Oversubscription of 80% masks underlying fragility as government locks in short-term funding
By Leo Nelson
Ghana’s Treasury bill auction has delivered a spectacular GH¢6.08 billion windfall the first major oversubscription in two months. But beneath the euphoria lie familiar questions about debt sustainability and the cost of short-termism.
Investors submitted bids totalling GH¢7.82 billion against a target of GH¢4.34 billion an 80 percent oversubscription. The trigger is no secret: Fitch Ratings’ recent upgrade of Ghana’s credit rating to ‘B’ with a stable outlook.
The 91-day bill soaked up 73 percent of total bids GH¢5.71 billion tendered, GH¢4.37 billion accepted. The 364-day instrument attracted GH¢1.46 billion, while the 182-day drew GH¢652 million.
Interest rates offered a more nuanced picture. The 91-day yield dipped 4 basis points to 4.88 percent a vote of confidence in near-term stability. The 364-day fell 6 basis points to 10.13 percent.
But the 182-day yield crept up to 7.03 percent from 6.97 percent. That modest increase suggests investors are not uniformly sanguine about medium-term risks.
“The market is rewarding Ghana’s improved credit metrics, but the preference for very short tenors signals lingering caution,” one Accra-based fixed-income analyst told The New Republic.
The GH¢6 billion injection gives the government breathing room funding for infrastructure, fiscal obligations and recovery programmes. Reduced reliance on external borrowing is welcome, particularly after the 2022-23 debt restructuring trauma.
Yet the auction’s structure raises eyebrows. Government consistently favours 91-day paper, rolling over short-term liabilities rather than locking in longer-term financing. That strategy leaves the treasury perpetually exposed to shifts in investor sentiment.
One prominent market watcher, speaking on condition of anonymity, noted: “An oversubscribed T-bill auction is not a turnaround. It is liquidity searching for safe harbour. The real test is whether government can stretch tenors without spooking the market.”
Fitch’s upgrade to ‘B’ still five notches below investment grade hardly signals a clean bill of health. The stable outlook assumes continued fiscal discipline and IMF programme compliance. Any slippage could reverse the tide just as quickly as it turned.
Foreign portfolio managers who fled during the crisis are now “showing renewed interest”, according to the government’s statement. But foreign holdings of T-bills remain a fraction of pre-default levels.
For ordinary Ghanaians and local businesses, the ripple effects are real but indirect. Stronger government finances could improve public services and investor climate. Banking stocks and corporate issuers may benefit from enhanced sovereign creditworthiness.
But analysts warn against reading too much into a single auction. The government still carries a heavy debt load. Domestic borrowing costs, though improved, remain elevated by historical standards.
“The combination of the Fitch upgrade and oversubscription creates a virtuous cycle for now,” said an economist with a local research firm. “But Ghana has seen false dawns before. The proof will be in sustained fiscal consolidation and growth.”
Ghana is open for business, the auction suggests. But the world’s wallets, while open, are watching closely. The GH¢6 billion triumph is a chapter not the final word in a long and uncertain economic recovery.
