The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has announced it will conduct its second Treasury Bills auction for February 2026, offering a total of ₦1.15 trillion in Nigerian Treasury Bills (NTBs), to investors on Wednesday as part of its ongoing debt and liquidity management strategy.
Auction Structure and Offer Size
The NTB auction will feature bills across three standard maturities:
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91‑day bills
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182‑day bills
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364‑day bills
The total offer of ₦1.15 trillion is split across these maturities to cater to varying investor preferences: smaller allocations are typically made to short and mid‑term bills, while longer‑term bills command the largest share of the offer.
In the most recent circular — issued via the Debt Management Office (DMO), on behalf of the CBN — the breakdown was outlined as follows:
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₦150 billion for 91‑day bills
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₦200 billion for 182‑day bills
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₦800 billion for 364‑day bills
This composition reflects the strong market appetite for long‑dated bills, which typically offer higher yields and better inflation protection.

Investor Appetite and Market Dynamics
Market observers expect oversubscription at this auction due to ample liquidity in the financial system. Analysts report that banks and asset managers are holding excess funds — in many cases over ₦4 trillion in excess liquidity — that they are keen to deploy in safe, short‑term government securities.
In previous NTB auctions, demand for 364‑day bills has generally been the highest, often significantly outstripping the amount offered. During the first NTB auction of 2026, total bids exceeded ₦1.5 trillion — far above the ₦1.15 trillion on offer — reinforcing the strong investor interest in these instruments.
However, demand patterns vary across maturities. Shorter bills (91 and 182 days), have at times underperformed relative to the long tenor, reflecting investor preference for locking in longer yields in Nigeria’s current monetary climate.
Why This Auction Matters
1. Liquidity Management:
One of the central reasons the CBN conducts regular T‑Bills auctions is to manage liquidity in the banking system. By absorbing excess cash through government paper sales, the central bank can help stabilise interest rates and contain inflationary pressures. The large midweek auction is expected to soak up a size-able portion of excess liquidity once settled.
2. Benchmark Rate Influence:
Treasury Bills form a critical reference point for Nigerian short‑term interest rates. Strong demand and changes in stop rates — the highest yield accepted at auction — directly influence overall money market rates, including yields on other fixed‑income securities.
3. Inflation and Monetary Policy:
Investors’ appetite at NTB auctions is also shaped by inflation expectations and recent statistical releases, such as Nigeria’s headline inflation figures. High inflation can push investors toward longer maturities to lock in yields ahead of anticipated rate hikes or policy shifts.
Market Context: Recent Trends
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In January’s primary market auction, investors’ total subscription topped ₦1.5 trillion, well above the CBN’s offer, with the 364‑day instrument particularly popular as a hedge against rising yields.
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Secondary market activity also remains active, with yields on benchmark Treasury Bills shifting week‑to‑week based on investor expectations and liquidity conditions.
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Broader system liquidity — influenced by other monetary operations such as Open Market Operations (OMO), and maturities — continues to play a significant part in shaping the landscape for NTB auctions.
Conclusion: Implications for Investors and the Economy
The CBN’s ₦1.15 trillion midweek Treasury Bills auction represents a key component of Nigeria’s monetary and debt management framework.
By offering diversified maturities across the 91‑, 182‑, and 364‑day spectrum, the central bank provides market participants with opportunities to adjust portfolios according to liquidity needs and yield expectations.
Given recent trends of high subscription and ample system liquidity, this auction is expected to be robust, potentially influencing yields and market rates. Investors — including banks, pension funds, and asset managers — will closely watch subscription levels, stop rates, and settlement outcomes for signals about future monetary policy directions and market conditions.
