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3/19/2020

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

Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury
Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association
February 5, 2020

February 4, 2020
Letter to the Secretary
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Economic activity grew at a moderate pace in the fourth quarter, with a 2.1% annualized
increase in real GDP. Real GDP rose 2.3% over the past four quarters, somewhat above estimates
of the economy’s longer run potential. Going forward, the significant easing in financial
conditions over the course of 2019 will likely provide a boost to growth, while a further fading of
the fiscal boost will likely be a headwind in the remainder of the year. While global growth
decelerated considerably in 2019, some signs of a rebound have emerged, although the ongoing
coronavirus outbreak presents downside risk to the near-term global growth outlook.
Since the Committee last met, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) lowered the target
range for the federal funds rate by 25bp to 1.50%-1.75%. Overall financial conditions have eased
further since the last refunding. Equity prices increased nearly 6% on net, despite declining in
recent weeks following news of the coronavirus outbreak. The 2-year Treasury yield and the 10year Treasury yield both declined on net. The trade-weighted dollar remained roughly flat since
the Committee last met.
Consumer spending grew at a 1.8% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, decelerating from the
2.9% pace in the first three quarters of 2019. Services spending increased at a 2% rate, while
durable goods spending increased at a 2.1% rate and non-durables spending increased at a
0.8% rate. Consumer confidence and consumer sentiment remain at high levels, and continued
solid job growth and the increase in equity prices are likely to provide a boost to consumer
spending in the coming quarters.
Business fixed investment continued to so en, declining for the third consecutive quarter.
Structures investment fell sharply at a 10.1% annualized rate, and equipment investment
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

declined at a 2.9% rate. Investment in intellectual property products accelerated modestly to a
5.9% pace, while the change in inventory investment subtracted 1.1 percentage points from
GDP growth in the fourth quarter. Regional manufacturing surveys thus far in January have
showed some signs of a pickup, following sizable declines in most manufacturing surveys for
much of 2019.
Residential investment increased at a 5.8% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, its second
consecutive quarterly increase following six consecutive quarterly declines. New home sales,
housing starts, and permits have all picked up over the last two quarters, and surveys of
homebuilders have indicated a high level of optimism in recent months. Mortgage rates
declined significantly over the last year, which should provide a continued boost to housing
activity.
Net exports contributed 1.5pp to real GDP growth in the fourth quarter, as real exports increased
at a 1.4% annualized rate while real imports fell sharply at an 8.7% annualized rate, the fastest
pace of decline since the previous recession. The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book indicated that
tari s and trade uncertainty continued to weigh on some businesses, although some contacts
reported a more optimistic trade outlook following recent trade negotiations. Federal spending
increased at a 3.6% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, while state and local spending
increased at a 2.2% rate. The O ice of Management and Budget’s most recent deficit projections
estimate a 4.7% deficit in fiscal year 2020.
The labor market has remained solid, with nonfarm payroll growth averaging 184,000 per
month over the last three months. The unemployment rate remained at a 50-year low of 3.5%,
while the broader underemployment rate dropped to 6.7%, the lowest on record. The labor
force participation rate remained at a 6-year high of 63.2%, and the employment-to-population
ratio remained at its cycle-high of 61.0%. Other labor market indicators such as the quits rate,
jobless claims, job openings, and anecdotes from the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book all continue
to point to a strong labor market. Average hourly earnings rose at a 2.9% pace over the last year,
decelerating in the last several months.
Consumer price inflation has remained fairly so . The total personal consumption expenditures
price index rose at a 1.6% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, and the core measure excluding
food and energy rose at only a 1.3% rate. The core measure rose 1.6% over the last four
quarters. Many Fed o icials have expressed continued concern about inflation remaining below
the 2% target and low inflation expectations.

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

In addition to the rate cut at the October meeting, FOMC participants made changes to their
interest rate projections at the December meeting. Most FOMC participants projected that no
rate change this year would likely be appropriate, while several participants projected that one
rate hike would be appropriate. Recent Fed communication and the January FOMC meeting
have further reinforced the likelihood that the funds rate will remain on hold barring a material
change to the outlook.
The reserve management operations that the Fed undertook in response to the September
funding market volatility significantly boosted the level of reserves into year-end. Despite
concern among market participants that year-end would bring another bout of volatility,
overnight rates were broadly stable, dollar funding costs eased, and collateral performed well in
December.
Looking ahead, recent Fed communication suggests that the current pace of bill purchases will
continue into the second quarter, with a simultaneous reduction in the reliance on term and
overnight repo. The Fed will continue o ering repos at least through April in order to ensure an
ample supply of reserves through tax season. Once the Fed assesses the level of reserves as
having durably reached ample levels, the pace of reserve management purchases should
decelerate to a rate in line with the trend growth of non-reserve liabilities.
In light of this financial and economic backdrop, the Committee reviewed Treasury’s February
2020 Quarterly Refunding Presentation to the TBAC. Q1 2020 receipts were $48 billion (6%)
higher than the same period in 2019. Increases in customs duties (due to new tari s), withheld
income and FICA taxes, as well as gross corporate taxes, were the largest drivers. This was
partially o set by a decline in excise taxes. Total outlays over the same period were $72 billion
higher, an increase of 7%, driven by Health and Human Services as well as Social Security
outlays, and Defense spending. Based on the Quarterly Borrowing Estimate, Treasury’s O ice of
Fiscal Projections currently projects a net privately-held marketable borrowing need of $367
billion for Q2 FY 2020, with an end-of-March cash balance of $400 billion.
For Q3 FY 2020, the net privately-held marketable borrowing need is estimated to be negative
$56 billion, with a cash balance of $400 billion at the end of June. It was noted that privatelyheld 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.
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

