Hedge fund study on U.S. Treasury issuance fuels debate
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[July 27, 2024] By
Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A hedge fund study that said the U.S. Treasury last
year effectively provided economic stimulus by moderating long-dated
bond sales has sparked a debate in the bond market and a denial from the
U.S. Treasury that said it was not aiming for such an effect.
The U.S. Treasury Department announced in November it would slow the
pace of auction size increases of long-dated debt securities, a move
that gave relief to bond markets rattled by previous increases in
long-term debt supply.
This led to a decline in 10-year Treasury yields equivalent to the
economic stimulus that would be provided by a one percentage point
reduction in the Fed's policy rate, according to a study published by
Hudson Bay Capital Management.
The study was authored by senior economic advisor Nouriel Roubini, an
economist who rose to prominence for predicting the global credit
crisis, and senior strategist Stephen Miran, who was an advisor for
economic policy at the U.S. Department of the Treasury under former
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, when Republican nominee Donald Trump
was U.S. president.
"Our interpretation is that while the Fed was raising the Fed fund rate
all the way to 5.5%, these (Treasury) policies were effectively pushing
long yields lower," said Roubini in an interview. "The Fed has been
trying to raise rates to pull down the economy and achieve a soft
landing, but ... it looks like we could be in a no landing zone, with
growth persistently above potential."
The study echoes suggestions by Republican senators last month that the
Treasury deliberately increased issuance of short-term Treasury bills to
give the economy a "sugar high" ahead of the elections. Roubini's paper
drew a similar parallel.
The U.S. Treasury denied any such strategy.
The Roubini paper “suggests a strategy that is intended to ease
financial conditions, and I can assure you one hundred percent that
there is no such strategy. We have never, ever discussed anything of the
sort,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who was appointed by U.S.
President Joe Biden, said on Friday.
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The American flag flies over the U.S. Treasury building in
Washington, U.S., January 20, 2023. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo
Assistant Secretary for Financial Markets Joshua Frost in a speech
earlier this month addressed what he said were common misconceptions
about Treasury issuance, saying the reduction in long-dated debt
increases last year was modest.
The Hudson Bay's paper compares changes in Treasury issuance to
quantitative easing - a bond buying program used by the Fed to
stimulate the economy. Several bond market analysts said the
comparison was overstated.
"At best, this ... kept rates marginally lower than they would have
otherwise been," said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of U.S. rates strategy
at TD Securities USA. "This is highly consistent with Treasury's
goal to obtain the best possible funding for the taxpayer and is not
in any way a sinister plot to 'ease' monetary policy," he added.
The move demonstrated "higher than expected market sensitivity on
the Treasury’s part during a period of volatility," said Jonathan
Cohn, head of U.S. rates desk strategy at Nomura Securities
International.
"Treasury may not be a market timer, but it is also not market
agnostic nor deliberately ignorant of market functioning," he added.
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia; editing by Megan Davies and Stephen
Coates)
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