DEVELOPMENT OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IN TANZANIA

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

DEVELOPMENT OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IN TANZANIA

Description:

DEVELOPMENT OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IN TANZANIA June 2003 ORGANIZATION OF THE PAPER Introduction - Period prior to 1991 - Period after 1991 - Period after 1993 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:5
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: PSD2

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: DEVELOPMENT OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IN TANZANIA


1
  • DEVELOPMENT OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IN TANZANIA
  • June 2003

2
ORGANIZATION OF THE PAPER
  • Introduction
  • - Period prior to 1991
  • - Period after 1991
  • - Period after 1993

3
  • What are financial markets?
  • - Transfer of funds
  • - Bonds, Foreign Exchange Markets
  • What are Government Securities?
  • - Treasury bills
  • - Treasury bonds
  • - Other market instruments (repos)

4
  • Participation in the securities market
  • - Primary market
  • - Secondary market
  • - Primary dealers and Direct Investors
  • Performance of the market

5
  • Factors inhibiting development of the Government
    Securities
  • - Lack of secondary market
  • - Market shallowness
  • The way Forward
  • Conclusion

6
Development of Government Securities in Tanzania
  • Presentation by
  • J.K. Ndissi (Mrs.)
  • Deputy Director,
  • Domestic Markets,
  • Bank of Tanzania.

7
A. Introduction
  • 1. Period Prior to 1991
  • - Introduction of the Arusha

    Declaration in l967. The financial sector
    wholly state owned.
  • - Absence of money and capital Markets.
  • - A few long term non tradable papers were
    issued in favour of the state owned
    institutions.

8
  • High inflation and interest rates.
  • 1988 government directed credit to a few
    selected sectors which led to credit
    misallocation.
  • - Establishment of the Banking Commission.

9
  • 2. Period after 1991
  • - Launch of comprehensive Financial Sector
    Reforms.
  • - Reforms aimed at supporting a stable
    macroeconomic framework.
  • - Development of money market.
  • - Strengthening of banking supervision function
    at the Bank.

10
  • - Restructuring of state owned banks
  • - Enactment of Banking and Financial Institution
    Act. 1991 (facilitated the licensing of new banks
    and financial institutions)

11
  • 3. Period after 1993
  • - Mr. John M Keyes said . The important thing
    for the government is not to do things which
    individuals are doing already and to do them a
    little bit better or worse, but to do those
    things which at present are not done at all
  • - Introduction of treasury bills auctions August
    1993.

12
  • Advantages of treasury bills include-
  • a vehicle for sterilising excess liquidity in
    the economy.
  • establish a reference point for interest rates
    and spearhead development of secondary market.
  • Non inflationary mechanism.

13
  • Introduction of Capital Markets and Securities
    Authority Act. 1994 (establishment of Dar es
    Salaam Stock Exchange).
  • Bank of Tanzania Act 1995 (Price Stability).
  • Introduction of two year treasury bonds (1997)

14
B. Definition of Financial Markets
  • Markets in which funds are transferred from those
    with axcess to those who have a shortage
    (financial intermediation).
  • Types of financial markets are Bond, Stock, and
    foreign exchange market.

15
  • Another distinction is by the maturity of
    securities i.e. money markets (short term debt)
    and Capital markets (long term debt).

16
C. Government Securities
  • Treasury bills (short term)
  • Treasury bonds (long term)
  • Other market instruments
  • Treasury bills
  • Short term debt obligations
  • Government borrows from the public, banks and non
    bank financial institutions.

17
  • Secured by the governments credit worthiness.
  • Maturities include 35, 91, 182 and 364 day bill.
  • Weekly competitive multiple pricing (Dutch)
    auctions.

18
  • Auction results announced after two hours of
    auction processing
  • Rediscount and redemption facilities offered at
    the Bank
  • They are secure, transferable, negotiable and can
    be pledged as collateral.

19
Treasury Bonds
  • Issuance methodology
  • - Introduced in 2002 (between February and
    October) after the recommendations made by the
    National Debt Strategy (2001).
  • - Maturities include 2, 5, 7 and 10 years.
  • - Issued on a monthly basis.
  • - Tranching or re-opening system.

