Audio By Carbonatix The government failed to meet its treasury bills target for the fifth week running. According to the auction results by the Bank of Ghana, the government recorded 8.20% undersubscription of its auction target, but lower than the previous week. Investors bought a little over GH¢4.48 billion of the short-term securities, as against a target of GH¢4.8 billion. It, however, accepted about GH¢4.0 billion of the bids. The 91-day bill was once again the most subscribed bill as GH¢2.55 billion of the bids were tendered, representing 56.9% of the total bids. The uptake was, however, GH¢790 million. The 364-day bill recorded bids of about GH¢1.1 billion. The uptake was GH¢162.59 million. For the 182-day bill, GH¢771.16 million of the bids were tendered. About GH¢ 758 of the bids were accepted. Meanwhile, interest rates continued to rise on the yield curve. The yield on the 91-day bill increased by 3.0 basis points to 4.94%. That of the 182-day bill also went up to 6.90% from the previous week’s 6.77%. Similarly, the yield on the 364-day bill inched up by 15 basis points to 10.12%. DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited. Tags: 182-day 364-day 91-day Interest rates T-Bills DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited. Related to this story T-bills: Government records 29% undersubscription; interest rates continue to surge GSE records GH¢1.09bn trade in equity market; 10 stocks register gains T-bills auction: Government records 32% undersubscription; interest rates rise again Government to borrow GH¢15.231bn via T-bills, bonds between March and June 2026 T-bills auction: Government records 20.1% undersubscription; interest rates continue to surge Cutting rates while draining liquidity: Is the Bank of Ghana contradicting itself—or getting it right? Declining interest rates and tightening liquidity needed to support gradual economic recovery – US-based Economist Cutting rates while draining liquidity: Is the BoG contradicting itself, or getting it right? T-bills: Government records 25% undersubscription; interest rates rise marginally GSE continues good run, 10 stocks record gains since January 2026 Latest Stories T-bills auction: Government records undersubscription for 5th week running; interest rates continue to rise15 minutes Sub-Saharan Africa GDP growth to soften to 4.3% in 202627 minutes Passenger arrivals decline 18.9% month-on-month to 110,087 in January 202630 minutes Consumer spending records strong performance in January 2026, but construction sector activities declined – BoG35 minutes Number of advertised jobs falls in February 2026 – BoG41 minutes Government’s new free primary healthcare policy marks a turning point in saving lives in Ghana44 minutes Asiedu Nkekia heads north, hists Upper West on Monday1 hour Aduana family rejects ‘breakaway’ claim, reaffirms loyalty to Okyenhene2 hours Mahama applauds progress on Tamale Teaching Hospital Cardiology Centre2 hours GRASAG holds 30th Annual National Congress at UCC, elects new leadership2 hours Nyinahini Bauxite Deal: Community pushes GIADEC to consider local investors2 hours Assafuah alleges nepotism at NPRA over rapid promotion and GH¢90k transfer grant5 hours Fire ravages Berekum Cinema Hall, destroying property worth thousands of cedis5 hours To create a prosecutorial office, Article 88 must be amended – Deputy AG5 hours Mahama directs Health Ministry to establish Tamale cancer treatment centre as new cardio facility nears completion5 hours