Nigeria’s
interbank lending rates inched up this week to an average of 10.50 percent on
Friday, up from 10.37 percent last week after a treasury bill sale drained
liquidity, dealers said.
The
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) sold a combined N200 billion ($1.2 billion) worth
of bills on Monday and Thursday this week, to manage excess liquidity. It also
sold N114.39 billion in treasury bills
at a primary market auction.
The
market opened with a cash balance of
around N516 billion from government
budgetary allocations, oil company cash call payments and matured open market
bills, before settling bills sold this week, dealers said.
The
cash balance was around N400 billion last Friday.
“Unless
the central bank sells more bills we expect rates to remain stable next week,”
one dealer said.
The
open buy-back rate climbed slightly to 10.50 percent from 10.25 percent, 1.50
basis points below the central bank’s benchmark interest rate of 12 percent.
Overnight
placements remained unchanged at 10.50 percent, the same level as last week.
Businessday
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