View original document

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

8/3/2022

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee | U.S. Department of the Tre…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury
Borrowing Advisory Committee
August 3, 2022

August 2, 2022
Letter to the Secretary
Dear Madam Secretary:
Economic activity fell at a 0.9% pace in the second quarter of 2022, reflecting weaker demand
growth and a 2pp drag from a decline in the pace of inventory accumulation. Residential
investment declined at a 14% annualized rate as rising mortgage rates weighed heavily on
the housing sector, business investment was roughly unchanged, and consumption grew at a
1.0% annualized rate. The rotation in consumer spending from goods to services continued,
with real goods spending falling at a 4.4% annualized rate and real services spending rising at
a 4.1% annualized rate.
The second consecutive quarter of contraction in GDP raised concerns about recession. But
other measures of economic activity such as real personal income excluding transfer
payments and industrial production rose, and forecasters expect GDP to grow again in the
third quarter.
A deceleration is also apparent in the labor market. Monthly payroll employment gains
averaged 375,000 in the second quarter, but household employment declined an average of
116,000 per month, an unusually wide gap. Average hourly earnings continued to decelerate in
the second quarter, but the Atlanta Fedʼs Wage Growth Tracker accelerated, and the
employment cost index continued to rise quickly. Overall, wage growth remains consistent
with inflationary pressures in excess of the 2% inflation target, reflecting the continued
tightness of the labor market. Labor demand remains very high, though job openings fell
modestly, and labor supply remains below the pre-pandemic level.
Both core and headline measures of consumer price inflation remained high in the second
quarter. The headline CPI rose 9% over the year ending in June as both food and energy
prices rose rapidly, though commodity prices have declined more recently. The core measures
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0909

1/5

8/3/2022

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee | U.S. Department of the Tre…

showed broad-based strength in recent months, including an acceleration in the large and
usually persistent shelter category. Short-term inflation expectations remain very high.
The Federal Reserve delivered a second 75bp interest rate hike in July, completing its plan to
“expeditiously” raise the target range for the funds rate to its 2.5% estimate of the longerrun neutral level. The median projection from the FOMCʼs Summary of Economic Projections
implies a further 100bp of total rate hikes across its three remaining meetings in 2022, similar
to bond market expectations, followed by an additional 37.5bp of tightening in 2023.
Since the last refunding, equity prices fell sharply and then rebounded, ultimately coming into
this refunding down only slightly on net, and the trade-weighted dollar rose by 2%. The yield
curve inverted as the 2-year Treasury yield rose 16bps to 2.89% and the 10-year yield fell 32bp
to 2.67%.
In light of this financial and economic backdrop, the Committee reviewed Treasuryʼs August
2022 Quarterly Refunding Presentation. Based on the marketable borrowing estimates
published on August 1, Treasury currently projects net marketable borrowing of $444 billion in
Q4 FY 2022 (Q3 CY 2022), with an end-of-September cash balance of $650 billion. The
borrowing estimate is higher than at the May refunding, most notably because SOMA portfolio
run-o was not included in the May projection. For Q1 FY 2023 (Q4 CY 2022), the net privatelyheld marketable borrowing need is estimated to be $400 billion, with a cash balance of $700
billion at the end of December. These estimates do not include impacts from any additional
legislation that could potentially be passed.
Over the past several years members of the Committee have released tools to encourage
broader understanding and analysis of debt management issues. The first of these was the
optimal debt model developed by TBAC members in 2018. Since then, The Hutchins Center at
the Brookings Institution, working with Committee members, has made the model publicly
available on GitHub. Similarly, last week, a member released a Brookings blog post detailing
one way to estimate the impact of current and future issuance decisions on the structure of
Treasury debt, a consideration that the Committee faces when discussing its recommended
financing tables. This code was also shared via GitHub. We hope these open-source tools are
useful for market participants and researchers to better understand key debt management
issues and provide additional perspectives on them. Of course, these tools represent only a
limited portion of the analysis that is used to help inform debt management
recommendations.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0909

2/5

8/3/2022

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee | U.S. Department of the Tre…

