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Treasury Bills In Nigeria - Investment (329) - Nairaland

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Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by TONY56: 8:27pm On Jul 08, 2017
bigbroda:
Hello guyz, has anyone done TB business in d last one week with GTB? I applied about a week ago and they keep telling me stories I don't understand. I'm sure u guys know d kind of stories they usually tell. Something like they haven't been able to get from d secondary market or so. I just don't understand what they were precisely saying but d bottom line is dat I've not been debited and still hoping dat it would be successful next week. Any advice?


Just Port to STANBIC OR FIRST BANK and you will very glad you did.
your account officer MAY be playing a fast one on you to keep your money as part of the target given to him for the month because once you buy TB, that money leaves their Bank to CBN and will no longer be useful to them

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by TONY56: 8:31pm On Jul 08, 2017
bigbroda:
Hello guyz, has anyone done TB business in d last one week with GTB? I applied about a week ago and they keep telling me stories I don't understand. I'm sure u guys know d kind of stories they usually tell. Something like they haven't been able to get from d secondary market or so. I just don't understand what they were precisely saying but d bottom line is dat I've not been debited and still hoping dat it would be successful next week. Any advice?

Did you ask for secondary market? If you did and they say they don't have, leave the Bank and move on to First Bank or Stanbic where you will get even better rates than GTB.

Must you buy from them?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by vitality22(m): 10:45pm On Jul 08, 2017
bigbroda:
Hello guyz, has anyone done TB business in d last one week with GTB? I applied about a week ago and they keep telling me stories I don't understand. I'm sure u guys know d kind of stories they usually tell. Something like they haven't been able to get from d secondary market or so. I just don't understand what they were precisely saying but d bottom line is dat I've not been debited and still hoping dat it would be successful next week. Any advice?
Bros, just wise up ooo, withdraw your money and move over to stanbic or firstbank. Unless you are not ready to invest in TBills yet.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 10:58pm On Jul 08, 2017
Thanks guyz. If I take d money to another bank, how soon or lemme say in how many days(max) can I successfully do d invest i.e. when d they would debit my account.

I told them(GTB) about my interest in d secondary market o. They even said primary market if for N50M and above or something. Unfortunately they said it has to pass through my account officer even when I called their call centre.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 11:17pm On Jul 08, 2017
What is the story you were told?

If you dont understand what they were saying, why did not ask for explanation?

If you have been debited, it means your subscription was successful
Your upfront will drop.
Keep Calm and Enjoy TBills grin


bigbroda:
Hello guyz, has anyone done TB business in d last one week with GTB? I applied about a week ago and they keep telling me stories I don't understand. I'm sure u guys know d kind of stories they usually tell. Something like they haven't been able to get from d secondary market or so. I just don't understand what they were precisely saying but d bottom line is dat I've not been debited and still hoping dat it would be successful next week. Any advice?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 5:27am On Jul 09, 2017
amjustme2:
What is the story you were told?

If you dont understand what they were saying, why did not ask for explanation?

If you have been debited, it means your subscription was successful
Your upfront will drop.
Keep Calm and Enjoy TBills grin

I explained d stories in my previous posts. D stories sounded like it's not something u say I wanna buy now and get now. It's takes little time based on availability since it's d secondary market according to them. I've not been debited hence my reason my asking questions here.

I also love d stanbic idea and would look into it soon but like to do gtb now cos I intend processing some bank documents with them soon and would prefer to have dat from them. Will certainly do stanbic afterwards.



I explained d stories in my previous posts. D stories sounded like it's not something u say I wanna buy now and get now. It's takes little time based on availability since it's d secondary market according to them. I've not been debited hence my reason my asking questions here.

