Treasury Cuts Quarterly Debt Sale, May Do So Again Even With Fed QT

The U.S. Treasury trimmed its quarterly sale of longer-term debt for a third straight time, and unexpectedly advised that it may make further reductions, citing “strong” federal tax revenues.

Dealers had widely expected the reduction to next week’s sale of notes and bonds, but viewed it as likely to be the last cutback ahead of the Federal Reserve’s move to shrink its $5.8 trillion stockpile of Treasuries. The Fed is forecast to unveil its plan for so-called quantitative tightening, or QT, later Wednesday, and that process was seen forcing the Treasury to have to sell more debt to the public.

The Treasury Department said in a statement Wednesday that it will sell $103 billion of long-term securities at auctions next week -- down $7 billion from February. This marks the longest string of quarterly cuts since a 2014-2015 cycle. In a surprise for some dealers, it’s also trimming sales of two-year, three-year and five-year auctions in coming months.

“The issuance plans announced today leave Treasury well positioned” with regard to necessary borrowing, the department said in its statement. However, “additional reductions in future quarters may be necessary depending on future developments in projected borrowing needs.”

The Treasury has been whittling down auction sizes from the record levels that were needed to fund the surge in government spending on pandemic-relief measures. The economic recovery has also contributed to a jump in federal tax revenues.

Improvement in the Treasury’s financing position has been sufficient to offset the increased needs likely to come as Fed rolls Treasuries off its balance sheet, Treasury officials said Wednesday. They noted that dealers, in their forecasts presented to Treasury before the refunding, didn’t have the details on the outsize tax revenue inflows over the past weeks, they said.

And while the Treasury schedule laid out Wednesday didn’t explicitly factor in the Fed’s QT, the outlook for how the runoff would affect future financing needs was taking into account overall, the officials said.