The Committee reviewed an update on the results from a model for determining the optimal
structure of debt stock. The e icient frontier for the debt stock has shi ed up and to the right
over the period since 2019, meaning that the Treasury faces higher expected debt costs for a
given amount of fiscal risk. The presenting member showed that this shi was largely driven
by increases in the outstanding debt stock and less so by the macroeconomic environment. As
a reminder, given the substantial mean-reverting properties of the model, the near-term
environment does not have a large impact on the economic conditions that Treasury faces in
the longer run. The model continues to illustrate the cost/risk advantages of issuance of TIPS,
bills, and intermediate-term nominal coupon securities over long-end securities. Shi ing
issuance from longer maturities into those types of securities would o er expected savings
with only a modest increase in risk.
While the model is a useful tool for quantifying costs and savings, it is only one of several
factors considered when making recommendations. Moreover, the results are highly sensitive
to the specific properties assumed in the model. The model results were largely intuitive, but
there was also considerable interest in seeing results if some of the key model assumptions
were varied, including some of the embedded correlations and the degree of mean reversion.
The Committee also reviewed a charge on Treasury buybacks. Treasury last regularly
conducted buybacks in April of 2002 in response to federal budget surplus, and the Committee
reviewed the topic at its February 2015 meeting. The market has changed significantly since
those events, though the potential benefits of buybacks remain largely the same. Buybacks
could help improve liquidity in o -the-run securities, reduce variation in bill issuance, and
improve Treasuryʼs cash management. However, buybacks would also require larger new issue
sizes to maintain net issuance levels. Given the current size of new issues, the liquidity
premium that Treasury could capture has been greatly reduced relative to where it was during
the previous period of buybacks.
The Committee was mixed on whether the benefits of improved liquidity in o -the-run
securities outweighed the costs of larger new issue sizes. The subject warrants further study.
One compelling sector to explore seems to be the front end of the market, where Treasury
could buyback short coupons (within 1-year to maturity) and issue bills in replacement. This
would allow the Treasury to achieve liquidity premium benefits and enable improved cash
management. More broadly, while ongoing buybacks could help support liquidity in o -the-run
issues in general, it was argued that Treasury should not try to construct buybacks as a tool
for sustaining market functioning during times of acute stress, as purchases generally need to
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0909

3/5

8/3/2022

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee | U.S. Department of the Tre…

be funded by issuing other Treasury securities. Overall, the Committee was supportive of
further analysis on this topic, while recognizing the challenges in design and need to better
estimate the potential economic benefit.
The Committee then discussed the financing recommendations for the current and
subsequent quarter. At the May meeting, members had expected that auction sizes would
level out for the August quarter. However, many near-term deficit estimates have fallen, the
share of bills in outstanding debt is expected to remain near the lower end of TBACʼs
recommended range, and market demand for bills is very strong. Thus, the Committee
recommends further reductions across the nominal coupon curve. Specifically, the Committee
recommends reductions of $1 billion per month in 2-, 3-, 5-, 7-year notes, $1 billion per quarter
in both new issues and reopenings of 10- and 30-year securities, and $2 billion per quarter in
both new issue and reopenings of 20-year securities. This path would reduce the supply of 20year securities by a disproportionate amount to bring supply more in line with longer-term
demand, and it would help to increase T-bill share close to the middle of TBACʼs
recommended range of 15 to 20% over time. Auction sizes are expected to level out next
quarter, though the group acknowledges Treasury may need to consider adjustments based
on evolving fiscal needs.
In the context of the financing recommendations, the Committee discussed the recent
performance of the 20-year sector. While recent auctions have been well received, there
appears to be an imbalance of securities outstanding relative to demand in the sector. The
Committee was unanimous in its view that Treasury should remain committed to the 20-year
maturity point to achieve its overall issuance goals and to maintain its regular and predictable
strategy. The group posited that the imbalance was due to the much larger than
recommended issue sizes from late 2020 and 2021 and that, with the recommended further
reduction, the 20-year is reaching the range of sustainable issuance size that should be better
aligned with future demand.
Overall, the recommended path of auction sizes for the current and next quarter should allow
Treasury to meet its financing needs in an e icient manner while maintaining flexibility to
accommodate further meaningful funding needs should they arise. Over a longer horizon, this
issuance path is expected to keep the average maturity of Treasury debt and its average
duration roughly unchanged; leave the T-bill share of outstanding debt within the
recommended 15% to 20% range; and gradually increase the share of TIPS in outstanding

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0909

4/5

8/3/2022

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee | U.S. Department of the Tre…

debt. Of course, given the considerable uncertainty surrounding the economy and projected
borrowing needs, 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

1

It was noted that privately-held marketable borrowing excludes rollovers (auction “add-ons”)

of Treasury securities held in the Federal Reserve System Open Market Account (SOMA) but
includes financing required due to SOMA redemptions. Secondary market purchases of
Treasury securities by SOMA do not directly change net privately-held marketable borrowing
but, all else equal, when the securities mature and assuming the Fed does not redeem any
maturing securities, would increase the amount of cash raised for a given privately-held
auction size by increasing the SOMA “add-on” amount (see pages 11 and 12 of accompanying
deck).

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0909

5/5