On Monday, May 9, the ECB announced its weekly Main Refinancing Operation. The auction was conducted on Tuesday, May 10, and attracted bids from euro area eligible counterparties of €124.75 billion, €2.79 billion lower than the amount bid for in the previous week. The bid amount was allotted in full at a fixed rate equivalent to the prevailing main refinancing rate of 1.25 per cent, in accordance with current ECB policy.

On Tuesday, May 10, the ECB conducted a Special Term Refinancing Operation (STRO) with a maturity of 35 days. This attracted bids of €80.65 billion, which were allotted in full at a fixed rate equivalent to the prevailing main refinancing rate of 1.25 per cent, also in accordance with current ECB policy.

Also on Tuesday, May 10, the ECB conducted an auction for a seven-day fixed-term deposit intended to absorb €76 billion. The operation was designed to sterilise the effect of purchases made under the Securities Markets Programme that were settled but had not yet matured by the previous Friday, May 6. The auction was carried out at a variable rate, with euro area eligible counterparties allowed to place up to two bids at a maximum rate of 1.25 per cent. It attracted bids amounting to €109.15 billion, with the ECB allotting €76 billion or 69.63 per cent of the total amount bid for. The marginal rate on the auction was set at 1.15 per cent, with the weighted average rate at 1.09 per cent.

On Tuesday, May 10, which was the last day of the reserve deposit maintenance period, the ECB conducted an overnight Fine-tuning Liquidity Absorbing Operation at a variable rate, with counterparties allowed to place up to two bids at a maximum rate of 1.25 per cent. The operation attracted bids of €143.75 billion, with the ECB accepting €143.09 billion or 99.54 per cent of the total amount bid for. The marginal rate on the operation was set at 1.05 per cent, while the weighted average rate was 1.01 per cent.

On Wednesday, May 11, the ECB conducted a seven-day US dollar funding operation through collateralised lending in conjunction with the US Federal Reserve. This operation was carried out at a fixed rate of 1.10 per cent and once more, no bids were placed by euro area eligible counterparties.

In the domestic primary market for Treasury Bills, the Treasury invited tenders for 182-day bills maturing on November 11. Bids of €27.23 million were submitted for the 182-day bills, with the Treasury accepting €17.23 million. Since €10.1 million worth of bills matured during the week, the outstanding balance of Treasury Bills increased by €7.13 million, to stand at €372.86 million.

The yield from the 182-day bill auction was 1.667 per cent, i.e. 18.3 basis points higher than on bills with a similar tenor issued on May 6, 2011, representing a bid price of 99.1643 per 100 nominal.

During the week under review, there was no trading on the Malta Stock Exchange.

Today, the Treasury will invite tenders for 91-day bills maturing on August 19.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.