At the end of September, we posted our analysis of the structural changes taking place in the Treasury market, The Gathering Storm In The Treasury Market 2.0, which was very well received and still getting thousands of hits per week.
Crowding Out
Our analysis focused “crowding out”, mainly, the changing supply and demand dynamics in the Treasury market. We flagged the sharp increase in new Treasury supply this year and the coming years, and the declining demand, mainly, what was once “free money” from: 1) foreign central banks; 2) U.S. government trust funds, such as Social Security which is now in deficit; and 3) The Fed, which is now a net seller of Treasury securities as quantitative tightening is full steam of head, forcing the Treasury to issue an additional maximum of $30 billion into the market to refinance the FED’s maturing Treasury portfolio.
We concluded the extra supply and declining demand is putting almost unprecedented stress and pressure on the world’s financial markets. That is the marginal supply of liquidity/savings/capital, however, you label it, available for all global asset purchases is not unlimited unless complimented by quantitative easing, and is being sucked into the U.S. Treasury market.
Interest Rates
We also noted in the piece that the only possible case for Treasury yields to remain at current levels or to move lower was for haven flows to increase. Selling in other asset markets, such as stocks and emerging markets, with the money moving into Treasuries.
Even still, we expect real yields to move higher.
Moreover, as markets increasingly fret over the growing fiscal deficit and how it will be funded, we suspect the political conflict in the U.S. is going to get very loud and ugly over the next few years.
Place your bets on how to lower the deficit to relieve market pressures. Cutting entitlements or raising taxes? Or both?
Jim Grant
Finally, Jim Grant nailed it last week, confirming, at least to us, our analysis.
…the expected burden of Treasury security supply in the market this year… we are talking about the biggest dollar amount of securities for sale as a percentage of GDP since World War II, 1945. – Jim Grant, @2.35 minute mark
Fed’s signal for ‘gradual’ rate increases was boring, but the right move: Fmr. Dallas Fed president from CNBC.
Keep it on your radar, folks.
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