BAI: Kz 100,500 ▲ 5.8% | BFA: Kz 118,000 ▲ 138.4% | USD/AOA: 914.60 ▲ 0.2% | Oil (Brent): $74.50 ▲ 3.2% | Gold: $2,920 ▲ 12.1% | BT 91d Yield: 14.8% | Inflation: 15.7% YoY | BNA Rate: 17.5% | BAI: Kz 100,500 ▲ 5.8% | BFA: Kz 118,000 ▲ 138.4% | USD/AOA: 914.60 ▲ 0.2% | Oil (Brent): $74.50 ▲ 3.2% | Gold: $2,920 ▲ 12.1% | BT 91d Yield: 14.8% | Inflation: 15.7% YoY | BNA Rate: 17.5% |
Instrument

OTNR — Non-Readjustable Treasury Bonds

OTNR — Non-Readjustable Treasury Bonds — instrument in Angola's capital markets.

Overview

OTNR (Obrigações do Tesouro Não Reajustáveis) are fixed-rate, kwanza-denominated Treasury bonds issued by the Republic of Angola through MINFIN. The “Não Reajustáveis” designation (non-readjustable) indicates that these bonds pay a fixed coupon rate that does not adjust for inflation or exchange rate movements, distinguishing them from the OTX (FX-indexed) variant. OTNRs are a core component of Angola’s sovereign debt market and trade on BODIVA.

Instrument Characteristics

FeatureDetail
IssuerRepublic of Angola (MINFIN)
CurrencyAngolan kwanza (AOA)
CouponFixed rate, paid semi-annually or annually
Maturities2, 3, 5, 7, and 10 years
Auction agentBNA
Trading venueBODIVA secondary market
CustodyCEVAMA
SettlementT+1 or T+2

Pricing and Yield Dynamics

OTNR yields are determined by multiple factors:

  • BNA policy rate: At 17.5% (cut from 18.5% on January 14, 2026), the policy rate establishes the floor for OTNR pricing. Shorter-dated OTNRs typically price near the policy rate plus a term premium, while longer maturities incorporate additional duration risk.
  • Inflation expectations: With the INE reporting 15.7% CPI inflation (December 2025), OTNR coupon rates must exceed inflation to deliver positive real returns. The spread between OTNR coupons and inflation represents the real yield available to investors.
  • Supply and demand: MINFIN’s issuance volume and the demand from banks, insurers, and institutional investors determine auction clearing rates.
  • Sovereign credit risk: Angola’s ratings (S&P B- / Moody’s B3 / Fitch B-) reflect the credit premium embedded in OTNR yields.

Investment Profile

OTNRs offer several distinct characteristics for portfolio construction:

Advantages

  • Predictable cash flows: Fixed coupons provide certainty on nominal income, facilitating asset-liability matching for banks and insurers
  • Higher yields: OTNRs typically offer higher nominal yields than Bilhetes do Tesouro (which are zero-coupon and short-term), compensating for duration and inflation risk
  • Duration exposure: Maturities of 2-10 years allow investors to express views on the interest rate cycle and potentially benefit from capital gains if rates decline

Risks

  • Inflation risk: Fixed coupons do not adjust for inflation, meaning real returns erode if CPI exceeds expectations. At 15.7% inflation, the real yield margin is compressed.
  • Currency risk: As kwanza-denominated instruments, OTNRs expose foreign investors to USD/AOA depreciation risk (rate at 914.60). Investors seeking FX protection should consider OTX bonds instead.
  • Liquidity risk: Secondary market trading for longer-dated OTNRs may be less liquid than for Bilhetes do Tesouro, particularly for 7-10 year maturities
  • Reinvestment risk: Coupon payments must be reinvested at prevailing market rates, which may be lower if the BNA continues its easing cycle

Comparison with OTX

FeatureOTNROTX
CouponFixed kwanza rateVariable, FX-indexed
Currency protectionNoneYes (indexed to USD/EUR)
Inflation hedgeNoPartial (via FX component)
Target investorDomestic, kwanza-focusedFX-sensitive, foreign investors

Investor Considerations

OTNRs are appropriate for investors with a constructive view on the kwanza, expectations of declining inflation, or a need for fixed-income duration in kwanza terms. The January 2026 BNA rate cut (from 18.5% to 17.5%) suggests the beginning of an easing cycle, which — if sustained — would generate capital gains on existing fixed-rate OTNRs as yields fall. However, investors must weigh this rate outlook against ongoing inflation (15.7%), oil price risk affecting fiscal stability (Brent at ~$74.50/bbl, debt-to-GDP at 59.9%), and the structural oil dependency that drives macroeconomic volatility. OTNRs should be analyzed as part of a broader sovereign debt allocation that may also include Bilhetes do Tesouro for liquidity and OTX for currency protection.

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