CBN Rakes in ₦26.4 Trillion via T-Bills & OMO in 8 Months Amid Tight Monetary Policy

  • Weekly Giveaway for our active users. N50,000 per Week. Do you want to contribute to this community? We are looking for contribution? What is hot right now? Sign up and get in on the ground floor of the newest, fastest growing Nigerian forum!

Olori Uwem

Well-Known Member
Mar 18, 2024
1,545
74
48
CBN Rakes in ₦26.4 Trillion via T-Bills & OMO in 8 Months Amid Tight Monetary Policy

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has raised a massive ₦26.4 trillion through Treasury Bills (₦9.47 trillion) and Open Market Operations (OMO) (₦16.92 trillion) between January and August 2025 as part of its aggressive monetary tightening strategy.

This represents a 56.9% YoY growth compared to ₦16.82 trillion raised in the same period of 2024.

Why Is the CBN Raising So Much?
• Goal: To mop up excess liquidity, stabilize the naira, and tame inflation.
• Tools Used:
• T-Bills: Short-term government debt, widely considered safe.
• OMO Bills: Used by the CBN to regulate liquidity and influence short-term interest rates.

By issuing more high-yield OMO bills, the CBN is also soaking up excess cash and keeping inflation expectations in check.

Market Dynamics
• T-Bills raised fell slightly (-4.3% YoY) from ₦9.9 trillion in 2024.
• OMO surged 144% YoY from ₦6.92 trillion in 2024 to ₦16.92 trillion in 2025.

• Yields:
• OMO yields rose above 20%.
• 364-day T-Bills yields fell to 17.44% (Aug), down from 22.62% (Jan).

• Investor Demand: Strong appetite for longer-dated instruments as investors seek to lock in high rates against inflation.

Investor Perspectives
• J.P. Morgan: Recently advised caution, warning that falling oil prices and global risks may hurt Nigeria’s macro stability.

• Local Investors: Still piling into long-dated OMO bills, showing confidence in high yields as a hedge against inflation.

Inflation & Policy Impact
• MPR (interest rate): Raised sharply by 870 bps to 27.5% in 2025.

• Inflation: Cooling gradually — down to 21.88% in July 2025 from 24.23% in March 2025.

• Liquidity Pressure: Nigeria’s M3 money supply hit ₦117.5 trillion (June 2025), up 15.8% YoY, forcing CBN to stay aggressive.

️ Expert View
• Tajudeen Olayinka (Investment Banker & Stockbroker):
• Cutting T-Bills rates is deliberate to attract foreign inflows and boost FX liquidity.

• This move could also stabilize the naira and moderate domestic interest rates in the long run.

• Cordros Research (Analysts):
• Expect yields on T-Bills and bonds to decline towards 18% by year-end 2025 as inflation eases and CBN pauses further rate hikes.


✨ Key Takeaway for Investors

The CBN’s ₦26.4 trillion debt drive shows its determination to fight inflation and stabilize FX. For investors:
• OMO bills offer attractive >20% yields, though not without risks.

• T-Bills remain a safe haven with moderating rates.

• The mixed signals (tight liquidity + falling inflation) suggest opportunities for strategic positioning across tenors.