Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Financial Market Performance in July 2025
September 7, 2025  
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 Monthly Economic Review shows that the financial market remained highly liquid in July 2025, supported by the recent reduction of the Central Bank Rate (CBR) to 5.75%. Government securities were in strong demand, with Treasury bill auctions oversubscribed nearly threefold (TZS 452.1 billion bids vs. TZS 162.0 billion offered) […]

The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 Monthly Economic Review shows that the financial market remained highly liquid in July 2025, supported by the recent reduction of the Central Bank Rate (CBR) to 5.75%. Government securities were in strong demand, with Treasury bill auctions oversubscribed nearly threefold (TZS 452.1 billion bids vs. TZS 162.0 billion offered) and a decline in the weighted average yield to 8.13% from 8.89% in June. In the bond market, investor preference shifted toward longer maturities, with the 10-year bond oversubscribed at a yield of 13.74%, while shorter tenors recorded slight yield increases. Meanwhile, interbank cash market (IBCM) activity surged, with turnover rising by 30% to TZS 3,746 billion, dominated by 7-day deals, while the average rate eased to 6.62% (from 7.93%), reflecting improved banking sector liquidity and effective monetary policy transmission.

1. Government Securities Market

  • In July 2025, the Bank of Tanzania conducted two Treasury bill auctions with a total offer of TZS 162.0 billion.
    • Bids received: TZS 452.1 billion
    • Successful bids: TZS 158.9 billion
    • Weighted Average Yield (WAY): 8.13% (down from 8.89% in June 2025).
  • Treasury Bonds:
    • Auctions for 2-, 5-, and 10-year bonds were held.
    • Tender sizes:
      • 2-year: TZS 117.05 billion
      • 5-year: TZS 136.2 billion
      • 10-year: TZS 162.8 billion
    • Bids received: TZS 396.4 billion, of which TZS 351.9 billion were accepted.
    • Yields:
      • 2-year: 12.17% (slight increase)
      • 5-year: 13.18% (slight increase)
      • 10-year: 13.74% (slight decrease).
    • Investor trend: Preference shifted toward longer-term bonds (10-year oversubscribed, while 2- and 5-year were undersubscribed).

2. Interbank Cash Market (IBCM)

  • The IBCM continued to play a role in liquidity management.
  • Turnover in July 2025: TZS 3,746 billion (up from TZS 2,873.9 billion in June 2025).
  • Structure of transactions:
    • 7-day deals dominated: 65.9% of total turnover.
  • Interest rates:
    • Overall IBCM rate eased to 6.62% (down from 7.93% in June 2025).
    • Within the Central Bank Rate (CBR) corridor of 3.75% – 7.75%.

Table 1: Treasury Bills Auction (July 2025)

IndicatorAmount / Rate
Amount OfferedTZS 162.0 billion
Bids ReceivedTZS 452.1 billion
Successful BidsTZS 158.9 billion
Oversubscription Ratio2.8x
Weighted Average Yield (WAY)8.13% (vs. 8.89% in Jun 2025)

Table 2: Treasury Bonds Auctions (July 2025)

Bond TenorTender Size (TZS Billion)Bids Received (TZS Billion)Accepted (TZS Billion)Yield (%)Investor Demand
2-Year117.0512.17 ↑Undersubscribed
5-Year136.2013.18 ↑Undersubscribed
10-Year162.8013.74 ↓Oversubscribed
Total416.05396.4351.9Strong demand

(Arrows indicate direction vs. June 2025 yields)

Table 3: Interbank Cash Market (IBCM), July 2025

IndicatorJune 2025July 2025Change
Total Turnover (TZS Billion)2,873.93,746.0+30%
Dominant Deal Type7-day (≈66%)7-day (65.9%)
Overall IBCM Rate (%)7.936.62-1.31
Policy Corridor (CBR range)3.75% – 7.75%3.75% – 7.75%

Economic Implications of the Financial Market Data (Government Securities and IBCM)

1. Government Securities Market

Government securities (Treasury bills and bonds) are key tools for the BOT and government to manage liquidity, finance budgets, and signal interest rate expectations. The July 2025 data shows strong demand overall, but with nuanced shifts in investor preferences.