20
  • - Parent bond issued in the first month of the
    quarter and then reopened with the same coupon
    rate and maturity date in the next two months.
  • - Government fixes the coupon and investors
    bid prices against TZS 100 per value.
  • - Multiple pricing auctions (discriminatory).

21
  • - Book entry system (no physical certificates).
  • - Listed at the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange
    (DSE)
  • - Interest payable semi-annually
  • - Single prospectus a call to tender issued
    one week before the auction

22
Why did we introduce Treasury Bonds?
  • - Domestic Debt restructured into marketable
    securities.
  • - Lengthen the maturity profile and the yield
    curve.
  • - Meet the excess demand for long term bonds
    by the market players.
  • - Enhance transparency in the trading of bonds.

23
  • - Adhere to the international best practice and
    develop financial markets.
  • - Pave way for the introduction of corporate
    bonds /municipal bonds (benchmark pricing).
  • - Reduce the number of auctions to 12 in a year
    (4 bonds (1 bond on a quarterly basis).

24
  • - spur secondary market trading (listing of
    bonds at the DSE) and thereby facilitate
    development of capital markets.

25
D. Participation in the
Securities Market
  • Primary market (wholesale of new issues)
  • Secondary market(resale) stock exchange or OTC
  • Auctions are done at a primary level.
  • Offers an entry point.

26
  • - Primary market dealership system (exclusive
    rights to bid in auctions)
  • - Group of selected participants (banks/broker
    dealers/DI)
  • - Prior to introduction of this system the market
    was characterized by yield volatility,number of
    participants was large.

27
  • Primary dealership system aimed at simplifying
    issuance and administration of government
    securities.
  • - Obligations include, receive bids from
    investors in t/bills/bonds, bid objectively on
    behalf of their customers and on their own
    behalf.

28
  • - Keep an inventory of securities for on selling.
  • - Expected to spur competition and lead to
    development of secondary market.
  • - Transfer and updating of ownership of
    securities is done in the Book Entry System
    (Central Depository System). It is in paperless
    form.

29
E. Performance of the Government Securities
  • Experience in the t/bills market has revealed
    mixed responses.
  • - the first auctions were highly oversubscribed
    and yields went up due to probably to the
    newness of the market and lack of expertise.
  • - The governments borrowing needs were on the
    high-side.

30
  • - Segmentation of bidders
  • - Currently yields have been declining and
    under- subscriptions have been the order of the
    day.
  • - Treasury bonds are also under- subscribed.
  • - Institutional investors have diversified
    their investment portifolio into real estate.

31
  • - inverted yield curve whereby short-term bills
    are earning more than the long term papers.
  • - the primary dealership has not yielded the
    expected results.

32
F. Factors inhibiting the development of the
Government Securities Market
  • Lack of deep and broad markets due to-
  • - Absence of secondary market trading and no
    price discovery (PDs buy and hold).
  • - Excess liquidity limited number of market
    instruments.

33
  • Reduced government borrowing requirements.
  • Structural rigidities- minimal bank lending to
    the private sector.
  • absence of the Credit Information Bureau.

34
  • - Delay/reluctance in signing the Master
    Repurchase Agreement. (un-collateralized lending
    in the interbank market)
  • - Limited pricing expertise among investors.

35
H. The Way Forward
  • Development of the secondary market situational
    analysis, enforcement of dealer obligations
  • Development of new tradable market instruments to
    enable diversification.
  • Speed up the formation of the Credit Information
    Bureau (enable participants to make informed
    decision).

36
  • Encourage the signing of the Master Repurchase
    Agreement.
  • Conducting sensitization seminars.

37
H. Conclusion
  • Central banks are responsible for implementing
    appropriate policies that bring about stable
    interest, exchange and inflation rates and to
    promote development of financial markets through
    the issuance of government securities.
  • It is necessary therefore that debt (sale of
    government securities) and liquidity

38
  • management (Open Market Operations) strategies
    are synchronized and complement each other.
  • Central Banks speak without saying anything
    Mike Moscow, President of the Chicago Federal
    Reserve 2002.

39
  • THANK YOU
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)