View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury
Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association
November 4, 2020

November 3, 2020
Letter to the Secretary
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Economic activity rose sharply in the third quarter of 2020, with a 33.1% annualized increase in
real GDP. The economy has recovered rapidly from the largest quarterly contraction in post-war
history, but real GDP still remains 2.9% below year-ago levels. Going forward, the course of the
virus will play a large role in determining the trajectory of the economy, and increasing virus
spread in many parts of the country poses significant near-term downside risk.
Since the Committee last met, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) maintained the
target range for the federal funds rate at the e ective lower bound of 0%-0.25%. Overall
financial conditions have remained at similar levels since the last refunding. Equity prices and
the 2-year Treasury yield have remained roughly flat on net since the Committee last met, while
the 10-year Treasury yield has increased slightly. The trade-weighted dollar has declined by
2.4% on net since the last refunding.
Consumer spending rose at a 40.7% annualized rate in the third quarter, following a 33.2%
annualized contraction in the second quarter of the year. Services spending increased at a
38.4% annualized rate, nondurable goods spending increased at a 28.8% rate, and durable
goods spending surged at an 82.2% rate. The recovery in consumer spending has varied widely
by industry, with overall goods spending 6.9% higher than year-ago levels, but services
spending still 7.2% below year-ago levels. The slower recovery in services reflects continued
weakness in face-to-face sectors such as transportation, recreation, and food services.
Business fixed investment increased at a 20.3% annualized rate in the third quarter, and
remains 5.0% below year-ago levels. Structures investment fell further at a 14.6% annualized
rate, equipment investment rose sharply at a 70.1% rate, and investment in intellectual
products edged down at a 1.0% rate. The change in inventory investment contributed 6.6
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

1/6

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

percentage points to GDP growth in the third quarter. Regional manufacturing surveys have
continued to show increased levels of activity through October. The Federal Reserve’s Beige
Book also indicated that manufacturing activity has continued to increase at a moderate pace,
although many contacts reported a high level of uncertainty around the virus, the upcoming
presidential election, and further possible fiscal stimulus measures.
Residential investment surged at a 59.3% annualized rate in the third quarter, to a level 6.6%
above that a year ago. The pace of new and existing home sales has well surpassed the pre-virus
rate in recent months, while housing starts and permits have also rebounded back to strong
levels. While much of the recent strength can be explained by pent-up demand from sales that
would have occurred in the spring if not for the virus, many surveys indicate that the virus has
created increased demand for homeownership. Mortgage rates remain at historically low levels
and should continue to support the housing sector, and surveys of home builders have reached
all-time highs.
Net exports subtracted 3.1pp from real GDP growth in the third quarter. Real exports increased
at a 59.7% annualized rate while real imports increased at a 91.1% annualized rate, following
sharp declines in both in the second quarter of the year. Federal spending fell at a 6.2%
annualized rate in the third quarter, while state and local spending declined at a 3.3% rate.
The federal deficit increased sharply to $3.1 trillion in fiscal year 2020, based on the
Congressional Budget O ice’s estimates. The deficit largely reflected fiscal relief measures
taken during the recession, which supported consumer spending and small businesses in the
face of large job losses and an unprecedented decline in business revenues. Recent fiscal
negotiations have not yet materialized into a new stimulus package, and the expiration of extra
unemployment insurance benefits presents downside risk to consumer spending in the coming
months.
The labor market has improved rapidly, but employment remains well below levels prior to the
pandemic. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 661k in September, a deceleration from the 1.6mn
monthly pace of job gains in July and August. The unemployment rate declined by 0.5pp to
7.9% in September, while the broader underemployment rate declined by 1.4pp to 12.8%. The
labor force participation rate fell by 0.3pp to 61.4%. The employment-to-population ratio
increased by 0.1pp to 56.6%, compared to roughly 61% prior to the pandemic.
Consumer price inflation has picked up but remains so on a year-over-year basis. The total
personal consumption expenditures price index increased at a 3.7% annualized rate in the third
quarter, while the core measure excluding food and energy increased at a 3.5% rate. The core
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

