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Home Business & Economy

Nigerian Treasury Bills Yield Climbs to 19.25% Amid N751bn Investor Rush

October 23, 2025
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Nigeria’s Treasury Bills auction this week painted a vivid picture of a financial market caught between conflicting pressures—surging investor demand for higher returns, persistent inflationary concerns, and a government increasingly wary of its mounting debt burden.

The numbers tell a compelling story. When the Central Bank of Nigeria opened the auction on behalf of the Debt Management Office, investors flooded in with N750.91 billion in bids against the N650 billion on offer. That N100.91 billion oversubscription—a 15.5% excess—would typically signal triumph for debt managers eager to fund government operations. Instead, authorities allocated just N391.58 billion, barely 60% of what was offered and roughly half of what investors demanded.

This dramatic under-allotment speaks volumes about Nigeria’s fiscal priorities. The government is clearly pumping the brakes on debt accumulation, even as it leaves substantial investor appetite unsatisfied. It’s a calculated risk—forgoing immediate funding to avoid compounding long-term debt service obligations in an environment where rates are climbing steadily.

The Flight to Longer Maturities

Perhaps the most striking feature of this auction was the overwhelming preference for the 364-day paper. Investors poured N674.25 billion into bids for the one-year bill—accounting for nearly 90% of total subscription. Compare that to the anemic N8.13 billion for the 91-day and N68.53 billion for the 182-day offerings, and the message becomes clear: sophisticated investors are positioning for sustained high rates and seeking to lock in attractive yields before market conditions potentially shift.

The 364-day true yield of 19.25%—substantially above the 16.14% stop rate—reflects the reality of inflation eroding purchasing power. Investors aren’t just chasing nominal returns; they’re demanding real compensation for the risks of holding naira-denominated assets in an economy where inflation remains stubbornly elevated.

Rising Rate Environment Takes Hold

The upward march in swap rates across all tenors confirms what market participants have suspected: the era of relatively accommodative monetary policy is firmly in the rearview mirror. The 91-day rate climbed 30 basis points to 15.30%, the 182-day rose 25 basis points to 15.50%, and the 364-day jumped 37 basis points to 16.14%—all compared to the previous auction.

These aren’t marginal adjustments. They represent the CBN’s recognition that it must offer competitive yields to attract capital in a tightening liquidity environment while simultaneously using rates as a tool to combat inflation. It’s a high-wire act—rates too low fail to attract sufficient investment and risk stoking inflation; rates too high burden the government with unsustainable debt service costs and potentially stifle economic growth.

What the Bid Spreads Reveal

The competitive positioning evident in the bid ranges offers insight into investor sentiment. For the 364-day paper, some investors were willing to bid up to 20%—nearly 400 basis points above the eventual stop rate. This aggressive bidding suggests certain market participants view current yields as highly attractive relative to alternative investments, possibly reflecting concerns about naira depreciation, equity market volatility, or simply a dearth of comparable fixed-income opportunities.

The tighter spreads on shorter maturities—14.9% to 16.5% on the 91-day—indicate more consensus around near-term rate expectations but less enthusiasm overall, given the minimal subscription levels.

Implications for Markets and Policy

This auction crystallizes several critical dynamics shaping Nigeria’s financial landscape. First, liquidity conditions are tightening—investors have cash to deploy but fewer attractive venues, making government securities increasingly appealing despite elevated rates. Second, inflation expectations remain entrenched, forcing real yields higher to maintain investor interest. Third, the government’s fiscal discipline—or constraint—is forcing it to be selective about debt accumulation even when funding is readily available.

Looking ahead, the tension between investor demand and government restraint may intensify. If the CBN maintains this cautious allotment approach while rates continue rising, we could see further oversubscriptions and potentially even higher yields at subsequent auctions. Alternatively, if liquidity loosens or inflation moderates, the dynamics could shift dramatically.

For now, one thing is certain: Nigeria’s debt markets are sending clear signals that investors expect rates to remain elevated, inflation to persist, and government financing needs to remain substantial—even if authorities are trying to moderate the pace of borrowing. The October 22 auction wasn’t just about raising funds; it was a revealing snapshot of an economy navigating complex monetary crosscurrents with no easy resolution in sight.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Nigeria’s October 22 T-Bills auction revealed a critical paradox: while investors aggressively bid N751 billion—N101 billion above the offer—the government allocated only N392 billion, signaling deliberate debt restraint despite available funding.

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