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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
August 2, 2017

8/2/2017
August 2, 2017
Letter to the Secretary
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Economic activity picked up in the second quarter a er a sluggish first quarter. Real GDP rose
2.6% (annual rate) last quarter, led by healthy gains in personal consumption expenditures and
business fixed investment. Smoothing through the quarterly variability, real GDP has expanded
2.1% over the last four quarters. That pace represents a continuation of the relatively slow but
steady growth that has characterized this expansion.
Since the Committee last met in May, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) raised
interest rates again, outlined a plan for how it will shrink its super-sized balance sheet, and
suggested it would begin the run-o “relatively soon,” which most market participants
interpreted as the next FOMC meeting in September. In spite of these moves to provide less
monetary policy accommodation, financial conditions eased on net. Equities rose on good news
about earnings, the broad trade-weighted exchange value of the US dollar fell as growth
improved abroad, and long-term interest rates were little changed. Financial conditions are
expected to remain accommodative in the near term, continuing to support domestic economic
activity and provide a favorable backdrop for the ongoing economic expansion.
Real personal consumption expenditures increased 2.8% in the second quarter, somewhat
stronger than in the first quarter. Spending on durable goods rose briskly despite sagging sales
of motor vehicles. Nondurable spending also notched a solid gain while growth in services was
steady. The most recent readings on the consumer have been mixed. Core retail sales (excluding
autos, building supplies and gasoline stations) fell outright in June, which provides a weak
hando to the current quarter. However, industry reports suggested motor vehicle purchases
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

edged back up in July. Looking ahead, the fundamental determinants of consumer spending
appear sturdy. Consumer sentiment is elevated, household balance sheets have enjoyed rising
home and equity prices, debt growth has been disciplined, and compensation growth has been
moderate.
Business fixed investment moved up 5.2% in the second quarter, improving across the board in
equipment, structures, and intellectual property. Real outlays on equipment accelerated to
8.2%, the largest increase since the third quarter of 2015. Real structures investment increased
4.9%, a move that was more than all accounted for by a surge in drilling activity in the energy
sector. Real investment in intellectual property slowed because of a decline in the
entertainment sector. Looking forward, national and regional surveys of purchasing managers
point to ongoing momentum in manufacturing and investment. In addition, hard data on orders
of nondefense capital goods excluding aircra have improved further in recent months, and
remain above the corresponding shipments, which is positive for further growth in equipment
investment. Inventory investment was nearly unchanged in the second quarter. The real level of
-$0.3 billion means that there is plenty of room for sizable positive contributions to growth in
the second half of the year as businesses restock.
Real residential investment declined 6.8% in the second quarter. Part of the decline may owe to
payback from the large increase in the first quarter when unseasonably warm weather pulled
forward activity. Despite the decline, fundamentals in the housing market look generally
positive. The benchmark 30-year mortgage remains below 4%, credit is widely available, and
the supply of new and existing homes is relatively lean.
Net exports added a little to second-quarter real GDP growth. With the broad trade-weighted
exchange value of the US dollar depreciating by 7% this year, the dollar is turning into a tailwind
for growth. At the same time, the outlook for global growth has brightened. Developed market
economies have displayed surprising strength, especially in the Euro area, and emerging market
economic performance has been stable as worries have faded about downside risks to growth
in China. As a consequence, we look for stronger US exports in the coming quarters
Government spending and investment rose a bit in the first quarter. Federal outlays increased a
little more than state and local contracted. Plans for federal expenditures on health care and tax
reform continue to be debated by Congress and the administration. E orts to repeal and replace
Obamacare have been unsuccessful so far. An outline for tax reform was agreed among key
o icials and the relevant committees in Congress will forge ahead on filling in the details in the
fall.
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Report to the Secretary of the Treasury from the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Market…

