Shutdown, default threat boost for U.S. Treasuries

Home > Business > Finance

print dictionary print

Shutdown, default threat boost for U.S. Treasuries

NEW YORK - Government shutdown. Federal default. These looming political threats to the U.S. economy might scare investors to buy more U.S. Treasuries in the coming days as they seek a shelter for their cash.

While a protracted government shutdown, and particularly a default, could harm the image of Uncle Sam’s debt, its safe-haven appeal looks unchallenged in the short term.

Worried about rising chances that federal workers and contractors won’t get paid if much of the government shuts down tomorrow amid a political standoff in Washington, investors are expected to go by the conventional crisis playbook - dumping assets perceived to be higher-risk and rushing into those seen as lower risk.

An extended shutdown, which would include furloughs and temporary unpaid leave for many government employees, would have a direct impact on businesses who rely on government contracts or spending by government employees.

It could also lead to delays in spending on big-ticket items by companies and consumers as confidence takes a hit.

That could all harm economic growth and make it less likely that the Federal Reserve will curb its stimulus program through bond buying, further supporting prices of government debt.

Congress must also raise the federal borrowing authority by Oct. 17 - when the government is expected to exhaust its $16.7 trillion debt limit.

Failure to do so could threaten a debt default, but many analysts think the government would slash spending before declining to pay its creditors, leaving Treasuries relatively unscathed, at least initially.

Analysts said a risk-aversion move could push benchmark yields on 10-year notes below 2.5 percent, more than 0.5 percentage point below the two-year high above 3 percent set in early September. Late on Friday they were trading at about 2.63 percent.

“It’s paradoxical that a government shutdown or hitting the debt ceiling is good for Treasuries, but you most likely would see a flight-to-safety into Treasuries,” said Bill Cheney, chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services in Boston.

Any fears about a protracted government shutdown haven’t been reflected in recent trading. This month, Treasuries are likely to post their first gain in five months as the sector recovered from its summer swoon, sparked by the Federal Reserve decision last week to maintain its bond purchase program.

Growing demand for some Treasury obligations that mature before the Oct. 17 debt limit deadline knocked their interest rates to below zero this week. A month ago, they traded at 0.02 percent.

The yields on benchmark 10-year Treasuries have already fallen to their lowest levels in six weeks partly on safe-haven bids on bets about a possible government shutdown next week.

Still, a long-lasting government shutdown, or, even worse, a default, could harm the Treasuries market.

“You don’t want to damage investor confidence in U.S. Treasuries,” said Craig Dismuke, chief economic strategist with Vining Sparks in Memphis, Tennessee. “If there is a flight-to-safety, it would a temporary one.”

Ironically, the wrangling between U.S. President Barack Obama and Republican lawmakers over the budget, debt ceiling and the Affordable Care Act comes as the U.S. fiscal picture has improved this year.

It is difficult to predict what might transpire the coming days.

“Looking at history, there is not a clear pattern,” said Cheney at John Hancock.

Government shutdowns in 1995 barely interrupted a Standard & Poor’s 500 index’s winning streak. It ended up 34 percent that year.

In contrast, the S&P tumbled 14 percent in the summer of 2011 during the first debt ceiling fight between Obama and the Republicans and following Standard & Poor’s stripping the United States of its AAA rating. Investors stampeded into Treasuries from stocks.

While many still expect that the White House and Republican leaders will come up with temporary fixes to avert a government shutdown and a default, analysts said there is some nervousness given that political leaders have remained far apart.

“We are conditioned for an 11th hour deal, but you can’t take anything for granted,” said Eric Green, global head of rates, currency and commodity research at TD Securities in New York.

If Washington were able to keep the government running and paying its bills, the 10-year yield will likely rise back to around 2.75 to 2.8 percent.

It would also allow Wall Street to focus on whether the economy is showing any signs of picking up steam and the timing of the Fed’s bond buying pullback, analyst said.

“The Fed tapering is way more important than all of this,” Cheney said.

Reuters

Log in to Twitter or Facebook account to connect
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
help-image Social comment?
s
lock icon

To write comments, please log in to one of the accounts.

Standards Board Policy (0/250자)