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Evaluating US Treasury
Auction Distress
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Investors often seek safety from financial market
turbulence in US government bonds since they offer virtually no risk of
default and, unlike cash or gold, provide a yield. At the same time,
sovereign debt default concerns outside the US, e.g., Iceland, Dubai, and Greece,
have been linked to short-term rallies in the US dollar and have diverted
attention from the fiscal challenges facing the US. However, since seven US states are in worse financial
condition than Greece, Ireland, Portugal or Spain, shelter may prove
hard to find. With a $3.83
trillion budget, a $12.3 trillion
federal government debt, a $1.35
trillion 2010 budget deficit and $6
3 trillion in unfunded liabilities, the fiscal condition of the US has
come into question and foreign interest in US Treasuries has
declined. In late March, it was reported that the 10-year US Treasury Note
yield had risen 30 basis points and that foreign holders of 10-year Notes
were selling in record numbers.

Reports of US Treasury auction distress first appeared in
December of 2009 when an article by Eric Sprott and David Franklin entitled
“Is it
All Just a Ponzi Scheme?” questioned the “Other
Investors” reported by the US Federal Reserve. The
unidentified investors held $359.1 billion worth
of US Treasuries in the forth quarter of 2008 but $880.5 billion by the
end of the third quarter 2009, an increase of $521.4 billion.
Based on the Federal
Reserve Flow of Funds Report, Messrs. Sprott and Franklin found the
increase attributable to the “Household Sector”, which is
defined in the Federal Reserve’s Flow of Funds
Guide as “…amounts held or owed by the other sectors
… subtracted from known totals … [such that] the remainders
are assumed to be the amounts held or owed by the household
sector.” Thus, the “Household Sector” is strictly
an artifact of accounting practices, and, as a result, there has been some
speculation regarding the parties responsible for $521.4 billion in 2009 US
Treasury purchases.
A recent analysis of 4-week Treasury auction results by
OmniSans Investment Research suggested that US Treasury auctions are
more distressed than has been generally recognized, and a similar analysis
appeared on the popular Zero Hedge website.

The OmniSans and Zero Hedge articles focus on the percent
of Treasury auction purchases made by the Federal Reserve’s own primary
dealers, as compared with other bidders, and on the percentage of
indirect (foreign) bids accepted. In particular, the acceptance of 100% of
foreign bids suggests extremely weak foreign demand. While the
evidence is accurate, the conclusion is less clear since the changing
pattern of US Treasury auction results is more complex.
Federal Reserve measures designed to increase financial
market liquidity and to recapitalize the banking system, such as the Term Asset-Backed
Securities Loan Facility (TALF), represent monetary inflation (or
re-inflation), and some of this currency has certainly found its way into
the coffers of the US Treasury, i.e., a rise in primary dealer
purchases. A rise in primary dealer purchases could also be a result
of the low cost of borrowing from the Federal Reserve. In theory,
primary dealers can generate profits simply by borrowing from the Federal
Reserve at near zero percent interest rates and buying Treasuries with
higher yields. Of course, primary dealer purchases funded by
borrowing from the Federal Reserve would be tantamount to debt
monetization.
An increase in primary dealer purchases, or in purchases by
direct bidders, could compensate for a decline in foreign purchases of US
Treasuries but would not explain it. To be significant, a decline in
foreign purchases would have to be evident in more than one type of
Treasury, i.e., outside of the reported 1.0 bid to cover ratio for indirect
bidders in recent 4-week Treasury Bill auctions.
What may be an emerging pattern of falling foreign demand
and rising primary dealer purchases, both of which have been moderated by
an increase in purchases made by direct bidders (financial institutions
that place bids directly with the US Treasury, such as domestic depository
institutions and mutual funds) is evident in 4-week Treasury Bill auction
results.