Despite relatively slow growth, the labor market has continued to impress. The unemployment
rate has fallen 0.3 percentage points in the first half of the year to 4.4%. Over the same period,
nonfarm payroll employment has averaged a robust 180,000 new jobs per month. Despite what
appears to be a tightening labor market, wage growth has been modest. Average hourly
earnings have slowed to a 2.5% clip over the year ended in June. Over the same period, a
broader measure of compensation in the employment cost index has been similarly muted. Part
of the explanation for restrained wage growth may owe to historically weak productivity trends.
Consumer price inflation has disappointed over the past few months. Total personal
consumption expenditures inflation ticked down to 1.6% in the year ended in the second
quarter. Inflation excluding food and energy has been even weaker slipping to 1.5%, owing
mostly to a string of idiosyncratic and transitory factors. Earlier in the year, a huge decline in the
quality-adjusted prices for wireless phone services shaved .1 percentage points by itself from
core inflation. More recently, volatile categories like airfares and lodging held back core
inflation. However, some of the decline in core inflation looks more persistent, as owner’s
equivalent rent (the largest share of expenditures a er health care) has slowed as well.
Meanwhile, survey-based measures of inflation expectations bounced back to the middle of the
ranges seen in the last few years. Market-based measures of inflation compensation have
generally followed the path of longer-term nominal interest rates, declining for most of the year
until bouncing back in the last month or so.
At its June meeting, the FOMC raised the federal funds rate for a third consecutive quarter to a
range of 1.0% to 1.25%. The Fed also indicated that it expects to continue raising interest rates
gradually. The median of the Committee participants’ submissions of the appropriate path of
policy called for three rate increases in each of 2018 and 2019 with a longer run neutral rate of
3%. The FOMC also announced in June detailed principles about how it plans to normalize its
balance sheet. The Fed will decrease its reinvestments of principal payments on Treasury and
agency mortgage-backed securities subject to a series of caps. For Treasuries, the cap will be $6
billion per month initially and will increase in steps of $6 billion at three-month intervals over 12
months until it reaches $30 billion. For agency mortgages, the cap will be $4 billion per month
initially and will increase in steps of $4 billion at three-month intervals over 12 months until it
reaches $20 billion per month. Although no decisions were made about the ultimate size of the
balance sheet, the near-term path of the gradually declining balance sheet appears to be on
autopilot. At their July meeting, the FOMC indicated that normalization would begin “relatively
soon,” code words most market participants took to mean an announcement in September with
commencement soon therea er. Given the very deliberate approach the Fed has taken to
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withdrawing accommodation, it seems likely they will pause on raising interest rates when they
start balance sheet normalization. In light of the surprising shortfall in inflation from the Fed’s
2% mandate, such a pause also enables the Committee to evaluate inflation trends before
raising rates again. Most o icials appear comfortable with returning to rate hikes in December,
Against this economic backdrop, the Committee reviewed Treasury’s August 2017 Quarterly
Refunding Presentation to the TBAC. Fiscal year-to-date receipts are up 2%, due to stronger
individual income and payroll taxes. Fiscal year-to-date Treasury outlays increased by 6%.
Based on the Quarterly Borrowing Estimate, Treasury’s O ice of Fiscal Projections currently
projects a net marketable borrowing need of $96 billion for the fourth quarter of FY 2017, with
an end-of-September cash balance of $60 billion. For the first quarter of FY 2018, net marketable
borrowing need is projected to be substantially higher at $501 billion, with a cash balance
ramping up to $360 billion by the end of December.
The Committee reviewed the Treasury’s cash balance policy in light of prudent risk
management goals as well as developments related to the debt limit impasse, including the
Secretary’s recent letter to Congress saying it must act to increase the debt limit by 29
September. The Committee stressed the urgency and importance for Congress to raise the debt
limit in a timely manner.
The TBAC charge was to discuss the implications for Treasury debt management from the
Federal Reserve’s potential normalization of its SOMA portfolio. The wide-ranging charge
covered three major topics: Expectations for balance sheet normalization, options for the
resulting increase in Treasury issuance, and potential broader market implications.
The FOMC is expected to begin phasing out reinvestments starting in October. Assuming a
steady state where reserve balances are $650 billion (which includes a bu er than may prove
unnecessary), the balance sheet will reach normal levels in the first quarter of 2021. At that time,
Treasury holdings will be $1.7 trillion, down from $2.5 trillion presently. A er normalization, the
Fed is assumed to reinvest all maturing Treasuries on a pro-rata basis across the Treasury curve.
Maturing mortgage-backed securities are assumed to be reinvested in T-bills. The Fed’s holdings
of Treasuries will grow by $100-200 billion per year in 2021 and therea er. Over this period of
normalization, the impact on 10-year term premium is estimated to be a relatively modest 40
basis points, but that will depend on the Treasury’s issuance strategy as well as empirical
relationships that are highly uncertain given the unique nature of this policy.