I also love d stanbic idea and would look into it soon but like to do gtb now cos I intend processing some bank documents with them soon and would prefer to have dat from them. Will certainly do stanbic afterwards.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Gazelle22: 7:23am On Jul 09, 2017
MOUNTING DEBT CRISES AMIDST WASTE - PUNCH EDITORIAL

Once again, Nigeria is on a binge borrowing to another national debt crisis. According to the Debt Management Office , Nigeria ’s total debt stock increased to $ 62 . 87 billion (N 19 . 15 trillion ) at the end of first quarter 2017 , from $ 57 . 39 billion ( N 17 . 36 trillion ) at the end of last year . While the external debt rose from $ 11 . 40 billion at the end of December to $ 13 . 80 billion at the end of March 2017 , the domestic component of the debt fell from N 13 . 88 trillion to N 11 . 97 trillion.

Amid ailing finances , Nigeria ’s debt is expanding again at a rapid pace with a huge debt servicing cost . In the past five years , Nigeria has spent $ 1 . 62 billion for servicing of external loans contracted by both the federal and state governments . In all , the Federal Government proposed to additionally borrow about $ 30 billion between 2016 and 2018 to be arranged from five multilateral institutions : World Bank , African Development Bank , Japan International Co - operation Agency , Islamic Development Bank and the China EximBank .
The breakdown of the package shows that $ 4 . 8 billion will be spent on the Mambila Hydro - electric Power Plant ; $ 3 . 5 billion on railway modernisation coastal project ( Calabar - Port Harcourt - Onne Deep Seaport segment ); $ 1 . 6 billion for Abuja mass rail transit project ; $ 1 . 1 billion to kick- start the Lagos - Ibadan segment of the Lagos- Kano railway modernisation project and $ 1 . 3 billion for the Kano - Kaduna section. Another $ 6 billion is devoted to social programmes in health and education. From this figure , $ 7 billion would be sought this year.

The Minister of Finance , Kemi Adeosun, declared recently that the solution to our rising debt service cost was not to stop borrowing , but to raise revenue from tax as a low hanging fruit. According to her , Nigeria ’s 69 million taxpayers have devised means of beating an opaque tax collection system . Her analysis shows that out of this figure , only 214 people pay personal income tax of about N 20 million each, despite the fact that the country has the highest number of Africa ’s wealthiest people.

Adeosun’ s aggressive tax collection and the plan to boost capital spending are welcome and indeed overdue , but her solution to Nigeria escaping another debt crisis is inadequate . We agree that the economy needs a sufficient amount of public debt to function well . The economy suffers from obvious infrastructure deficiencies like electricity , roads, rails , water systems and more , which , according to some estimates, will require $ 31 billion to fix each year for the next decade.

And one way to put debt in perspective is to compare it to gross domestic product . The debt- to - GDP ratio is one primary indicator of a country ’s economic health ; a lower ratio is generally seen as more favourable , as it shows that a country is producing enough to eventually be able to repay its debts . The Economist magazine’ s Global Debt Stock puts our public debt at $ 55 , 944 , 262 , 295 , public debt per person at $ 309 . 57 , public debt as percentage of GDP at 19 . 1 per cent and total annual change of 6 . 3 per cent. From the figures , we appear to be in a reasonable threshold when compared with that of South Africa ’s $ 226 , 101 , 639 , 344 total public debt at $ 4 , 657 per person, 42 . 2 per cent of GDP and 12 . 5 per cent annual change.

But that is where the good news ends . The bad news is that successive governments have so badly managed resources only to resort to borrowing to meet consumption and feed the prevailing system of graft and patronage while piling up debts . Similarly , Nigeria is not among the world’ s economic powerhouses . We are also not persuaded that the government is utilising loans judiciously as a tool for development . It is wrong therefore to justify borrowing using global thresholds knowing that we run an economy with an acute infrastructure deficit , one that is dependent on crude oil receipts for over 70 per cent of government revenues , where the rule of law is weak and one where excessive corruption derails all development programmes . Our oil -resource economy is another disincentive . With oil receipts dominating fiscal revenue and exports , the Nigerian economy has been hit hard by falling oil prices and low oil production . It is argued that a drastic and persistent fall in public assets, caused by a fall in revenue , would , in the long run , increase the risk of debt distress . Unlike Nigeria , countries like Malaysia , South Africa, Brazil and South Korea have built up infrastructure , diversified and built export - oriented economies and could therefore sustain such high debt- to - GDP ratios. In these and other countries , corruption is not as endemic as it is in Nigeria.