  • Treasury Bills (Short-Term Securities):
    • Oversubscription and Yield Decline: The auctions offered TZS 162.0 billion but attracted TZS 452.1 billion in bids (nearly 2.8x oversubscribed), with only TZS 158.9 billion accepted (about 35% of bids). The weighted average yield (WAY) fell to 8.13% from 8.89% in June.
    • Economic Meaning: This indicates abundant liquidity in the banking system, as investors (primarily banks and institutional players) are eager to park excess funds in safe, short-term assets. The yield drop reflects the BOT's accommodative policy transmitting to lower short-term borrowing costs for the government. Economically, it signals:
      • Lower Government Financing Costs: Cheaper short-term debt helps ease fiscal pressure, allowing more budget allocation to growth-oriented spending (e.g., infrastructure, as noted in the document's budgetary operations section).
      • Stimulus to Credit and Growth: With yields falling, banks may redirect funds toward private sector lending, aligning with the BOT's goal of boosting credit growth (which was at 15.9% annually in July). This could support sectors like agriculture and manufacturing, contributing to GDP expansion.
      • Potential Risks: Persistent oversubscription might hint at risk aversion if investors prefer safe assets over riskier loans, though the document's strong money supply growth (19.9% for M3) suggests otherwise.
  • Treasury Bonds (Medium- to Long-Term Securities):
    • Auction Details and Yield Movements: Tender sizes were TZS 117.05 billion (2-year), TZS 136.2 billion (5-year), and TZS 162.8 billion (10-year). Total bids reached TZS 396.4 billion (oversubscribed overall), with TZS 351.9 billion accepted. Yields rose slightly for 2-year (to 12.17%) and 5-year (to 13.18%) bonds but eased for 10-year (to 13.74%).
    • Investor Shift to Longer Tenors: The 10-year bond was oversubscribed, while shorter ones were undersubscribed, showing a preference for long-term instruments.
    • Economic Meaning: This points to evolving investor confidence and expectations of future rates.
      • Yield Curve Dynamics: The slight increase in short- to medium-term yields contrasted with a dip in long-term yields suggests a flattening yield curve. Investors may anticipate further policy easing (e.g., more CBR cuts) or stable inflation, making long-term bonds attractive for locking in returns. This reflects optimism about Tanzania's medium-term economic stability, supported by the document's notes on resilient global conditions and domestic inflation within the 3-5% target.
      • Confidence in Long-Term Outlook: The shift to 10-year bonds indicates reduced perceived long-term risks, possibly due to improving external factors (e.g., stable commodity prices like oil at USD 69.2/barrel) and strong export performance. It could lower the government's overall debt servicing costs over time, freeing resources for development (as seen in the document's external sector improvements).
      • Fiscal and Growth Implications: Higher acceptance rates (89% of bids) help fund budgetary operations without crowding out private credit. However, undersubscription in shorter bonds might signal caution on near-term liquidity or inflation risks from food price upticks (e.g., rice and millet, as detailed in the inflation section).

Overall, for Government Securities:

  • Broad Implications: The market's robustness (high bids, easing yields) underscores effective monetary policy transmission, fostering lower interest rates economy-wide. This supports the BOT's dual mandate of price stability and growth, potentially reducing the cost of capital for businesses and households. From a macroeconomic perspective, it aligns with Tanzania's 2025 growth projections (around 6.5% per IMF estimates), driven by mining, tourism, and agriculture. However, if yields continue falling too sharply, it could encourage speculative borrowing or pressure the shilling (though it remained stable at TZS 2,666.79/USD).

2. Interbank Cash Market (IBCM)

The IBCM is a short-term lending market among banks, crucial for liquidity management and transmitting BOT policy signals. It operates within the CBR corridor (3.75%-7.75% in July).

  • Increased Turnover and Easing Rates: Turnover rose ~30% to TZS 3,746 billion from TZS 2,873.9 billion in June, with 7-day deals dominating (65.9%). The overall rate eased to 6.62% from 7.93%.
  • Economic Meaning: This reflects improved liquidity conditions in the banking sector, directly tied to the BOT's reverse repo operations (TZS 758.8 billion injected in July, per the document).
    • Ample Liquidity and Policy Effectiveness: Higher turnover and lower rates indicate banks have excess reserves to lend, reducing borrowing pressures. The rate staying within the corridor shows the BOT's success in steering short-term rates toward the CBR, promoting stability.
    • Boost to Banking and Credit: Easier interbank lending lowers funding costs for banks, which can pass savings to customers via cheaper loans. This complements the document's noted private sector credit growth (15.9%), potentially accelerating investment in key sectors.
    • Growth Support Amid Easing: The ~1.3% rate drop signals a loosening environment, encouraging economic activity without stoking inflation (which remained stable due to offsetting food and energy dynamics). It could help mitigate global risks like trade uncertainties (highlighted in the global section).

Summary of Broader Economic Significance

  • Positive for Growth and Stability: The data portrays an easing financial environment, with lower yields and rates fostering cheaper credit, higher investment, and fiscal flexibility. This is consistent with the BOT's strategy to counter subdued global demand while maintaining inflation targets, potentially supporting Tanzania's 2025 GDP growth amid resilient exports (e.g., gold and cash crops).
  • Liquidity-Driven Trends: Strong demand and easing conditions stem from policy measures like the CBR cut and reverse repos, indicating effective liquidity management. Investors' long-term preference suggests confidence in sustained recovery.
  • Potential Challenges: While beneficial, excessive liquidity could lead to asset price inflation or currency depreciation if not monitored. The document's emphasis on stable commodity prices and external improvements mitigates this, but ongoing vigilance is key.
  • Comparative Context: Compared to regional peers (e.g., EAC inflation within 8% benchmark), Tanzania's markets appear more liquid and investor-friendly, enhancing its attractiveness for foreign inflows.

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