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The Treasury actively stimulates liquidity by altering its debt issuance strategy. By issuing more short-term T-bills (bought by banks) and fewer long-term bonds, it effectively monetizes fiscal spending. This 'Treasury QE' is a major, under-the-radar source of liquidity for markets.

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The Fed's intervention in funding markets, while not officially labeled Quantitative Easing, directly helps the Treasury finance its debt, effectively monetizing it and providing critical liquidity to markets.

Despite official rhetoric, the Fed is creating money out of thin air to buy short-term government debt. Labeled "reserve management purchases," this is functionally quantitative easing, designed to keep the government's borrowing costs from exploding.

The common narrative of the Federal Reserve implementing Quantitative Tightening (QT) is misleading. The US has actually been injecting liquidity through less obvious channels. The real tightening may only be starting now as these methods are exhausted, signaling a significant, under-the-radar policy shift.

The Fed's plan to reinvest maturing mortgage-backed securities (MBS) into Treasury bills is a stealth liquidity injection. The US Treasury can amplify this effect by shifting issuance from long-term bonds to short-term bills, which the Fed then absorbs. This is a backdoor way to manage rates without formal QE.

Over the past few years, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve have been working at cross-purposes. While the Fed attempted to remove liquidity from the system via quantitative tightening, the Treasury effectively reinjected it by drawing down its reverse repo facility and focusing issuance on T-bills.

The Treasury isn't just managing debt; it's actively managing market stability. Data shows a direct correlation where a 10-point rise in the MOVE index (bond volatility) subsequently leads to a ~$28 billion increase in Treasury buybacks, suggesting a deliberate policy to keep volatility low.

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.

Lacking demand for long-term bonds, the Treasury issues massive short-term debt. This requires a larger cash balance (TGA) to avoid failed auctions, draining liquidity from the very markets needed to finance this debt, creating a self-reinforcing crisis dynamic.

Because the Fed pays interest on reserves, Quantitative Easing (QE) doesn't function like traditional money printing. Instead, it effectively swaps long-term government debt (like bonds) for short-term floating-rate debt (bank reserves), altering the maturity composition of government liabilities.