Illustration of a Treasury debt auction scene with officials, bidders, and financial charts symbolizing economic measures.
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.

The Finance Secretariat announced an auction of National Treasury instruments for Wednesday, November 26, aiming to renew peso-denominated debt worth nearly $15 trillion. The offering includes fixed-rate titles such as the Bono T13F6 (maturity 13/02/2026), Letra S30A6 (30/04/2026), and others maturing up to 2027. A new Letra at TAMAR rate with April 2026 maturity is introduced, based on the Badlar/TAMAR average for private bank deposits over one billion pesos. There are also CER-adjusted instruments like a new LECER (29/05/2026), and dollar-linked ones such as the Letra D30A6 (30/04/2026).

Meanwhile, the Central Bank (BCRA), led by Santiago Bausili, lowered simultaneous rates from 22% to 20% TNA, a tool for daily liquidity regulation. This cut follows a week of exchange rate stability and seeks to normalize the economy and boost credit. Additionally, via Communication A8355, the BCRA eased reserves starting December 1: the daily minimum cash floor drops from 95% to 75%, removing an additional 3.5% on certain peso obligations. It allows up to 3.5 percentage points to be met with public titles and extends a 5% requirement for Group A banks until March 31, 2026, encouraging primary bond subscriptions.

These measures aim to boost demand for Treasury debt, facilitate rollover of maturities, and promote remonetization amid inflation reduction efforts. Experts note they extend timelines to avoid short-term buildups and provide room for reserve purchases without monetary stability risks.

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Discussions on X focus on the Argentine Central Bank's rate cut to 20% TNA and eased reserves to support the Treasury's $15 trillion debt renewal auction on November 26. Reactions include positive views on normalizing rates and stimulating activity, neutral analyses of maturity structures and liquidity effects, and some skepticism about rollover success amid international financing hurdles.

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News illustration of Colombia's Ministry of Finance TES bond auction worth 450 billion pesos, featuring officials, bidding screens, and national symbols.
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Ministry of Finance auctions TES worth 450 billion pesos

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The Ministry of Finance held an auction of Treasury Titles (TES) worth 450 billion pesos, denominated in Real Value Units (UVR), maturing in 2031, 2041, 2055, and 2062. The Comptroller General backed the operation, confirming its legality and that it does not create new debt, while President Gustavo Petro defended the move to manage government liquidity.

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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Colombia's Public Credit Directorate awarded one-year TES bonds at a cut-off rate of 13.494% in the March 24 auction, setting a new historical high. With 5.29% inflation, this yields a real rate near 8.2%. The outcome signals heightened fiscal risk perception among investors.

Argentina's Central Bank announced on Monday, December 15, 2025, the first measures of its 2026 economic plan, including updating exchange rate bands according to inflation and a consistent program to accumulate international reserves. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) welcomed these decisions, aligned with its prior recommendations. Meanwhile, the National Treasury purchased 320 million dollars following the announcements.

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Argentina's central bank gross international reserves reached USD 43.610 million on Friday, the highest since President Javier Milei's term began, building on the 2026 accumulation plan announced earlier this month. Driven by gold revaluation and Treasury purchases, this strengthens the position ahead of a USD 4,200 million debt maturity on January 9.

An ANIF report states that the gross debt of Colombia's National Central Government ended 2025 at $1.194 trillion, or 64.4% of GDP, the highest since the 2020 pandemic. Treasury liquidity hit historic lows, with cash on hand covering just five days of obligations in February 2026.

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The Central Bank of Nigeria has raised N15.3 trillion through low-risk Nigerian treasury bills in 2025 to help bridge the country's budget deficit.

 

 

 

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