Treasury likely to maintain bond auction levels
South Africa’s National Treasury will probably keep the levels of its bond auctions constant until the end of the fiscal year, even with domestic-debt issuance running ahead of target.
The Treasury is unlikely to “adjust its in-year bond auction levels due to the short time period remaining after the presentation of the 2021 budget,” its media desk said Wednesday in an emailed response to questions, while emphasizing that the department “does not front-run the budget.”
Finance Minister Tito Mboweni is due to present the national budget on February 24, while the fiscal year runs to the end of March.
The government in October said its total borrowing requirement for the 2020-21 budget year would be R774.7-billion. The weekly bond auctions have been oversubscribed and if it continues to issue local-currency debt at the rate of R12.4-billion a week, the Treasury could exceed the estimate by R96-billion, according a client note by FirstRand Group’s Ltd.’s Rand Merchant Bank.
Domestic-bond issuance is running ahead of estimates because of strong uptake in non-competitive bond auctions, supported by an increase in the limit, the Treasury said. While it’s not deliberately raising more money than planned, cash balances are good due to the demand at the non-competitive sales and higher tax collections, according to the Treasury.
Cash Balances
Revenue collected from April through December is 10.6% lower than the same period a year earlier. That compares with a shortfall of 17.9% projected for the full 2020-21 fiscal year in the medium-term budget policy statement.
“Government raises funding to fund the budget deficit and to an extent that there is over-funding in a given fiscal year, the over-funding would then contribute toward high cash balances that can be used in the subsequent fiscal years to fund part of the budget deficit,” the Treasury said.
The government in October forecast that the budget gap would widen to 15.7% of gross domestic product in the current fiscal year, before moderating to 10.1% of GDP in 2021-22.
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