By: Ben O. de Vera - 04:15 AM
January 07, 2020
Except for the benchmark 91-day debt
paper, treasury bill rates rose on Monday amid expectations of higher inflation
last December and as intensifying tensions between the US and Iran are seen
putting upward pressure on global oil prices.
During its first auction for 2020,
the Bureau of the Treasury sold a total of P19.1 billion worth of bills out of
the P20-billion offering as the rate for the 364-day securities was capped and
partially awarded.
The Treasury sold P6 billion in
three-month IOUs at an average rate of 3.179 percent, down from 3.192 percent
previously.
But for the 182-day treasury bills,
the rate rose to 3.435 percent from 3.348 percent previously. The Treasury
nonetheless sold all P6 billion in six-month securities it offered.
The one-year bills were awarded at
3.624 percent, up from 3.475 percent previously. Since the rate was capped at
3.75 percent, P7.1 billion in bids were accepted out of the P8-billion
offering.
Across the three tenors, tenders
totaled P26.8 billion, making the auction oversubscribed.
National Treasurer Rosalia V. de
Leon told reporters after the auction that the rates of the 182- and 364-day
treasury bills rose because of the brewing tensions between the US and Iran
after last week’s airstrike in Iraq that killed a top Iranian military
commander. Iranian officials have vowed to retaliate, causing many analysts to
warn of heightened risks to global oil supply, of which a big portion comes
from the Middle East.
While global oil prices may go up,
De Leon said the third tranche of excise tax increases under the Tax Reform for
Acceleration and Inclusion Act at the start of the year also worried some
investors, resulting in higher bid rates alongside expectations that inflation
in December likely exceeded 2 percent.
“Altogether, the rates submitted by
bidders during the auction were expected,” De Leon said.
She said that yields, while higher,
remained “aligned to market rates and performance” even as the Treasury will
still “practice some restraint on higher yields (it will) accept.”
As for the yearly global bond
issuance that the Philippines usually embarks on at the start of each year, De
Leon said that the Treasury was still securing some government approvals.
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