Many have had a hand in creating this mess . For an economy highly dependent on oil revenue and given the volatility in oil prices, an appropriate policy choice would have been a vigorous accumulation of oil savings during a boom time and using them in a downturn . The Goodluck Jonathan government failed Nigeria woefully on this score . Nigeria sailed through the 2008 - 09 crisis with ample buffers: the balance in the Excess Crude Account , according to an International Monetary Fund damning report , was put at $ 22 billion ( 8 per cent of GDP) , while gross international reserves stood at $ 62 billion ( equivalent to 16 months of imports ). But Jonathan came and squandered a substantial part of that . By 2014 , the ECA had been depleted to $ 4 billion (½ per cent of GDP) and GIR had fallen to $ 40 billion (about 8 ½ months of imports ). Over time , the GIR fell below $ 30 billion in 2015 on Jonathan ’ s watch . Yet, as of March 31 , 2015 , the Jonathan government left a public debt of $ 63 . 5 billion or N 12 . 062 trillion . A year later , the debt stock climbed further to $ 71 . 7 billion or N 13 . 8 trillion.

Many others also brought this country to the sad state of affairs . For instance , while Nigeria is running from pillar to post seeking external loans to fund the budget , the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria just says that the debts owed it by 350 Nigerians would be enough to fund about N 2 trillion deficit in the 2017 budget . “ The Federal Government will have no need to borrow in order to finance part of the budget if they (AMCON debtors ) pay the debts . ”

No doubt , the treasury that Adeosun inherited from the Jonathan administration was almost out of cash. But the Buhari government statist approach to economic management is wrong . The administration must not drag Nigeria into a Greece - like debt crisis when a left - leaning , socially liberal government embarked on large increase in government spending. Government spending and borrowing soared , leading to 16 years of double - digit fiscal deficit . This , according to a report , stifled the private sector and saw an explosive expansion of the public sector as a percentage of total GDP.

How should Nigeria , therefore , manage its debt? The previous loans were expended on ill - conceived projects . Therefore, how the loans were utilised should be audited before new ones are taken. In addition to cracking down on artful tax dodgers, the government should take measures to shrink the bloated state , retool the anti - graft war and address the illicit financial outflow. Economic diversification driven by the private sector can only make sense if it is accompanied by aggressive privatisation plan.

Copyright PUNCH .
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 7:49am On Jul 09, 2017
Good morning wonderful ppl..

Abeg 1.4Million in T-Bills for 365 days how much intrestest?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 7:55am On Jul 09, 2017
If you get 18.3%

That will be

1.4m x 18.3% = 256,200

Yes. 256,200.


Osahon7:
Good morning wonderful ppl..

Abeg 1.4Million in T-Bills for 365 days how much intrestest?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:37am On Jul 09, 2017
amjustme2:
If you get 18.3%

That will be

1.4m x 18.3% = 256,200

Yes. 256,200.


Thank you Sir
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Ghost01(m): 9:27am On Jul 09, 2017
jp130:
upfront alert just gotten now from sterling bank. base on my calculation, rate na 18.05%
18.1%. That was the rate I got from Sterling last week.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 10:14am On Jul 09, 2017
I would go early 2mao cos i learnt if u go b4 10am, u could get a juicy rate.

Can i decide to invest the interest too??

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Investnow2017: 11:52am On Jul 09, 2017
Fm4real06:
I would go early 2mao cos i learnt if u go b4 10am, u could get a juicy rate.

Can i decide to invest the interest too??

