17 April 2024

Liquidity Deteriorates for US Treasuries

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Trading in the world’s biggest government bond market has become increasingly challenging as the large banks that support transactions focus on slimming down their balance sheets. As dealers step back from facilitating the buying and selling of US Treasury debt, a key measure of market liquidity has deteriorated sharply and plumbed a level not seen since the bond rout of 2013, when investors anticipated that the Federal Reserve would start tapering its quantitative easing policy.

Ahead of an expected shift higher in official borrowing costs next month by the central bank, investors have been selling Treasuries, with the rise in yields and decline in prices being compounded by a tougher operating environment for dealers.

Faced with capital constraints, primary dealers, who are responsible for underwriting the US government’s debt, have struggled in their traditional role of being middlemen for investors. That has resulted in the price of older or “off-the-run” Treasury debt issues cheapening beyond their usual discount compared with current or “on-the-run” bond benchmarks. Such a breakdown between older and new Treasury securities typically signifies market tension and comes when derivatives trading is also being adversely affected by shrinking dealer support, the prospect of a Fed rate rise and looming end of the financial year.

Isaac Chang, global head of fixed income at KCG, an electronic market maker, said the current Treasury market dislocation highlights the strains on banks’ balance sheets due to increased capital requirements. That relationship has been exacerbated by foreign central banks selling their holdings of older Treasuries as they support their currencies against the dollar. Highlighting the inability of banks to digest large supply and demand imbalances, their holdings of Treasuries have increased from around $20bn in July to $60bn.

Money market funds that exchange cash with banks in return for high quality collateral such as Treasuries via a repurchase, or “repo”, agreement are bracing for poorer market liquidity in the coming weeks. Banks say balance sheet pressures have forced them to pull back from the repo business.

Debbie Cunningham, senior portfolio manager at Federated Investors said some banks have retreated from repo transactions with money market funds. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York runs its own repo programme, allowing investors to trade with it either overnight or for a longer period, called “term repo”. At the end of the third quarter the Fed expanded its programme to $450bn. Last week it announced a term repo programme of $300bn beginning on December 18, soon after the central bank’s meeting.

Click here to access the full article on Financial Times.

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