2/6

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

measure rose 1.4% over the last four quarters, well below the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. While
the disinflationary pressure from the collapse in demand in virus-sensitive sectors has abated
somewhat, the shortfall in year-over-year inflation remains concentrated in these virussensitive categories.
In late August, the FOMC adopted a flexible form of average inflation targeting as the key
outcome of its monetary policy framework review. The FOMC simultaneously released an
updated Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy, and under the new
approach the FOMC will respond only to “shortfalls” of employment from its maximum level
rather than to all “deviations” above or below the maximum level. In addition, the updated
statement notes that appropriate monetary policy would aim to achieve inflation moderately
above 2 percent following periods when inflation had been running persistently below 2
percent.
In addition to keeping the funds rate at the e ective lower bound in the September meeting,
the FOMC provided new forward guidance for the policy rate. The FOMC adopted outcomebased li o criteria where it expects to maintain the current policy target range until the labor
market reaches maximum employment, and inflation has risen to 2 percent and is on track to
exceed 2 percent for some time. The median projected path for the funds rate in the September
Summary of Economic Projections showed no change through 2023, although four participants
project at least one hike by then. The FOMC continues to increase its holdings of US Treasury
securities at a pace of around $80 billion per month and its holdings of agency mortgagebacked securities at around $40 billion per month.
In light of this financial and economic backdrop, the Committee reviewed Treasury’s November
2020 Quarterly Refunding Presentation to the TBAC. Through Q4 2020 receipts were $42 billion
(1%) lower than the same period in 2019. Total outlays over the same period were $2,105 billion
higher, an increase of 47% relative to the comparable period in 2019, mainly due to payments
related to COVID-19 relief e orts. FY20 outlays were 31.2% of GDP, compared to 21.0% of GDP
for FY19. Based on the Quarterly Borrowing Estimate, Treasury’s O ice of Fiscal Projections
currently projects a net privately-held marketable borrowing1 need of $617 billion for Q1 FY
2021, with an end-of-December cash balance of $800 billion. For Q2 FY 2021, the net privatelyheld marketable borrowing need is estimated to be $1,127 billion, with a cash balance of $800
billion at the end of March. Both of these estimates include $1 trillion of additional COVID-19
stimulus.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

3/6

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

The Committee again noted the elevated cash balance that Treasury has held in recent months
and projects to hold for some time due to the large and highly uncertain need for funds amid
considerable uncertainty about the path of fiscal policy and the timing of the associated
projected payments. Treasury’s approach has been precautionary given the significant risk of
forecasting error in this unprecedented environment and its desire to be able to disburse funds
quickly to support the economy. TBAC members agreed that maintaining a high cash balance
during this highly uncertain period was a prudent strategy.
Treasury sta presented an overview of net issuance assuming coupon sizes remained the same
as announced in FYQ4. In that case, net coupon issuance this quarter would be $623bn, and the
outstanding amount of T-Bills would decline by $6 billion to meet the projected financing need.
At the end of September, private T-Bill holdings remain near all-time highs at $4,703 billion -and T-Bills holdings as a share of marketable debt outstanding stood at 24.7% -- above the
historical average of 22.7%.
Committee members had hoped that Treasury would make a decision to announce a SOFR FRN.
Members acknowledged the significant private and public sector work currently underway on
the transition, including the recent clearinghouse moves to SOFR discounting and the launch of
the ISDA fallback supplement and protocol. Treasury has been an active participant in ARRC
and has provided helpful guidance on tax treatment of derivatives subject to the transition, but
the Committee strongly believes that Treasury should also be a leader in terms of its issuance
decisions. The Committee therefore continues to unanimously support Treasury issuance of a
SOFR FRN. Specifically, the Committee expects that issuance by the Treasury would help to
further establish market standards for notes, encourage technological investment, support
development of a term rate, and increase liquidity of SOFR-indexed products. The Committee
continues to encourage Treasury to finalize any remaining issues on security design and
implementation, and move forward with issuing a SOFR FRN, as soon as practicable, ideally in
FY2021.
The Committee next reviewed a charge on supply and demand dynamics in the T-Bill sector and
appropriate levels of T-Bill issuance in the medium- and longer-term. The presenters discussed
the robust demand for T-Bills from Money Market Funds (MMFs) given meaningful inflows into
Government MMFs and the increased allocation to T-Bills in both Prime and Government MMFs.
The presenters highlighted that these types of inflows are typical in moments of market and
economic stress and o en coincide with increased T-Bill issuance.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

