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Economy
Weak Treasury Auctions Raise Worries About US Debt Burden
2009-07-30
The U.S. Treasury sold $39 billion in five-year debt Wednesday in an auction that drew poor demand, raising worries over the cost of financing the government's burgeoning budget deficit. It was the second lackluster showing in as many days, convincing analysts that the stellar results of debt auctions just a few weeks ago were a fluke and that Thursday's $28 billion seven-year offering could suffer a similar fate.

Under the weight of the ballooning deficit, the government has raised auction volumes and analysts now wonder whether the strain on the market is showing.

"Obviously everyone is inferring that tomorrow's won't be good either," said James Combias, head of government bond trading at Mizuho Securities USA in New York. "Maybe you will see more interest tomorrow but I think the increase in the auctions and the size of them may be starting to have an effect. These are very large auctions."

Demand for the five-year notes was below average, measured by the bid-to-cover ratio of 1.92, the lowest in almost a year. This followed a poor two-year auction on Tuesday.

In a further sign of a weak sale, yields at the auction were well above expectations, known as a "tail." The tail indicates that dealers drove an unexpectedly hard bargain to raise yields, and lower prices, to buy the bonds. Ultimately, this could raise interest rates throughout the economy at a faster rate than might be appropriate given the lingering effects of the worst recession in decades.

A key proxy for foreign interest, the indirect bidder category, was slightly above the average of auctions over the past year at 36.6 percent but far below the most recent sale.

"It was just a horrendous result," said William O'Donnell, head of U.S. Treasury strategy at RBS Securities in Greenwich, Connecticut. "It was the weakest bid-to-cover since September 2008, and by my numbers it was the biggest tail since February 1993. It was just a very, very weak result."
Posted by:Steve White

#11  The Fed Ponzi scheme with the Treasury is monitizing the debt right under everyone's noses, and not a squeak from anyone. Devaluing fiat money is the next bold step in destroying public confidence worldwide in credit markets. And specificallly in the US, is essentially theft in that they are simply stealing the real value of what we have saved in personal wealth through monitization. They print more paper and the buying power I had in my IRA/401/457 erodes just as if they simply stole the exact percentage by which they inflate the overall money supply. This and the 30 year de-industrialization of America represents the greatest transfer of wealth in the history of mankind, and not a real peep from our leaders.....but we are still checking to make sure Michael Jackson is really dead and what beer Zero will have at the picnic table tonight....
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2009-07-30 16:02  

#10  Lesse, the Fed is payin' crap interest and equities are back. Whoodathunk desire for treasuries would go down under such conditions.

The only question I'd like answered is how much is spending going to be cut and how much money is going to be printed to cover our debt.
Posted by: Mike N.   2009-07-30 15:09  

#9  Don't be silly, the US government has no intention of cutting a significant amount of spending. Obama will leverage in a more pliable Fed chairman who will assist the government in monetizing the debt (or at least the deficits) as the Fed & Treasury swap newly-printed currency for newly-printed bonds.
Posted by: AzCat   2009-07-30 13:25  

#8  darth, Dems 'investment' in ACORN should maintain their electability regardless of what they do. And (as shown in Washington State a few years ago & others since) 'it doesn't matter who votes, it matters who counts the votes.'
Posted by: Glenmore   2009-07-30 11:00  

#7  If the US can't borrow enough to finance the deficit, then Congress will be forced to act by cutting spending, beginning with the $787 billion "Stimulus"

Oh they will cut. But not their bribe money. Defense and security will take the major hits. Then taxes will be raised.

High taxes+weak economy+high risk of being hit again+government bloat=loss for dhimocrats for the next 4 years.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-07-30 09:30  

#6  If you expect both at the same time - inflation-driven increases in interest rates and decreasing corporate earnings

Invest in aspirin and rot gut booze. Oh, and pitchforks.
Posted by: ed   2009-07-30 09:18  

#5  Don't be silly, Besoeker -- it's the Chinese and Russian governments that are refusing to play along.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-07-30 08:57  

#4  If you are an investor who anticipates high inflation, you avoid bonds & such - they'll devalue even more than cash - and put money in stocks & commodities. If you anticipate deflation bonds are a little better than cash. If, like me, you expect both at the same time - inflation-driven increases in interest rates and decreasing corporate earnings, it's just a WAG which way to go.
Posted by: Glenmore   2009-07-30 08:41  

#3  I have to point out that yields on 5-year bonds were 2.7% Would you loan money to this government at that rate for 5 years? I didn't think so.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-07-30 08:24  

#2  Under the weight of the ballooning deficit, the government has raised auction volumes and analysts now wonder whether the strain on the market is showing.

Nonsense! Just raise the interest earned to record levels and you'll have all kinds of takers and plenty of new cash to squander. If that fails to work, then nationalize all the 401k accounts and dump that money into gummit bonds. It's the rich people (old white men) who are to blame. They're just holding out for better returns.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-07-30 07:28  

#1  Under the weight of the ballooning deficit, the government has raised auction volumes and analysts now wonder whether the strain on the market is showing.

If the US can't borrow enough to finance the deficit, then Congress will be forced to act by cutting spending, beginning with the $787 billion "Stimulus"

And with the overarching idea that republicans must be left out of all legislation in this congress, the democratic left will own the cuts.

It will also moot cap and trade, and health care, as well as any number of "reforms" on liberal democrats' agendas.

All of which has the "potential to translate into an electoral bloodbath for democrats in 2010.
Posted by: badanov   2009-07-30 00:51  

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