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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 funding gap created by less reinvestment by the Fed, the amount of maturing
debt that needs to be refinanced will rise in the coming years. Another important variable for
judging Treasury’s funding needs is the path of future budget deficits, a topic about which
there’s considerable uncertainty. If the median deficit forecast by the primary dealers is a good
guide, Treasury’s borrowing needs are likely to be substantially higher over the coming years. In
the baseline estimates, borrowing needs will increase from $525 billion in calendar year 2017 to
$1,010 billion in calendar year 2020, e ectively a doubling. Assuming a gradual ramping up in Tbill’s share of overall debt, o ering amounts excluding T-bills will have to rise by $672 billion by
calendar year 2020. Assuming a more favorable profile for the federal deficit—such as in the
administration’s forecast—results in meaningfully lower o ering amounts.
The presentation then turned to how Treasury should consider responding to increased funding
needs. The highlight of the findings is that Treasury should consider increasing auction sizes
across all tenors while gradually increasing T-bills as a share of overall debt. Under this
proposal, the weighted average maturity (WAM) of the debt would gradually increase. Several
other scenarios were presented. For example, were Treasury to concentrate increases at the
front end of the Treasury curve with a large jump in the T-bill share to 22% of outstanding,
coupons would increase only modestly.
The higher borrowing needs are primarily driven by the federal deficit, so Treasury should
carefully consider fiscal policies as it makes decisions about various debt management
scenarios. Nevertheless, if the median primary dealer forecast is a good guide, a prudent and
flexible approach would consider increasing coupon debt as soon as the November refunding
and as late as the first quarter of 2018. In particular, the presentation recommended that
Treasury consider a broader increase in issuance across tenors.
The presentation concluded with a discussion of potential spillovers and risks from the
normalization of the Fed’s balance sheet. The private sector piggy-backed on the Fed’s largescale asset purchases, a move that promoted a surge in corporate borrowing and tighter risk
spreads. In this environment, a tail risk stress scenario is that a small increase in yields could
possibly lead to large changes in risk premiums. In an adverse scenario, there’s the possibility of
a meaningful, but not systemically risky, decline in both credit and equities.
In the ensuing discussion among Committee members, there was unanimous agreement that
the traditional way of responding to cyclical debt needs by relying primarily on short-end
funding would be inappropriate. Given the potential magnitude of the funding gap going

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forward, the Committee strongly recommends that Treasury consider a broader increase in
issuance across tenors.
Although the Committee did not make specific recommendations for how to increase coupon
issuance, there was unanimous agreement that the WAM should remain about the same or
increase going forward. It was stressed by many members that the WAM is just a metaphor for
Treasury’s specific goals for least cost issuance and interest rate risk mitigation over time. In
future charges, the Committee plans to carefully examine di erent debt management strategies
within a model-based framework along with using WAM. The risk is that by using WAM as a
single metric exclusively, the market mistakenly infers that a mechanical increase in longer-term
coupons is optimal. It’s not.
In terms of the timing of increased coupon issuance, the Committee felt that Treasury should
consider increasing coupon debt as soon as the November refunding and as late as Q1 2018. By
legging into increased coupon issuance relatively soon and in a predictable manner, Treasury
maintains flexibility to respond to fiscal and other developments without causing market stress.

Respectfully,

_______________________________

Jason G. Cummins
Chairman

TBAC Recommended Financing Table Q3 2017

and TBAC Recommended Financing Table Q4

2017

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