By Adnan Adams Mohammed
In a worrying development for national fiscal management, the government’s latest Treasury bill auction recorded a massive 20.2% undersubscription, resulting in a staggering GH¢1.07 billion shortfall.
The failure to hit the auction target comes despite central bank and treasury officials pushing interest rates to fresh highs in a desperate bid to lure hesitant investors.
Market analysts warn that the rising yields, paired with falling subscription volumes, signal deepening investor fatigue and heightened anxieties regarding the state’s domestic debt trajectory and inflationary pressures.
Inside the Numbers: The Billion-Cedi Shortfall
The Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Ghana set an ambitious target of GH¢5.32 billion across the 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day tenors to meet immediate debt rollover requirements and short-term budgetary needs. However, the auction results revealed that total bids submitted by commercial banks and the public amounted to just GH¢4.25 billion.
The government accepted all bids tendered, leaving a gaping GH¢1.07 billion deficit in its weekly financing goals.
To attract buyers, the state allowed yields to jump significantly. The 91-day bill average interest rate crept up further into the upper 20s, while the 182-day and 364-day instruments followed a similar upward trajectory.
“The math is becoming incredibly expensive for the state,” noted a fixed-income strategist at an Accra-based investment firm. “The government is offering higher yields, but the market simply isn’t biting like it used to. A 20% undersubscription tells us that institutional investors, particularly commercial banks, are aggressively hoarding liquidity or diversifying out of government paper due to perceived structural risks.”
Rising Interest Rates Feed Financial Sector Anxiety
The persistent rise in T-bill rates is sending ripples through the broader financial sector, threatening to crowd out private-sector credit and force commercial lending rates upwards.
Speaking to journalists on the implications of the current yield trajectory, an independent financial analyst expressed concern that the high-interest rate environment is creating a structural trap for local businesses.
“When risk-free short-term government paper is pushing toward 30%, commercial banks have zero incentive to lend to small and medium enterprises,” the analyst explained. “This creates a double-edged sword. On one hand, the government is paying a premium to borrow, escalating our national debt servicing costs. On the other hand, the real economy is being starved of affordable credit, which will inevitably stall economic growth.”
Concurrently, fund managers are pointing out that while the higher yields look attractive on paper, they fail to offset the underlying fears of currency depreciation and sticky inflation. Investors are demanding higher premiums because they remain highly cautious about locking up capital, even for 91 days.
Fiscal Pressure on the Horizon
The GH¢1.07 billion auction shortfall places immediate fiscal strain on the Treasury. With the domestic capital market serving as the government’s primary source of deficit financing following its exclusion from international capital markets, continuous undersubscriptions could force the state into difficult choices.
“If this trend of undersubscription continues over the coming weeks, the government will be forced to either drastically cut back on critical infrastructure spending or rely on central bank overdraft facilities, which would only trigger further inflationary pressures,” a banking executive warned under condition of anonymity.
As the Ministry of Finance prepares for its next weekly auction, pressure is mounting on fiscal authorities to present a clearer roadmap for expenditure rationalization. Market participants emphasize that raising interest rates alone will no longer suffice; the state must restore broader investor confidence in its long-term fiscal discipline to get the domestic market back on track.