Treasury sta presented an overview on T-Bill market liquidity in light of continued SOMA
purchases in this sector. Given current fiscal projections and assuming unchanged coupon
auction sizes, the supply of privately-held T-Bills is expected to decline to the mid $1.8 trillion
range by end of June 2020. This would be the lowest absolute level since October 2017 and
within the range that primary dealers estimated to be the minimum supply needed to ensure
benchmark liquidity. The Committee agreed to monitor the sector closely as this will be the
second consecutive quarter that T-Bill issuance will be lower than TBAC’s prior guidance (that
between one quarter and one third of the financing gap should be met with T-Bill issuance).
2020 may mark a low point for front end supply but this should rise meaningful as the financing
gap increases in 2021 and 2022.
Treasury sta reviewed primary dealers’ recommendations on initial size for the 20-year issue,
which was announced on January 16th. Most dealers expect a first issue to take place in May,
with a small initial issuance size given current fiscal projections. Dealers expected an inaugural
size of $10-13 billion for the new issue with subsequent monthly re-openings of $8-11 billion, for
a total coupon size of $26-35 billion. Dealers broadly expect the size of the 20-year to increase
over time as Treasury’s financing needs grow.
The Committee discussed financing strategies to accommodate current fiscal projections, the
announced introduction of a 20-year issue in the first half of 2020, and continued Federal
Reserve T-Bill purchases. With longer term funding needs expected to rise in 2021 and 2022 and
with the expectation of broad end-user demand, the Committee supports the introduction of
the new 20-year issue in May, sized at the lower end of primary dealer’s expectations. The
Committee feels strongly that a regular and predictable issuance strategy is critical to achieving
the lowest cost to the taxpayer over time, and consistent with that view, does not recommend
changes to other coupons in the near term. This does not indicate a departure from the
Committee’s prior views of the longer-term strategy of maturity composition of Treasury debt.
Further, the Committee reiterated its view that the WAM of the debt, while not an explicit target,
is adequate and noted prior discussions which suggest issuance in the belly is preferable over
the long end given the cost/risk trade o .
The Committee continues to expect little or no change to coupon sizes for much of FY 2020, with
the exception of modestly increasing 20-year supply. Given the uncertainty inherent in fiscal
projections and Fed balance sheet policy, Treasury will need to retain flexibility in its issuance
path to respond to any changes in funding needs and to accommodate historically large auction
sizes through 2021 and 2022. Members agreed that decisions taken to date a ord Treasury
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

significant flexibility to respond to potential changes in fiscal projections or Fed policy including
potential further changes in the SOMA portfolio size and composition.
The Committee next reviewed a charge on whether Treasury should alter its issuance pattern if
the Federal Reserve shi s its SOMA holdings toward shorter-dated securities as discussed
during the April/May 2019 FOMC meeting. The presenters highlighted that while Treasury and
the Federal Reserve are independent entities operating with di erent mandates, decisions that
the Federal Reserve makes on its SOMA portfolio will have an impact on Treasury, because the
Federal Reserve remits most of the interest earned on its SOMA holdings to Treasury. Thus, it
can be useful to look at a stylized consolidated balance sheet across Treasury and SOMA when
considering some debt management considerations.
The presenters demonstrated that, from the perspective of a stylized consolidated balance
sheet, SOMA portfolio holdings replicate the e ects of the Treasury having issued more floatingrate notes tied to overnight interest rates set by the Fed. That e ect, combined with the
presence of currency as a SOMA liability, has produced a better cost/risk trade-o for Treasury
than would have been the case without the SOMA.
The presenters highlighted that any decision by the Federal Reserve to run o its SOMA holdings
would increase Treasury's borrowing needs, as Fed add-ons would decline. The potential shi
towards shorter-dated securities in SOMA could give the Federal Reserve considerable capacity
to run o its holdings over short periods. However, a decision by the Federal Reserve to employ
run o caps, as it did in its most recent portfolio decline, would help the Treasury to maintain its
regular and predictable approach to debt issuance.
The presenters argued that Treasury should adjust supply to meet a desired shi by the Federal
Reserve in the longer-run SOMA maturity structure, thereby keeping the composition of
privately-held securities una ected. Altering Treasury issuance to the private sector to o set the
desired shi by the Federal Reserve would not significantly reduce the risk involved and would
result in a less favorable cost/risk outcome for the taxpayer.
Finally, the Committee discussed whether Treasury should alter its issuance plans in a future QE
episode. In light of Treasury’s overall economic growth mission, the Committee believes
Treasury should not adjust, over the short run at least, its maturity composition in response to
QE in a way that o sets the e ects of the Federal Reserve’s policy.
Respectfully,
_______________________________
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

Beth Hammack
Chair, Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee
_______________________________
Daniel Dufresne
Vice Chair, Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee

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