Fun seekers at the Millennium Park during the Eid-el-Fitr holiday celebration in Abuja on Thursday, July 7, 2016. Photo: NAN |
The three-day public
holiday declared by the Federal Government in an economy inching closer to
recession, will cost the country ₦138 billion by the time activities resume
today.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Reason:
There were scheduled treasury bills auction estimated at ₦94 billion, as well
as ₦44 billion treasury bills maturity for the week, which the unusual straight
three-day have put off.
The
monetary policy measures were expected put liquidity into the system in the
week, with the auction component helping to taper its effect on money market
rates.
The treasury bills auctions and maturities are usually executed between Tuesdays and Thursdays, save for seeming special interventions on Fridays.
The treasury bills auctions and maturities are usually executed between Tuesdays and Thursdays, save for seeming special interventions on Fridays.
In
the event the monetary policy measures are implemented today, the effect in the
market rates would be minimal and driven by sentiments because the liquidity
will not have trickled down to the market and volumes of interbank activities
are usually moderate.
“So,
the week just ran like a closed economy. It is as if everyone was just sleeping
and not waking up at all. That is exactly how gains and losses and value
addition to the economy also remained standstill. Friday’s transactions are
usually cautious one due to speculations over the week ahead. The auctions on
Friday will not make much meaning,” a financial market operator told The
Guardian.
Last
week, the treasury bills market saw renewed buying interest with the launch of
the Naira-settled Over-The-Counter market, as the average rate declined on all
the trading days of the week.
A
decline in the rate of treasury bills shows confidence and an indication that
traders are pricing the security with lesser risks attached, as well as the
quantity of money in the market.
Average
rate inched lower on Tuesday to 10.2 per cent as system liquidity improved
owing to inflow of Federal Accounts Allocation Committee disbursement, from
10.7 per cent on Monday.
The
sentiment continued till Friday, when average bills’ rate closed at 9.4 per
cent, down 1.7 per cent week-on-week on the back of ₦115 billion Open Market
Operations maturity inflow into the system by Thursday.
Similarly,
the interbank lending rate, particularly the Overnight, fell to five per cent
on Friday, compared with 15 percent a week earlier, as cash from maturing
treasury bills and payments by government to its contractors, boosted
liquidity.
According
to Reuters, the increased cash flow left the money market with a ₦267.10
billion surplus balance on Friday, reversing the ₦300 billion shortfall a week
earlier and pushing down the cost of borrowing among commercial lenders.
Many
banks had approached the central bank’s discount window to borrow short-term
cash last week to enable them meet obligations and ease liquidity pressures,
traders said.
Traders said the expected release of capital spending by the federal government to re-inflate the economy should inject more cash into the money market in the coming days, which should impact positively on the interbank rate.
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