Economy

Govt borrows Tk 65b as T-bill yields dip

Banks flock to safe assets amid weak private credit demand

Written by The Banking Post


The government borrowed Tk 65 billion on Sunday by issuing treasury bills (T-bills), as yields on the short-term securities fell further with banks parking their excess liquidity in risk-free assets.

Auction results show the cutoff yield on the 91-day T-bill dropped to 10.02% from 10.07% earlier, while the 182-day and 364-day bills both slipped to around 10.01–10.02%, down from more than 10.13% previously.

“Banks are leaning toward government securities mainly because private sector credit demand remains weak ahead of the national election,” said a senior central bank official, adding that the downward trend in yields is likely to continue.

The government regularly issues four types of T-bills — 14-day, 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day — alongside bonds with longer maturities of up to 20 years, to help manage its budget deficit and borrowing needs.


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