The one thing to emerge from the debt ceiling crisis has been to
highlight the short-term debt focus. Every Thursday the US government
has had to sell $100 billion of new debt rolling over short-term with 3
month bills. This may have helped to bring down long-term rates and it
reduced the interest expenditures, but it has introduced
extreme vulnerability to a sudden loss of lenders’ trust as lawmakers
debate whether to raise a cap on public borrowing.
U.S. Treasury will unveil its new borrowing strategy that will signal
the shift in interest rates has arrived. The extreme short-term
debt can trigger default within days or weeks around one of these debt
ceiling debates placing more power in the hands of the Tea Party. The
Obama Administration is counter-acting with starting to shift the debt
long-term to reduce Treasury need to raise $100 billion to repay
short-term debts on a weekly basis.
The Treasury will now shift the U.S. government’s reliance on
short-term debt, which increased dramatically ever since Clinton began
to shift it to reduce interest expenditures to balance the budget. (see
Op-Ed WSJ below), Under the new program, the Treasury plans to start
selling 2-year floating-rate notes at regular auctions beginning in
January. The yield on the new notes will float according to market
conditions. Hence, we will begin to see longer-term rates start to rise.
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