Yesterday, the Ministry of Finance raised UAH6.4bn by placing new military bills and "reserve" notes.
The MoF offered three bond issues. Two of them were reopenings: one maturing in October 2024, which the Ministry of Finance has been offering in the primary market every week since mid-July, and another was "reserve" notes maturing at the end of 2026, which the Ministry was offering for the second time, and the NBU allows for covering required reserves starting next Monday. The third issue of bonds was new: military paper maturing in June 2025.
There was no demand for one-year bills yesterday. It was the second case this year after the MoF did not receive any bids for similar paper at the first primary auction this year.
"Reserve" notes received small demand compared with last week's auction—UAH2.8bn vs. UAH8.7bn. Banks were not in a hurry to buy more "reserve" bonds, as they can only use them to cover part of reserve requirements starting next Monday. Therefore, considering that the cap was much larger—UAH5bn—and demand was within the 19‒19.2% range, the Ministry of Finance satisfied all competitive bids at their rates, and the non-competitive demand at a weighted average rate of 19.19%.
At the same time, non-banking demand could flow into a new issue of military bills. The demand for the new issue was more than UAH8bn, but the Ministry was ready to sell only UAH4bn of bonds (at face value). However, as a result, the MoF sold UAH3.4bn of new bonds, attracting UAH3.5bn to the budget at rates from 18.15% to 18.35%, while bids with higher interest rates were rejected. The weighted average rate for non-competitive bids was set by the MoF at 18.31%.
Moscow Imposes Russian Car Insurance in Occupied Ukraine by 2025
Research team: Taras Kotovych.
JOIN US ON TELEGRAM
Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.
See the full report here.
You can also highlight the text and press Ctrl + Enter