The Treasury is unlikely to make abrupt changes to debt issuance, like cutting long-end auctions, despite political pressure for lower rates. The institutional memory of the 2001 surprise 30-year bond cancellation, which damaged credibility, constrains it to a "regular and predictable" approach to avoid spooking markets.

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Despite market speculation about potential cuts to long-end Treasury auction sizes, the primary dealer agenda for the next refunding shows no such intention. The Treasury's focus on other topics suggests it will likely maintain or even increase coupon auction sizes next year, pointing to continued supply pressure.

Politicians will continue running large deficits as long as the bond market tolerates it by keeping interest rates low. The ultimate correcting mechanism for government spending isn't political discipline, but the bond market's impersonal decision to raise rates, forcing fiscal responsibility.

Contrary to fears of a spike, a major rise in 10-year Treasury yields is unlikely. The current wide gap between long-term yields and the Fed's lower policy rate—a multi-year anomaly—makes these bonds increasingly attractive to buyers. This dynamic creates a natural ceiling on how high long-term rates can go.

While the Fed's Reserve Management Purchases will absorb significant T-bill supply, J.P. Morgan predicts the Treasury will still increase coupon auction sizes. This is based on the belief that a prudent debt management strategy will avoid over-reliance on short-term T-bills to prevent financing cost volatility.

Despite facing a massive $5.5 trillion funding gap through 2030, the Treasury is expected to delay increases to its coupon auction sizes until November of next year. This decision stems from a slightly improved short-term fiscal outlook and a political desire from the administration to project 'no urgency'.

The Federal Reserve’s decision to end Quantitative Tightening (QT) is heavily influenced by a desire to avoid a repeat of the 2019 funding crisis. The 'political economy' of the decision is key, as the Fed aims to prevent giving critics 'ammunition' by demonstrating it can control short-term rates.

Despite the Federal Reserve's plan to purchase $490 billion in T-bills in 2026, easing immediate funding pressure, the U.S. Treasury is expected to increase coupon auction sizes in November. This preemptive move aims to mitigate the long-term risks associated with a rising T-bill share of debt, such as financing cost volatility.

The Federal Reserve is expected to buy approximately $280 billion of T-bills in the secondary market next year. This significant demand source provides the Treasury with flexibility, allowing it to temporarily exceed its long-term T-bill share target of 20% without causing market disruption.

Despite fears of fiscal dominance driving yields up, US bond yields have remained controlled. This suggests a "financial repression" scenario is winning, where the Treasury and Federal Reserve coordinate, perhaps through careful auction management, to keep borrowing costs contained and suppress long-term rates.

When the Treasury does increase coupon issuance, it will concentrate on the front-end and 'belly' of the curve, leaving 20 and 30-year bond auctions unchanged. This strategy reflects slowing structural demand for long-duration bonds and debt optimization models that favor shorter issuance in an environment of higher term premiums.

Treasury's Credibility, Haunted by 2001 Bond Cancellation, Prevents Sudden Policy Shifts | RiffOn