4/6

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

The presenters noted that demand would likely sustain a T-Bill share of outstandings (T-Bill
share) at levels above the historical average for some time given the current economic
environment. However, the Committee continues to believe that extending the maturity
structure of Treasury debt, particular into maturities out to 10 years, is desirable to protect
against rising rates and to minimize operational risk with frequent issuance. Moreover, reducing
the share of T-bills would better enable them to continue serving as an e ective shock absorber
for unexpected financing needs. Based on these considerations, the Committee recommended
allowing the share of T-Bills to decline gradually to a range of 15% to 20% of outstanding debt.
The Committee next discussed financing strategies to accommodate revised fiscal projections
amidst continued fiscal and economic uncertainty owing to the COVID-19 epidemic and today’s
election. Prior increases in coupon issuance will continue to result in sizable net funding to
Treasury for several years and are expected to extend the weighted-average maturity of the
debt over time. Given the possibility of additional fiscal stimulus, the Committee endorsed
continued increases of coupon sizes this quarter, although with a larger deceleration of the
issuance at the longer maturities. The Committee assumed that issuance would slow further
across all maturities in the next quarter, although this outcome will depend on how projected
funding needs evolve.
While Treasury issuance was met with solid demand over the quarter, Committee members
noted that yields had risen and the curve had steepened notably since the August refunding,
with 2- year notes only 5bps higher, but 5-, 10- and 30-year tenors 20bps, 38bps, and 50bps
higher respectively. Members pointed to several factors driving the sell-o in long end yields in
addition to supply, including the improvement in economic conditions, market expectations of
further fiscal stimulus, and the Federal Reserve’s adoption of a Flexible Average Inflation
Targeting approach. Committee members thought that this confluence of factors had on
balance driven the term premium higher for longer-term maturities.
The Committee further recommends moderate increases in TIPS issue sizes. Given the
meaningful increases in debt issuance in 2020, TIPS share of outstanding debt has fallen to 7.5%
from around 9% in the pre-COVID period. The Committee is supportive of increases in TIPS
supply to gradually move their share of debt outstanding in the direction of pre-COVID levels
and recommends that Treasury should continue to monitor market functioning and the relative
valuation of TIPS to nominal securities as this adjustment takes place.
Overall, these gradual adjustments, in line with Treasury’s regular and predictable issuance
strategy, should allow Treasury to continue reducing funding risk, while maintaining flexibility
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

5/6

11/5/2020

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

to accommodate further meaningful funding needs should they arise. These changes would be
expected to lengthen the maturity profile of its debt back to its pre-COVID levels over time. Of
course, given the considerable uncertainty surrounding current fiscal projections, the economy,
and the Fed’s balance sheet policy, Treasury will need to retain flexibility in its approach.
Respectfully,
_______________________________
Beth Hammack
Chair, Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee
_______________________________
Brian Sack
Vice Chair, Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee
1It was noted that privately-held net marketable borrowing excludes rollovers of Treasury
securities and Treasury Bills held in the Federal Reserve’s System Open Market Account (SOMA).
Secondary market purchases of Treasury securities by SOMA do not directly change net
privately-held marketable borrowing, but when they mature would increase the amount of cash
raised for a given privately-held auction size by increasing the SOMA “add-on” amount.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1175

6/6