It's another interesting week for public auctions. First a recap of last week's Bond auction where the yield on the re-opened short/medium term papers. Average redemption yield (ARY) on 2 year went down 206bp to 9.59% while 5 year went down 151bp to 8.13%. The latest weekly bulletin shows a Ksh10 b injection on Feb 1 enabling this to happen and highly distorting the yield curve on the short end (anyone comparing YTM spreads for 5 year paper in the past week can confirm that from published weekly NSE yield curves).
I'm not so sure how to do it but someone should post a pic on wazua with NSE yield curve for the past 2 weeks to confirm any changes.
Over the past few auctions 91, 182 & 364 day T-bills have declined by 27bp, 20bp & 62bp...the 364 paper had no redemptions (as predicted earlier) and curious that both 182 and 364 last week had 100% successful bidders (haven't seen that in sometime)...Inflation is low and demand for govt paper is high, so just what's the agenda from Prof Ndungu? Making govt paper unattractive for banks? Making bond traders happier? No 10% price cap on bonds (like equities)...one could exploit unsuspecting customers.
Curious that bond turnover at NSE was its highest in January competing comfortably with the equity market rally. The highest turnover was in the last week of January...does it correlate with the above auctions? Bond turnover of January 2010 alone (55bn) accounted for almost 25% of 2009 turnover (if 09 was an excellent year for bonds guys...talk about surpassing targets this year).
Here's a contrarian investor with his own way of making market, shorting bonds. Read
more:
http://moneynews.com/Str...ies/2010/02/04/id/348993“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden