The Bureau of the Treasury awarded the full P6.5 billion for the three-month debt papers which fetched an average rate of 5.463 percent; it also awarded another P6.5 billion for the six-month papers which had an average rate of 5.731 percent, an increase from the 5.668 percent posted in the auction last week.  BTr on FB
BUSINESS

T-bills rates up amid possible Fed rate cuts

Kathryn Jose

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) made a full award of Treasury bills (T-bills) worth P22 billion during its auction on Monday which saw higher interest rates after declining in the past five weeks and amid investors' anticipation of smaller rate cuts from the US Federal Reserve (Fed).

The BTr auctioned off 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day debt papers which drew total bids amounting to P50.1 billion or 2.3 times oversubscription.

The BTr awarded P7 billion for the three-month papers, fetching an average rate of 5.128 percent, higher than the 5.101 percent posted in the 3 February auction.

The Treasury awarded another P7 billion for six-month papers, which had an average rate of 5.562 percent, up from 5.477 percent in the last week's auction.

Lastly, the BTr awarded P8 billion for the one-year papers which fetched an average rate of 5.726 percent, an increase from 5.671 percent in the prior auction.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said T-bills rate increased as investors are worried about the inflationary impact on goods and services from US President Donald Trump's protectionist policies.

"Some markets are concerned that Trump’s plans for higher US import tariffs would lead to higher US inflation and fewer future Federal Reserve's rate cuts," Ricafort said.

He noted that investors are seeing a 36-basis point cut for this year, smaller than the 50 basis points based on the Federal Reserve's official estimate.

Following Trump's remarks on a 25 percent tariff on all steel and aluminum imports, global oil prices rose on Monday.

US-sourced WTI crude oil increased by 0.70 percent, while Europe's Brent crude rose by 0.71 percent based on data from Bloomberg.

While economists project the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to ease its policy rate by 25 basis points to 5.5 percent on Thursday, BSP Governor Eli Remolona Jr. said its Monetary Board will be taking a "gradual" approach this year.

"T-bill yields corrected slightly higher to be usually slightly lower than short-term PHP BVAL yield in the secondary market and usually slightly higher versus the expected BSP 1-day policy rate later this week," Ricafort said.

In its December meeting last year, the BSP Monetary Board estimated local average inflation to slightly quicken to 3.4 percent this year from 3.2 percent last year and to 3.7 percent in 2026.

Ricafort added investors sought more returns after demand for local government securities surged to over $5 billion last year.