"The U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury), among other roles, manages the country’s debt.
The primary objective of Treasury’s debt management strategy is to finance the government’s
borrowing needs at the lowest cost over time. To accomplish this Treasury adheres to three
principles: (1) to issue debt in a regular and predictable pattern, (2) to provide transparency in the
decisionmaking process, and (3) to seek continuous improvements in the auction process.
Within the Treasury, the Office of Debt Management (ODM) makes all decisions related to debt
issuance and the management of the United States debt portfolio. When federal spending exceeds
revenues, the ODM directs the Bureau of the Fiscal Service to borrow the funds needed to finance
government operations by selling securities to the public and government agencies through an
auction process. The Bureau of the Fiscal Service manages the operational aspects of the issuance
of Treasury securities, including the systems related to and the monitoring of security auctions.
During the mid-1970s, Treasury faced a period of rising nominal federal budget deficits and debt
requiring unanticipated increases in issuances of securities. Up to that point, debt management
was characterized by an ad-hoc, offering-by-offering survey of market participants. At that time,
Treasury implemented a new debt management strategy that provided greater transparency and
reduced the potential for market volatility. The resulting debt management process modernized
the market for Treasury securities, realizing the benefits of predictability in an environment of
large deficits. A reliance on auctions became a central part of the strategy’s increased focus on
regular and predictable debt management.
Most of the debt sold by the federal government is marketable, meaning that it can be resold on
the secondary market. Currently, Treasury offers five types of marketable securities: Treasury
bills, notes, bonds, inflation protected securities (TIPS), and floating rate notes (FRNs), sold in
about 300 auctions per year. A small portion of debt held by the public and nearly all
intragovernmental debt (debt held by government trust funds) is nonmarketable.
Investors examine several key factors when deciding whether they should purchase Treasury
securities, including price, expected return, and risk. Treasury securities provide a known stream
of income and offer greater liquidity than other types of fixed-income securities. Because they are
also backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, they are often seen as one of the
safest investments available, though investors are not totally immune from losses. Security prices
are determined by investors according to the value of such characteristics in the context of the
financial marketplace.."
Treasury Department Debt
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
How Treasury Issues Debt
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