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Benchmark tipping in the money and bond markets

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  • Robert N McCauley

Abstract

The possibility that the stock of outstanding US Treasury securities may shrink significantly raises the question of how the broader US dollar fixed income market might operate in their absence. Market participants have come to rely heavily on US Treasury securities as benchmarks for pricing other securities, as means of hedging and positioning in both duration and volatility, as bases for futures market contracts and as collateral for secured borrowing. One approach to answering this question reaches back almost a century: to examine the workings of the US bond market in the period before the First World War when there was little in the way of government debt. This earlier era, however, lacked many features that are now important to the functioning of financial markets, such as mortgage-backed securities, futures and options. As a result, it may be hard to draw reliable inferences from this earlier experience. This special feature approaches the question by examining the changing roles of Treasury and other obligations in the dollar money market over the last generation for clues as to how their relative roles might evolve in the dollar bond market. This approach considers a time when the modern instruments of finance were in use. The principal finding of this special feature is that private instruments eclipsed government paper as a benchmark in the dollar money market over the last two decades even as government debt grew rapidly. The shift followed a “tipping” process in which market participants found it advantageous to use first one, and then another, instrument in line with the preponderant choice of other market participants. More recently, the bond market has shifted away from its reliance on government securities and might well have continued to do so even had there been no reduction in the stock of outstanding US government paper. On this view, therefore, any sustained reduction in the supply of the US Treasury’s obligations would only accelerate this shift.

Suggested Citation

  • Robert N McCauley, 2001. "Benchmark tipping in the money and bond markets," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:bis:bisqtr:0103e
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Fleming, Michael J, 2002. "Are Larger Treasury Issues More Liquid? Evidence from Bill Reopenings," Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Blackwell Publishing, vol. 34(3), pages 707-735, August.
    2. Robert N McCauley & Catherine R Schenk, 2020. "Central bank swaps then and now: swaps and dollar liquidity in the 1960s," BIS Working Papers 851, Bank for International Settlements.
    3. Andreas Schrimpf & Vladyslav Sushko, 2019. "Beyond LIBOR: a primer on the new benchmark rates," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, March.
    4. Dong He & Robert N. McCauley, 2010. "Offshore Markets for the Domestic Currency: Monetary and Financial Stability Issues," Working Papers 1002, Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
    5. Mr. Obert Nyawata, 2012. "Treasury Bills and/Or Central Bank Bills for Absorbing Surplus Liquidity: The Main Considerations," IMF Working Papers 2012/040, International Monetary Fund.
    6. Benjamin H Cohen & Hyun Song Shin, 2002. "Positive feedback trading in the US Treasurey market," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, June.
    7. Robert N McCauley & Ben S C Fung, 2003. "Choosing instruments in managing dollar foreign exchange reserves," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, March.
    8. Wenqian Huang & Karamfil Todorov, 2022. "The post-Libor world: a global view from the BIS derivatives statistics," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, December.
    9. Obert Nyawata, 2013. "Treasury Bills And/Or Central Bank Bills For Absorbing Surplus Liquidity: The Main Considerations," Journal of International Commerce, Economics and Policy (JICEP), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 4(02), pages 1-32.
    10. Eli M Remolona & Philip D Wooldridge, 2003. "The euro interest rate swap market," BIS Quarterly Review, Bank for International Settlements, March.
    11. Stéphane Chrétien & Frank Coggins & Félix d’Amours, 2016. "The Performance of Market Timing Measures in a Simulated Environment," Review of Finance, European Finance Association, vol. 20(3), pages 1153-1187.

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