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The Analyst Magazine:
US Treasury Bonds : Losing Luster?
 
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The US Treasury's decision to issue bonds to help finance the government's hefty fiscal deficit and bank bailouts has underwhelmed the US Treasury bond market, which remained the preferred destination for global investors in the not too distant past.


 

In the trouble-tossed world of finance, America's vast and liquid Treasury-bond market was considered a safe and attractive place by many. For years, it was attracting loads of money from China, Japan, UK, Saudi Arabia and many other oil-exporting countries. In a way, it has added to US's total debt to the world, which stood at nearly $78.8 tn at the end of February 2009 and exceeds the total world GDP. America, being a prolific spender, has largely benefitted from its Treasury bond market. It used to finance its expenditure from the proceeds from this market. It thus helped the American market to prosper all these days. However, the credit crunch and the downfall of its banking system have exposed the US's trillion dollar debt and certain flaws in managing that debt through its treasuries.

Obama's new budget has projected a deficit of nearly $1.75 tn, (the figure represents 12.3% of GDP, double the post-war record of 6% in 1983 and the highest after it totaled 21.5% of GDP in 1945 at the end of World War II), which he is planning to finance through the Treasury-bond market. The stimulus package and the bank bailout plans announced by the US Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner indicated his interest in selling more bonds this year, further enhancing the Treasury's existing debt of over $6 tn. Analysts are of the view that this proposal is likely to increase the Treasury borrowing by $3.7 tn in 2009 and 2010, and may go even higher. The decision was therefore not well received by the Treasury bond market. Since touching a record low of 2.04% in mid-December, 10-year bond yields shot up to 3.04% by the end of February 2009, pushing their prices to record lows. Similarly, the yields on 30-year bonds rose from 2.5% to 3.75%. Heavy selling of these bonds made January 2009 the worst month for US government securities in decades. The Treasury bond market has lost 3.6% this year, their worst annual start since 1986.

 
 

 

The Analyst Magazine, Treasury-bond Market, Global Investors, Gross Domestic Product, GDP, US Government Securities, Treasury's Inflation-Protected Bonds, US Treasury Bonds, BMO Capital Markets, Corporate Bonds, Treasury Department, Foreign Banks, Equity Markets, American Economy, Capital Markets.