The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has raised KSh 61.44 billion from the reopening of two long-dated Treasury bonds, reversing a weak start to its September bond sale programme.
Both cleared below their market-weighted average rates of 13.72% and 14.25%, showing strong investor demand for long-dated government debt.
Metric | FXD1/2018/020 (20-year) | FXD1/2022/025 (25-year) |
---|---|---|
Bids Received | KSh 33.38Bn | KSh 63.91Bn |
Accepted | KSh 23.51Bn | KSh 37.93Bn |
Performance | 83.44% | 159.77% |
WAR | 13.58% | 14.14% |
MWAR | 13.72% | 14.25% |
Coupon | 13.20% | 14.19% |
The strong uptake followed a weak showing in the first leg of the programme. On September 3, CBK raised only KSh 2.40 billion from the reopening of the 30-year Savings Development Bond (SDB1/2011/030) despite offering KSh 20 billion.
Investors submitted KSh 8.07 billion in bids, a performance rate of 40.35%. CBK rejected most bids as investors sought higher yields.
Bond | Bids Received | Accepted | Performance | WAR | MWAR | Coupon |
SDB1/2011/030 (30-year) | KSh 8.07Bn | KSh 2.40Bn | 40.35% | 13.96% | 14.37% | 12.00% |
CBK lined up the three reopenings to raise KSh 60 billion in September for budgetary support and to manage upcoming redemptions. The rebound in demand for the 20- and 25-year bonds shows investors prefer shorter long-dated maturities over the ultra-long 30-year tenor.
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