ORLANDO, Florida, Oct 11 (Reuters) – The recent surge in
long-dated U.S. bond yields to their highest since 2007 has a
few plausible triggers, but the Fed’s quantitative tightening
(QT) policy of reducing its balance sheet does not appear to be
one of them.
If anything, shifts in the composition of the central bank’s
holdings of Treasury bonds since ‘QT 2’ was launched in June
last year may actually be keeping longer-term borrowing costs
from spiking even higher.
While the Fed has reduced its holdings of Treasury bonds and
bills by around $840 billion in that time, its stash of bonds
with a maturity of 10 years or more has actually grown, both in
nominal terms and as a share of total holdings.
Indeed, it is now a record high by both measures – $1.5
trillion in nominal terms, up around $75 billion since QT 2
started; and 30.5% of all the Fed’s holdings of bills and bonds,
up almost 6 percentage points.
Fed holdings of Treasury-issued debt of all other maturity
segments – bills, one-to-five years, and five-to-10 years – have
declined to varying degrees, nominally and as a share of the
total, particularly the one-to-five year part of the curve.
If the Fed’s holdings of long-dated securities were
shrinking like other parts of the curve, or even at all, more of
these bonds would be available to the wider market. All things
equal, these yields would probably be higher.
“It’s at least reasonable and fair to raise the argument
that the backup in long-dated yields doesn’t owe to QT
dynamics,” said Benson Durham, head of global policy and asset
allocation at Piper Sandler.
Curiously, the Fed’s holdings of longer-dated bonds as a
share of the total also rose during ‘QT 1’ between October 2017
and July 2019, although the nominal value held pretty steady
around $620 billion.
Durham is reluctant to put too much weight on QT 2’s impact
on the broad rise in yields, given that the program has been so
well-flagged and the monthly caps have been in place for over a
year. Well before the current volatility.
But Joseph Wang, chief investment officer at Monetary Macro
and a former senior trader on the Fed’s open markets desk,
believes QT is a factor driving yields higher as it increases
the supply of Treasuries the private sector must hold.
Wang recognizes that if the Fed held fewer longer-dated
securities these yields might be even higher, but also points
out that the Fed’s holdings are largely determined by what
Treasury issues.
POOR LIQUIDITY?
All told, the Fed’s ‘QT 2’ is almost twice the pace of QT 1.
It involves reducing the central bank’s balance sheet by as much
as $95 billion a month – up to $60 billion of Treasury debt and
$35 billion of mortgage-backed securities.
The Fed has not sold a single bond back to the market and is
still reinvesting the proceeds of some maturing paper into new
debt of similar maturities. But it allows some securities to
mature without reinvesting, which reduces its holdings.
Since the Fed started QT 2, its total holdings of Treasury
bills and bonds have fallen to $4.93 trillion from $5.77
trillion. More than half of that $840 billion decline, almost
$500 billion, has been in one-five year securities.
This may be more mechanical than anything else, driven by
Treasury issuance. Also, a two-year bond falls out of the
one-five year maturity bucket quicker than 20-year and 30-year
bonds fall out of the 10-year and longer maturity segment.
The average profile of Fed-held Treasury debt is longer than
total outstanding Treasury debt, and getting longer. If current
trends continue, the Fed’s largest holding of Treasuries will be
10-30 year maturities by the middle of next year.
Heavy selling at the long end of the curve in recent months
has propelled yields higher and steepened the yield curve,
developments which could spell bad news for the economy.
IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said on
Tuesday that the spike in long-term borrowing costs was “a
little bit odd,” while Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari
said it is a bit “perplexing.”
Some point to growing fiscal concerns, with the government
budget deficit potentially approaching the $2 trillion mark.
Some point to the ‘term premium’ – the somewhat nebulous level
of compensation investors demand for taking on the extra risk of
holding longer-dated securities rather than regularly rolling
over shorter-term bonds.
Whatever is driving yields higher, trades are clearing and
there is no obvious sign of stress or liquidity air pockets. So
far, at least, the market is functioning smoothly.
“It has been a relatively orderly move, but it is getting
more volatile. And price volatility is synonymous with poor
liquidity,” Wang warns.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters.)
(By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Andrea Ricci)