from Silver Doctors:
Booming economy? This sale will surpass levels seen both in the aftermath of the Great Depression and the Global Financial Crisis. Here are the details…
from Zero Hedge
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is set to steal Timothy Geithner’s achievement of selling a record amount of notes and bonds as he seeks to finance America’s growing budget deficit.
According to the latest quarterly refunding statement, the US Treasury is about to sell a record amount of debt, surpassing levels seen both in the aftermath of the Great Depression and the Global Financial Crisis.
On Wednesday, the US Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee unveiled that it will increase the amount of debt to be sold at the upcoming quarterly refunding auctions to $83 billion from $78 billion three months earlier; this will be the fourth straight quarter of increasing refunding auction sizes and is driven by the soaring US deficit shortfall, which in 2018 hit $779 billion the highest since 2012, as well as the Fed’s ongoing balance sheet shrinkage.
Here are the details of the TBAC’s proposal:
In total, the Treasury will sell $83 billion in long-term debt next week – consisting of $37BN in 3 Year notes, $27BN in 10 Year notes and $19BN in 30 Year notes, versus $78 billion in August’s refunding week sales.
Meanwhile, as noted on Monday, the net amount of new cash raised by the Treasury this quarter is expected to be $425 billion, a slight reduction from the $440 billion forecast made by the Treasury in July.
Notably, Bloomberg notes that the debt issuance at this quarterly refunding will surpass the previous record of $81 billion set by former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in 2009 when the U.S. was issuing record amounts of debt to fund its recovery from the Great Recession. Of course, this time borrowing is surging as the economy hums along at a 3.5% annual growth rate and unemployment is near a half-century low, a paradox which many are confident will end up making the next recession that much worse as the US will have little fiscal dry powder.
While the announcement came in line with expectations, it helped push 10Y yields to a session high of 3.16% before the move faded back to 3.14%, almost unchanged on the day as Treasury vol remains non-existent.
As Bloomberg notes, the Treasury release may draw more attention to rising federal deficits less than a week before midterm elections: Trump, who is expected to sell $1.3 trillion in total Treasury debt this calendar year, had often criticized Barack Obama for running up the budget deficit, and in 2012 recommended banning lawmakers from reelection if Congress couldn’t balance the budget.
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