Why not. That is the take
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Dozi05(m): 2:15pm On Jul 09, 2017
Please what is the process to get tbills at firstbank from the secondary market. What is the minimum amount one can get as i understand that the minimum amount at firstbank for the primary market is 100k
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by hiscules: 4:52pm On Jul 09, 2017
Gazelle22:
MOUNTING DEBT CRISES AMIDST WASTE - PUNCH EDITORIAL

Once again, Nigeria is on a binge borrowing to another national debt crisis. According to the Debt Management Office , Nigeria ’s total debt stock increased to $ 62 . 87 billion (N 19 . 15 trillion ) at the end of first quarter 2017 , from $ 57 . 39 billion ( N 17 . 36 trillion ) at the end of last year . While the external debt rose from $ 11 . 40 billion at the end of December to $ 13 . 80 billion at the end of March 2017 , the domestic component of the debt fell from N 13 . 88 trillion to N 11 . 97 trillion.

Amid ailing finances , Nigeria ’s debt is expanding again at a rapid pace with a huge debt servicing cost . In the past five years , Nigeria has spent $ 1 . 62 billion for servicing of external loans contracted by both the federal and state governments . In all , the Federal Government proposed to additionally borrow about $ 30 billion between 2016 and 2018 to be arranged from five multilateral institutions : World Bank , African Development Bank , Japan International Co - operation Agency , Islamic Development Bank and the China EximBank .
The breakdown of the package shows that $ 4 . 8 billion will be spent on the Mambila Hydro - electric Power Plant ; $ 3 . 5 billion on railway modernisation coastal project ( Calabar - Port Harcourt - Onne Deep Seaport segment ); $ 1 . 6 billion for Abuja mass rail transit project ; $ 1 . 1 billion to kick- start the Lagos - Ibadan segment of the Lagos- Kano railway modernisation project and $ 1 . 3 billion for the Kano - Kaduna section. Another $ 6 billion is devoted to social programmes in health and education. From this figure , $ 7 billion would be sought this year.

The Minister of Finance , Kemi Adeosun, declared recently that the solution to our rising debt service cost was not to stop borrowing , but to raise revenue from tax as a low hanging fruit. According to her , Nigeria ’s 69 million taxpayers have devised means of beating an opaque tax collection system . Her analysis shows that out of this figure , only 214 people pay personal income tax of about N 20 million each, despite the fact that the country has the highest number of Africa ’s wealthiest people.

Adeosun’ s aggressive tax collection and the plan to boost capital spending are welcome and indeed overdue , but her solution to Nigeria escaping another debt crisis is inadequate . We agree that the economy needs a sufficient amount of public debt to function well . The economy suffers from obvious infrastructure deficiencies like electricity , roads, rails , water systems and more , which , according to some estimates, will require $ 31 billion to fix each year for the next decade.

And one way to put debt in perspective is to compare it to gross domestic product . The debt- to - GDP ratio is one primary indicator of a country ’s economic health ; a lower ratio is generally seen as more favourable , as it shows that a country is producing enough to eventually be able to repay its debts . The Economist magazine’ s Global Debt Stock puts our public debt at $ 55 , 944 , 262 , 295 , public debt per person at $ 309 . 57 , public debt as percentage of GDP at 19 . 1 per cent and total annual change of 6 . 3 per cent. From the figures , we appear to be in a reasonable threshold when compared with that of South Africa ’s $ 226 , 101 , 639 , 344 total public debt at $ 4 , 657 per person, 42 . 2 per cent of GDP and 12 . 5 per cent annual change.

