As far as the Treasury auctions are concerned, all we have to do is look at the public auction results to see what the demand is for new Treasuries.
Here is the latest auction results for the latest batch of 28-day T-Bills going at a blistering 0.010%!
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The auction's Bid-to-Cover ratio was
4.45 times oversubscribed! And that's for T-Bills that only return 0.010%.
Take a look at the Direct and Indirect Bidders — that's the demand for Treasury Bonds from people who aren't Primary Dealers. The Direct and Indirect Bidders almost took down the entire auction on their own. Again, for almost no return whatsoever.
The Primary Dealers showed up with enough bids to cover more than 3 auctions worth of Treasury Bills!!
So, even without the Primary Dealers, the demand for T-Bills is already high. But, the Primary Dealers are bidding for waaaay more 28-day T-Bills than the government ever plans on buying from them during that timeframe.
What's clear is that the Primary Dealers are more than happy to turn their excess reserves into T-Bills —
even if the Fed isn't buying them.
Now, granted, not every last bid was probably super competitive. But, the bids that were the most competitive were the ones that got accepted. So, I think it's hard to argue that a government auction that is 4.45x oversubscribed is at risk of any debt-serving problems or is about to suffer a loss of confidence.
The demand for government debt is just too high.
And why shouldn't it be? The government is creating a scarcity and the Primary Dealers want more government debt, and less reserves, so that they can try to do better than the Fed's Interest on Reserves (IOR) policy.
This is what Monetary Policy looks like — just altering the balance of base money reserves to bond assets and targeting interest rates.
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.