop rates rise

    According to The Guardian Nigeria, the Debt Management Office secured about ₦1.144 trillion at its first Nigerian Treasury Bills auction of 2026, with stop rates climbing across all maturities.

    The report notes the 364-day paper dominated the auction and the stop rate for the one-year tenor rose sharply, reflecting investor demand for higher yields in a high-rate, high-inflation environment.

    For households and corporates, higher T-bill yields can improve returns on risk-free assets, but they can also raise government debt-service costs and crowd out private-sector borrowing.

    Market watchers will be tracking whether rates stabilise or rise further, and how monetary policy signals influence the next auction rounds.

    Echotitbits take: Elevated T-bill yields are a double-edged sword—great for savers, tough for fiscal space. Watch the CBN’s liquidity stance and whether banks reprice loans upward in response.

    Source: The Guardian Nigeria – https://guardian.ng/news/fg-raises-n1-1tr-from-first-2026-treasury-bills-auction/ 9 January 2026

    The Guardian Nigeria 2026-01-09

    Photo Credit: The Guardian Nigeria

  • States and LGs cut bank exposure by ₦547.5bn as FAAC inflows rise

    States and LGs cut bank exposure by ₦547.5bn as FAAC inflows rise

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    Figures cited by Saturday PUNCH show states and local government councils reduced outstanding bank borrowings by about ₦547.5bn over one year, amid stronger statutory inflows.

    The report links the drop in bank claims to higher Federation Account distributions and the higher cost of borrowing under a tighter interest‑rate environment.

    TheStar.ng reported that “States and Local Government councils cut their outstanding bank loans by about N547.5bn in one year,” while TheConclaveNg cited CBN bulletin data that claims fell from “N2.68tn… to N2.13tn” by June 2025.

    Echotitbits take: Lower bank debt is good—but what replaces it matters. If states swap bank loans for short‑term contractor arrears or opaque “capital receipts,” the fiscal stress simply moves. Watch state debt transparency, DMO/CBN data and wage/contract arrears.

    Source: The Punch — December 27, 2025 (https://punchng.com/states-lgs-repay-n547-5bn-bank-debts/)

    The Punch  2025-12-27