But that is where the good news ends . The bad news is that successive governments have so badly managed resources only to resort to borrowing to meet consumption and feed the prevailing system of graft and patronage while piling up debts . Similarly , Nigeria is not among the world’ s economic powerhouses . We are also not persuaded that the government is utilising loans judiciously as a tool for development . It is wrong therefore to justify borrowing using global thresholds knowing that we run an economy with an acute infrastructure deficit , one that is dependent on crude oil receipts for over 70 per cent of government revenues , where the rule of law is weak and one where excessive corruption derails all development programmes . Our oil -resource economy is another disincentive . With oil receipts dominating fiscal revenue and exports , the Nigerian economy has been hit hard by falling oil prices and low oil production . It is argued that a drastic and persistent fall in public assets, caused by a fall in revenue , would , in the long run , increase the risk of debt distress . Unlike Nigeria , countries like Malaysia , South Africa, Brazil and South Korea have built up infrastructure , diversified and built export - oriented economies and could therefore sustain such high debt- to - GDP ratios. In these and other countries , corruption is not as endemic as it is in Nigeria.

Many have had a hand in creating this mess . For an economy highly dependent on oil revenue and given the volatility in oil prices, an appropriate policy choice would have been a vigorous accumulation of oil savings during a boom time and using them in a downturn . The Goodluck Jonathan government failed Nigeria woefully on this score . Nigeria sailed through the 2008 - 09 crisis with ample buffers: the balance in the Excess Crude Account , according to an International Monetary Fund damning report , was put at $ 22 billion ( 8 per cent of GDP) , while gross international reserves stood at $ 62 billion ( equivalent to 16 months of imports ). But Jonathan came and squandered a substantial part of that . By 2014 , the ECA had been depleted to $ 4 billion (½ per cent of GDP) and GIR had fallen to $ 40 billion (about 8 ½ months of imports ). Over time , the GIR fell below $ 30 billion in 2015 on Jonathan ’ s watch . Yet, as of March 31 , 2015 , the Jonathan government left a public debt of $ 63 . 5 billion or N 12 . 062 trillion . A year later , the debt stock climbed further to $ 71 . 7 billion or N 13 . 8 trillion.

Many others also brought this country to the sad state of affairs . For instance , while Nigeria is running from pillar to post seeking external loans to fund the budget , the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria just says that the debts owed it by 350 Nigerians would be enough to fund about N 2 trillion deficit in the 2017 budget . “ The Federal Government will have no need to borrow in order to finance part of the budget if they (AMCON debtors ) pay the debts . ”

No doubt , the treasury that Adeosun inherited from the Jonathan administration was almost out of cash. But the Buhari government statist approach to economic management is wrong . The administration must not drag Nigeria into a Greece - like debt crisis when a left - leaning , socially liberal government embarked on large increase in government spending. Government spending and borrowing soared , leading to 16 years of double - digit fiscal deficit . This , according to a report , stifled the private sector and saw an explosive expansion of the public sector as a percentage of total GDP.

How should Nigeria , therefore , manage its debt? The previous loans were expended on ill - conceived projects . Therefore, how the loans were utilised should be audited before new ones are taken. In addition to cracking down on artful tax dodgers, the government should take measures to shrink the bloated state , retool the anti - graft war and address the illicit financial outflow. Economic diversification driven by the private sector can only make sense if it is accompanied by aggressive privatisation plan.

Copyright PUNCH .
what is the summary ,please?

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 11:26am On Jul 10, 2017
I was at firstbank, and dey said no more funds for 91days.. they have 116days 185days at 16.5% etc
I dont know if it is the branch that dont have funds in TB or i should try another branch.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 11:37am On Jul 10, 2017
It means it has been fully subscribed.

Go for the next available tenor.

The figure they tell you is from their HQ. You will get the same information from any other branch.

Fm4real06:
I was at firstbank, and dey said no more funds for 91days.. they have 116days 185days at 16.5% etc
I dont know if it is the branch that dont have funds in TB or i should try another branch.

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 11:41am On Jul 10, 2017
100k can go.

According to posts this morning, FBN have 116days 185days at 16.5% etc available.


Dozi05:
Please what is the process to get tbills at firstbank from the secondary market. What is the minimum amount one can get as i understand that the minimum amount at firstbank for the primary market is 100k
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 11:56am On Jul 10, 2017
amjustme2:
It means it has been fully subscribed.

