CBE attracts $1.14 billion in bids for dollar-denominated Treasury bill auction

The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) received bids worth $1.141 billion in its latest US dollar-denominated local Treasury bill auction, exceeding the offered amount of $950 million, according to data published on the bank’s official website. The 364-day Treasury bills, offered on Monday and maturing on 2 February 2027, drew 26 bids.

The Central Bank of Egypt accepted 17 bids worth a total of $961 million at a yield of 3.5%, while rejecting higher yield requests that reached up to 4.25%. The proceeds from the auction will be used to repay the maturity of a previous dollar-denominated Treasury bill issued on 4 February 2025, under which bids worth $1.061 billion were accepted. That issue matures on Tuesday.

Subscription to the dollar-denominated Treasury bills is open to local banks and foreign financial institutions, with a minimum investment of $100,000 and multiples thereof. Investors participate through the same mechanism applied to local-currency Treasury bill offerings. Each primary dealer submits a subscription request to the CBE specifying the desired amount and yield. The central bank then aggregates and evaluates the bids, accepting those it deems appropriate.

The yield on dollar-denominated Treasury bills is determined by several factors, most notably global US dollar interest rates, alternative investment opportunities available to local and foreign banks and financial institutions, and Egypt’s sovereign credit rating. This auction highlights ongoing interest in dollar-based financial instruments amid current economic conditions.

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Illustration of a Treasury debt auction scene with officials, bidders, and financial charts symbolizing economic measures.
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Treasury seeks to renew nearly $15 trillion in debt in key auction

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The Finance Secretariat called an auction to renew nearly $15 trillion in debt on November 26. The Central Bank cut interest rates to 20% TNA and eased bank reserve requirements to encourage bond purchases. These steps aim to absorb liquidity, extend maturities, and boost economic activity.

Egypt's Ministry of Finance has announced eight treasury bill and bond tenders worth a total of EGP 190bn this week, as part of its ongoing financing plan. The offerings include four treasury bills totaling EGP 160bn and four bonds amounting to EGP 30bn.

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Egypt’s Ministry of Finance has announced plans to issue local debt instruments worth EGP 843bn in February 2025, as part of a broader strategy. The plan encompasses tenders totaling EGP 2.703tn in the third quarter of FY 2025/2026 to repay maturing debts and fund the state budget deficit.

The Central Bank of Egypt announced a cumulative $20.3 billion increase in net foreign assets for the Egyptian banking sector throughout 2025. This surge was driven by an improved external economic position and favorable exchange rate developments.

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Ethiopia's National Bank of Ethiopia's foreign currency auction on Hidar 7, 2018, resulted in vain. Although 13 banks participated, the auction did not succeed. The bank announced it will conduct similar auctions in the next two weeks.

The Argentine government paid US$4200 million to bondholders, leaving just over US$100 million in its account, according to private surveys. In parallel, it conducted a debt auction that covered 98% of its maturities, though with interest rates reaching 49%. This operation marks the first local placement of the year.

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Hassan Abdalla, governor of Egypt's Central Bank, joined the second AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies, stressing that the bank's role is not to push the currency up or down but to build a resilient policy framework. He outlined Egypt's economic reform program launched in March 2024, noting inflation's drop from around 40% to nearly 12%. He also highlighted improvements in key economic indicators amid global challenges.

 

 

 

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