U.S. Treasury refunding set to offer relief from supply rises
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[April 27, 2024] By
Karen Brettell
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury Department is expected to offer
markets some relief next week when it details refunding plans for the
coming quarter, by keeping the size of most of its auctions steady after
three quarters of increases.
Investors will focus on an expected debt repurchase program and whether
it offers any insights into longer-term financing plans as concerns
mount over rapidly rising U.S. debt.
While the Treasury may increase the size of some issues, including the
10-year Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), most auctions
are expected to be unchanged.
The pause in auction size increases would likely be positive for
investors after larger than expected debt needs last year sent bond
yields higher and rattled stock markets.
"It shouldn't be as big of an event risk as it was the past couple of
quarters," said Vail Hartman, U.S. rates strategist at BMO Capital
Markets in New York.
The Treasury will give its financing estimate for the coming two
quarters on Monday and more detailed plans on Wednesday.
Near-term financing needs are improving due to stronger tax receipts and
a less bad than previously expected deficit. At the same time, the
Federal Reserve is expected to taper its quantitative tightening
program, in which it lets bonds roll off its balance sheet without
replacement.
That will also reduce the Treasury's need to raise cash via Treasury
bills, with issuance of short-term debt in the last nine months of 2024
likely to be net negative, said Angelo Manolatos, macro strategist at
Wells Fargo in New York.
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The Treasury Department is pictured in Washington, U.S., April 25,
2021. REUTERS/Al Drago/FILE PHOTO
A bigger focus will be on the likely launch of a buyback program, in
which the Treasury will repurchase bonds for cash management
purposes or to support liquidity.
"We think that the buybacks are going to be unveiled next week and
we'll get that first actual schedule," said Manolatos.
For cash management purposes, the Treasury is likely to buy back
shorter-dated debt mainly around major tax payment dates.
For liquidity, it will focus on buying back off-the-run securities,
older and less liquid issues trading at a discount.
The U.S. government may give more details on how the program would
work, including on selecting issues to repurchase.
Meanwhile, any comments on the Treasury's longer-term financing
plans would be a focus as the rapidly rising U.S. debt gains more
attention.
"There are very large upside risks to the deficit in coming years
... that's the important issue for them to address, I just don't
know if necessarily they are going to be addressing them in great
detail here because there's an election looming,” said Gennadiy
Goldberg, head of U.S. rates strategy at TD Securities in New York.
TD sees a "significant risk" that the Treasury will need to resume
auction size increases next year.
(Reporting by Karen Brettell; Editing by Alden Bentley and Alexander
Smith)
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