The US Treasury is facing the need for increasing issuance of longer-term securities this year as the budget deficit worsens, but for now its plans are frozen by the partisan standoff in Washington over raising the debt limit.
(Bloomberg) — The US Treasury is facing the need for increasing issuance of longer-term securities this year as the budget deficit worsens, but for now its plans are frozen by the partisan standoff in Washington over raising the debt limit.
This Wednesday’s so-called quarterly refunding announcement — at which the Treasury Department outlines its issuance plans for longer-term securities — is likely to be the third in a row without any change to the slate of coupon-bearing debt auctions that kicks off each three-month cycle. Most forecasters see the combined size for the three securities being kept at $96 billion.
Later this year, the Treasury will be under pressure to boost that figure, to fund a widening budget gap while maintaining its preferred overall maturity structure.
On Monday, the US Treasury ramped up its estimate for federal borrowing for the current quarter, in an assessment that assumes Congress will resolve the impasse over the debt limit and allow the department to rebuild its cash pile. The Treasury Department increased its borrowing estimate for the April-to-June quarter to $726 billion, compared with the $278 billion it predicted in late January.
US Treasury Boosts Borrowing Estimate, Counts On Rebuilding Cash
With the Treasury constrained from what it can do thanks to having hit the debt ceiling in January and using special measures to avoid breaching it since then, dealers aren’t expecting major new signals on issuance strategy on Wednesday. The refunding will provide Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s debt managers to renew calls to Congress to address the limit.
“Treasury is better off doing the bare minimum they can do, with the backdrop of the uncertainty around the debt ceiling,” said Jason Williams, an interest-rate strategist at Citigroup Inc. “Treasury will need to increase coupon debt ahead but it’s not an emergency for them to do it now. It makes more sense for them to wait.”
An unchanged quarterly refunding plan would suggest the Treasury sells:
- $40 billion of 3-year notes on May 9
- $35 billion of 10-year notes on May 10
- $21 billion of 30-year bonds on May 11
In its broader discussion of debt-management strategy, the Treasury may on Wednesday offer an update on its thinking about a potential program to buy back some outstanding securities. The department has for months been looking at such an initiative, in part to bolster trading liquidity.
Read More: Treasury Asks Dealers Views on Buybacks, Post Debt-Limit T-Bills
“It could be an interesting refunding on two issues: one being how Treasury is thinking about changes to coupon-debt sizes ahead and also on buybacks,” said Priya Misra, global head of rates strategy at TD Securities.
Misra noted that the Federal Reserve’s continuing quantitative-tightening program — which sees up to $60 billion of Treasuries mature each month without replacement — is also contributing to the need for the Treasury in time to expand its refunding size.
As with many other dealers, Misra is penciling that in for November. JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists wrote that an increase is “unavoidable,” and that team sees a boost coming in August.
For now, the Treasury is running down its stockpile of cash and shrinking its issuance of Treasury bills as it works to stay under the $31.4 trillion debt limit.
Speaker Kevin McCarthy last week muscled a debt-limit bill through the House that’s opposed by President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats, leaving the situation in limbo with the clock ticking until the government runs out of enough cash to make good on all federal obligations.
The Treasury is expected in the coming days to offer an update of its timeline for when it will likely exhaust the special accounting measures it’s been deploying since January to stay within the statutory limit.
Once the ceiling is suspended or raised, the Treasury is expected to ramp back up its sales of T-bills to rebuild its cash. Wells Fargo & Co.’s team predicts $1.1 trillion in net new bill issuance from the start of August through the end of the year — assuming a debt-ceiling resolution is put in place before that. By the end of March 2024, net new bill supply will have catapulted up by $1.5 trillion, Wells Fargo says.
That surge would then threaten to lift the share of bills in the Treasury’s overall debt load above the 15% to 20% advised by the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee — a group of dealers, investors and other market participants that counsels US debt managers.
“That, along with our deficit forecast, mean Treasury will have to increase coupons starting in November,” said Angelo Manolatos, a rates strategist at Wells Fargo.
(Adds Treasury’s financing estimates in fourth paragraph.)
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