Go for the next available tenor.

The figure they tell you is from their HQ. You will get the same information from any other branch.

Exactly. I went to another bank and i was told d same thing. Although the bank official said everything is zeros that i should check back. The issue now is i dont know the next available tenure. It may take time or days sef.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Investnow2017: 12:47pm On Jul 10, 2017
I am just from first bank in phc and i got 18% for 332days! Secondary market rates this week are rather low compared to recent weeks.

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 1:04pm On Jul 10, 2017
Go for the next available Tenor, 116, 185

If they are still available.

Fm4real06:

Exactly. I went to another bank and i was told d same thing. Although the bank official said everything is zeros that i should check back. The issue now is i dont know the next available tenure. It may take time or days sef.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 1:05pm On Jul 10, 2017
Investnow2017:
I am just from first bank in phc and i got 18% for 332days! Secondary market rates this week are rather low compared to recent weeks.
Dats d rate as at last week too. 18.4%
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 1:06pm On Jul 10, 2017
amjustme2:
Go for the next available Tenor, 116, 185

If they are still available.

Im thinking of 91days.... 116days still plenty.. i want short time things..
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 1:09pm On Jul 10, 2017
Go to another bank GTB or Stanbic.

Alternatively wait for next auction.

Fm4real06:

Im thinking of 91days.... 116days still plenty.. i want short time things..
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 1:37pm On Jul 10, 2017
amjustme2:
Go to another bank GTB or Stanbic.

Alternatively wait for next auction.

I think Following by the cbn calendar, the next auction date should be 19th of july..
Im i right..

https://i2.wp.com/nairametrics.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Treasury-bills-calendar.jpg

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by amjustme2: 1:45pm On Jul 10, 2017
Correct!!

Fm4real06:

I think Following by the cbn calendar, the next auction date should be 19th of july..
Im i right..

https://i2.wp.com/nairametrics.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Treasury-bills-calendar.jpg
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 1:57pm On Jul 10, 2017
amjustme2:
Correct!!

Thats a long time from now oo..
Kindly look at the calendar(link) above, are those figures in millions or billions.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 2:42pm On Jul 10, 2017
amjustme2:
Go to another bank GTB or Stanbic.

Alternatively wait for next auction.

I have gone to GTb.. the staff said there are no funds for NTB for now but i should wait till the next auction date. Which is 19th of this month but i need to submit my application lastest by monday of that auction week.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by henrienta: 6:08pm On Jul 10, 2017
Pls how much is tbills of 1million for 90days in GTB
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:19pm On Jul 10, 2017
Fm4real06:

I have gone to GTb.. the staff said there are no funds for NTB for now but i should wait till the next auction date. Which is 19th of this month but i need to submit my application lastest by monday of that auction week.

Exactly what I was talking about by saying they were telling me stories I didn't understand. Though they told me dis morning dat they might b debiting me between today and tomorrow for my request. Don't know if it's gonna b for d 19th auction as stated here but they never told me about 19th or any date.

Guess what, I just got d debit alert while typing dis. 94 days for 13.5%.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:28pm On Jul 10, 2017
bigbroda:


Exactly what I was talking about by saying they were telling me stories I didn't understand. Though they told me dis morning dat they might b debiting me between today and tomorrow for my request. Don't know if it's gonna b for d 19th auction as stated here but they never told me about 19th or any date.

Guess what, I just got d debit alert while typing dis. 94 days for 13.5%.
Wow.. when did u apply? Now in regretting why i didnt apply on friday wen it was 14% for 91days .
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:33pm On Jul 10, 2017
henrienta:
Pls how much is tbills of 1million for 90days in GTB
The rate is 13.5% so when u do ur calculation:

1m × 13.5% =135,000
135000÷365 days =369.863
369.863×90days = #33,287.67

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