Direct Federal Reserve purchases of US Treasuries
(monetization) have been distributed over Treasuries of different types and
maturities and have been generally implemented as a consistent, low-level
of buying for particular Bills, Notes or Bonds. Overall, the Federal
Reserve increased its
holdings of US Treasuries by $286 billion in 2009, an increase of more
than 60% as of September 2009 compared to
2008, and, as of March 2010, the Federal Reserve’s holdings of US
Treasuries had increased another $14
billion to roughly $777 billion.
What is important is that monetization has been most
significant in 4-week Treasury Bills, reaching 38.59% of total 4-week
Treasury Bill sales on January 26, 2010, but similar spikes in Federal
Reserve purchases do not appear in auction results for other types of
Treasuries. Thus, it should come as no surprise that 4-week Treasury
Bills have fallen out of favor with foreign investors.
Of course, the amount of currency created by monetization
in a particular auction, regardless of the percent of Treasuries purchased
by the Federal Reserve, represents only a small fraction of the monetary
base. Nonetheless, there is not only a psychological dimension but
also aggregate effects on the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve, on the
US dollar and, ultimately, on the viability of US Treasury auctions.
A general pattern of decreased indirect bidder
participation offset by rising direct bidder participation, setting aside
any increase in primary dealer purchases, is evident outside of 4-week
Treasury Bill auctions.
Foreign demand for 30-year Treasury Bonds has fallen over
the past year, suggesting that foreign purchases may have shifted towards
the short end of the maturity continuum. The more significant fact,
however, is the marked increase in direct bidder purchasing, which has more
than compensated for slack foreign demand at the extreme long end of the
spectrum leaving primary dealer purchases flat.
Given the increase in direct bidder purchases, and
reflecting on the questions raised by Messrs. Sprott and Franklin, it seems
likely that the $521.4 billion worth of US Treasuries in 2009 reflects
otherwise unclassified direct bidders, i.e., direct bidders other than
recognized domestic investment funds and depository institutions.
Unfortunately, the identities of the bidders remain unknown in any
case.
The most dramatic example of primary dealer purchases
replacing indirect (foreign) bidders is in Cash Management Bills, but these
represent a rolling debt of perhaps $100 billion analogous to the corporate
bond market and are not representative of other types of Treasuries.
While there are apparent signs of Treasury auction distress, based on a
survey of Treasury auction data from January 2009 to March 2010, there is
no indication of an immanent auction failure so long as the primary dealers
and direct bidders continue to step into the breach. Further, the
same patterns either do not appear or are much less pronounced in
longer-term Treasury Note sales.
It seems unlikely that direct bidders within the US can
compensate indefinitely, or to an unlimited extent, for falling foreign
demand. Commenting on the ambitious spending plans of the US federal government, Zhu Min, Deputy
Governor of the People's Bank of China said in December 2009 that
"the world does not have so much money to buy more US
Treasuries."
It would certainly be unreasonable for the US federal
government and Federal Reserve to assume that ambitious deficit spending
and ongoing quantitative easing (QE) would have no
cumulative impact on US Treasury auctions. If there is a limit to
foreign appetite for US debt, to foreign capacity to lend to the US, or to
international tolerance for US dollar devaluation, the US government and
Federal Reserve seem determined to find it.
China's foreign exchange reserves, valued at $2,399.2 billion at
the end of December 2009 (not including gold), include only $894.8 billion in US Treasury
bonds. In contrast, the US must issue or roll over $702 billion
in debt in 2010 and a total of $2.55 trillion in Treasuries to be issued this year, while
$3.7 trillion in US
Treasuries are held abroad.
While US
GDP was at $14.46 trillion in 2009 (with debt levels set to rise to 90% of GDP by
2020), China’s GDP is currently estimated as $8.791 trillion. Although there are signs of recovery in Chinese
exports, the entire value of China's reserves, assuming that its
current Treasury holdings could be liquidated, is insufficient to finance
US federal government debt in 2010.
Since China recently liquidated $34 billion in US Treasuries, the
statement of China’s Director of the State Administration of Foreign
Exchange, Yi Gang,
“[China is] a responsible investor and in the process of these
investments we can definitely achieve a mutually beneficial
result" seems obligatory. In reality, the US is currently
the largest debtor nation in the history of the world, while China is the
US’ largest creditor, and neither China nor any other country is in a
position to bail out the US should US Treasury auctions run aground.
Nonetheless, an overt Treasury auction failure seems impossible with the
Federal Reserve as the lender of last resort to domestic depository
institutions and to its own primary dealers. Unfortunately, direct
monetary inflation is not without consequences. Specifically,
increased debt monetization would impact the value of the US dollar and
could spark high inflation, i.e., rising US dollar prices for imported
goods and energy, or an eventual hyperinflationary collapse of the US
dollar.
Without a robust economic recovery in the US, it seems
unlikely that the apparent distress of US Treasury auctions will
abate. Among other things, the gap between increasing US federal
government spending and falling federal tax receipts is currently
growing. A continuation of current US federal government and Federal
Reserve policies under deteriorating economic conditions suggests levels of
debt that could not be absorbed by US creditors, and a so-called double-dip
recession would put extreme pressure on the US dollar. Indicators of
Treasury auction distress include:
- Rising Treasury yields, regardless of interest
rates, signaling inadequate demand.
- A continued decline in foreign bids, thus a higher
percentage of accepted bids, particularly in additional types of
Treasuries, outside of 4-week Treasury Bills.
- Direct bids failing to rise at a rate sufficient to
offset falling indirect bidder demand, thus causing either primary dealer
purchases or monetization to rise.
- A marked and sustained increase in primary dealer
purchases versus direct or indirect bidders.
- Additional spikes in Federal Reserve purchases
(monetization) in any type of Treasury, or a sustained increase in Federal
Reserve Treasury purchases generally.
- An expansion of the incipient shift away from the
long end of the maturity continuum towards shorter-term Treasuries.
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