The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is set to conduct another Treasury Bills Primary Market Auction (PMA), offering about N450 billion worth of short-term government securities in a bid to manage liquidity in the financial system.
According to the auction schedule, the exercise is billed for Wednesday, June 17, and will be executed through the Debt Management Office (DMO) on behalf of the apex bank. The offer is split across the standard tenors of 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day instruments, with investors expected to bid competitively for the papers.
Market updates indicate that the offer size forms part of the CBN’s regular open market operations aimed at controlling excess liquidity and stabilising short-term interest rates in the money market. Analysts note that such auctions often attract strong demand from banks, pension funds, and other institutional investors seeking relatively safe, naira-denominated returns.
The auction comes amid continued active issuance of government securities in June 2026, a period marked by significant maturities and reinvestment activity across the fixed-income market. Recent market trends have shown heightened investor appetite, with prior auctions recording oversubscriptions as participants reposition portfolios in response to prevailing yield conditions.
The outcome of the June 17 sale is expected to influence short-term borrowing costs and provide further signals on liquidity conditions in Nigeria’s financial system as the central bank continues its monetary tightening and liquidity management stance.
Further details, including stop rates and allotment results, are expected after the auction concludes.

