The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is set to intensify its liquidity management drive in the second quarter of 2026 with plans to auction N3.95 trillion in Nigerian Treasury Bills, a programme that underscores the apex bank’s continued preference for tight monetary conditions and its growing reliance on longer-dated instruments to lock in funds.
According to the CBN’s Q2 Treasury Bills issuance calendar, the auction programme begins on April 8 and runs through mid-June, with total gross issuance of N3.95 trillion against expected maturities of N3.2 trillion, implying a net liquidity withdrawal of N750 billion from the financial system by the end of the quarter.
That net issuance figure is significant because it signals that the apex bank is not merely refinancing maturing obligations but actively mopping up excess liquidity in the banking system, a strategy aimed at containing inflationary pressures, stabilizing money market rates, and supporting the naira.
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The structure of the issuance calendar reveals where investor demand is currently strongest. Of the total amount to be raised, N2.85 trillion is allocated to 364-day Treasury Bills, accounting for the overwhelming bulk of the programme. By contrast, N700 billion has been earmarked for 91-day bills, while N400 billion is allocated to 182-day paper.
The heavy skew toward the one-year tenor is consistent with recent auction trends, where institutional demand has been overwhelmingly concentrated at the long end of the curve.
At the March 18 primary market auction, for instance, the 364-day bill alone attracted N2.89 trillion in subscriptions, far outstripping demand for shorter maturities, while the stop rate settled at 16.63%, only marginally lower than the previous auction.
This demand pattern suggests that banks, pension funds, asset managers, and other institutional investors are still eager to lock in elevated risk-free yields for as long as possible. In a high-rate environment, longer-dated Treasury Bills offer yield certainty and reduce reinvestment risk, especially at a time when there remains uncertainty over the pace of monetary easing.
The six planned auction sessions are expected to be spread evenly across the quarter. The first two auctions, worth N700 billion and N750 billion, are scheduled for April 8 and April 22.
May will see two further auctions of N700 billion and N650 billion on May 6 and May 20, while the final two sessions are fixed for June 3 and June 17, with planned sales of N700 billion and N450 billion, respectively.
On the maturity side, the quarter carries a substantial settlement burden, particularly in June. The CBN is expected to settle N356.47 billion and N758.31 billion on April 8 and 22, respectively, followed by N556.02 billion and N634.5 billion in May.
June is more clustered, with maturities of N464.59 billion on June 3, N144.4 billion on June 10, N184.8 billion on June 17, and N97.75 billion on June 24. This concentration of maturities in June will be closely watched by money market traders because it creates short-term liquidity windows that could influence interbank rates and secondary market yields.
From a policy standpoint, the programme reflects a deliberate continuation of liquidity tightening. The CBN is effectively withdrawing cash from the banking system by ensuring that gross issuance exceeds maturities by N750 billion, a move that supports its broader inflation-control mandate.
This is particularly relevant given lingering excess liquidity conditions, the ongoing need to anchor inflation expectations, and market concerns over possible fiscal expansion ahead of the 2027 election cycle. The strategy also complements the CBN’s open market operations framework.
Treasury Bills remain one of the apex bank’s most effective monetary tools for sterilizing liquidity. When issuance exceeds maturities, banks and investors commit fresh funds into government securities, thereby reducing the volume of free cash available for lending, foreign exchange speculation, or short-term trading activities.
The implications for the capital market are equally important because elevated Treasury Bill yields continue to present a compelling risk-free alternative to equities, particularly for domestic institutional investors focused on capital preservation.
At yields in the mid-16% range for one-year paper, the relative attractiveness of dividend-paying stocks narrows considerably. This dynamic is likely to sustain portfolio rebalancing away from equities and toward fixed income, especially among pension funds, insurance firms, and conservative fund managers.
That said, the rotation may not be uniform as stocks with strong earnings visibility and robust dividend yields are expected to remain relatively resilient, even as broader market liquidity comes under pressure.
The near-term consequence, however, is likely to be softer valuations in growth and speculative counters. The latest programme also provides insight into the CBN’s rate expectations.
The dominance of 364-day instruments suggests the apex bank is comfortable locking in current yields over a longer tenor, a signal that it may not expect a rapid fall in short-term rates in the immediate future.
The Q2 calendar confirms that fixed-income markets will remain a central component of portfolio strategy in the months ahead. It also reinforces the message that monetary authorities are prioritizing liquidity discipline and macroeconomic stability, even if that means tighter funding conditions for risk assets and the private sector.
In effect, the second-quarter Treasury Bills programme is more than a borrowing calendar. It is a clear policy statement that the CBN intends to keep liquidity conditions firm while preserving investor appetite for naira assets.



