Fewer Treasury bills and liquidity questions – what to expect from the
U.S. refunding
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[January 26, 2023] By
Karen Brettell
(Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury Department next week is likely to announce
that it will offer fewer Treasury bills in the second quarter, after
hitting its statutory borrowing limit.
Any new indications over whether the Treasury could employ Treasury
buybacks, or make changes to its auction schedule for some notes, will
also be a focus of interest as market participants grapple with the best
ways to improve liquidity in the $24 trillion Treasuries market.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen activated a second extraordinary
cash management measure on Tuesday, after previously warning that the
Treasury could run out of funds in early June if the U.S. Congress does
not approve an increase in the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling.
Analysts expect the U.S. government could finance itself through July or
even October, but there is much uncertainty and how long it can last may
depend on proceeds from this year’s tax season.
Next week, the Treasury is likely to say that it will reduce its
issuance of Treasury bills, debt that matures in one year or less, and
run down its cash balance to buy more time.
“Bill issuance is going to come down quite a bit in Q2. ... They have to
incorporate the debt ceiling into their financing estimates at this
point,” said Angelo Manolatos, a macro strategist at Wells Fargo.
The Treasury will give its financing estimate for the coming quarter on
Monday and offer more details on its funding strategy on Wednesday.
It may also indicate that it will do more than reverse cuts in bill
issuance when an agreement to increase the debt ceiling is reached, and
a flood of the debt is expected to hit the market.
That is because the U.S. government wants to increase bills as a
percentage of overall debt to meet its long-term goals.
“It’s trying to build up bill supply, which got too low last year when
Treasury was facing smaller deficits on the back of the pandemic
spending,” said Meghan Swiber, U.S. rates strategist at Bank of America.
IMPROVING LIQUIDITY
Analysts and market participants will also be watching to see whether
the Treasury indicates that it will adopt proposals meant to improve
liquidity, which it has queried dealers about over the last few
quarters.
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Signage is seen at the United States
Department of the Treasury headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S.,
August 29, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
In the last survey, Treasury asked if it should change auctions
schedules for two-, three-, five- and seven-year notes to include
reopenings, as is common with longer-dated debt.
This could increase liquidity and concentrate more trading in larger
“on-the-run” issues, but that would come at the expense of
“off-the-run” debt, said Benjamin Jeffery, an interest rate
strategist at BMO Capital Markets.
So-called “on-the-runs” are the most recent and liquid issues, while
older “off-the-run” bonds have suffered the most liquidity problems
when market conditions worsen.
Having larger two-year note issues could reduce the number of times
the notes trade “special” in the repurchase agreement market, said
Manolatos, which occurs when there is a shortage of notes to borrow.
On the other hand, it could also require more active risk management
by investors because three months between issues, assuming two
reopenings, is a large duration change for a relatively short
maturity.
“Two months later a two-year doesn’t have the same duration,”
Manolatos said.
BofA’s Swiber said that Treasury buybacks, which the Treasury
queried dealers about in a previous survey, are a better solution to
boost liquidity during times of market stress.
These “allow Treasury to more directly manage Treasury liquidity, to
more directly manage the outstanding supply of securities and they
can effectively buy back things that are cheap on the curve and help
support liquidity in the more liquid parts of the curve as well,”
she said.
An improving liquidity outlook with less uncertainty over Federal
Reserve policy relative to last year and more balanced supply and
demand dynamics makes this issue less urgent, however, so while the
Treasury may include a discussion on possible buybacks, it is
unlikely to make a formal announcement next week, Swiber said.
(Reporting by Karen Brettell; Editing by Alden Bentley and Jonathan
Oatis)
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