
Borrowing Scale Revised Downward, Cash Cushion Thicker
The U.S. Treasury's latest quarterly funding plan indicates a "moderate contraction." Supported by a higher-than-expected starting balance in the Treasury General Account (TGA), the authorities have revised down the forecast for net marketable borrowing to $569 billion from October to December, lower than July’s $590 billion estimate, and significantly below last year's record level of $776 billion for the same period. The Treasury also disclosed that net borrowing guidance for the first quarter of next year is projected at $578 billion, a significant drop from last year's historical peak. The main reason for this revision is the "excess buffer" of starting cash: the current TGA balance has reached $891 billion, which is more generous than the previously set target of $850 billion, providing greater flexibility for the debt issuance pace during the quarter.
Issuance Pressure Temporarily Eased, Focus on Yield Curve Shifts
The marginal reduction in the total financing amount is expected to temporarily alleviate the supply pressure in both the primary and secondary markets of U.S. Treasury bonds. Institutional traders point out that if the subsequent "auction schedule-tenure ratio-refinancing rollover" remains stable, the supply premium of long-term yields may converge temporarily, and the curve is more likely to return to pricing based on macroeconomic data and policy prospects. However, the market remains cautious about two points: first, a reduction in net borrowing does not equate to a slowdown in total issuance, as rollover refinancing remains substantial; second, if volatility in risk assets increases, the alternating demand for hedging will amplify the volatility at curve endpoints.
Why Is Cash Richer? Three Driving Clues
First, the "replenishment effect" from increasing the issuance of short bills and notes in the previous period to rebuild the TGA continues; second, tax and other non-debt income (including tariffs) have remained robust; and third, the spending pace is relatively steady at the start of the quarter, providing a breathing window for cash positions. The direct result of this is that the fiscal side’s dependence on “excess financing of the season” has decreased, allowing a more selective arrangement of types and maturities to mitigate the immediate impact of auctions on the market.
Tariff Hearing Approaching, Uncertainty on the Revenue Side Increases
The Treasury emphasizes that borrowing estimates are also affected by the revenue side. This week, the Supreme Court will hold hearings on the legality of a package of tariff policies. If future changes in the tariff collection framework impact tariff revenue, the fiscal side may have to adjust the borrowing trajectory and issuance structure. For the bond market, this legal and policy uncertainty, combined with delays in economic data releases, means that short-term risk premiums may remain elevated.
Rebalancing Duration and Type: From "Total Volume" to "Structure"
While adjusting down the net borrowing scale, the market is more focused on whether to "extend or shorten" durations and how to tweak the balance between notes and long-term bonds. If the Treasury chooses to maintain the proportion of notes to stabilize near-term financing costs, short-end rate disruptions will be controllable; if it increases medium to long bonds to stabilize the duration of the debt structure, long-end supply premiums might be relatively strong. Institutions generally believe that a "moderate and predictable" fiscal stance is more conducive to stabilizing the curve and liquidity conditions, thereby reducing market friction parallel to quantitative tightening.
Supply Turning Point Not Yet Reached, Volatility Focus Depends on Three Things
First, whether the cash balance target can remain stable around $850 billion is crucial for smoothing the subsequent borrowing path; second, the resilience of revenue items such as taxes and tariffs will determine the flexibility of net financing; third, macroeconomic data and the pace of monetary policy will affect the demand side’s capacity. Overall, marginal easing of supply pressure is expected this quarter, but the reality of annual refinancing and deficits remains. For investors, observing small changes in auction cover ratios, bid differentials, and allocation structures might provide more foresight than merely looking at total volumes.
From "Volume Mitigation" to "Quality Management"
Lowering net borrowing estimates is a fiscal move aligned with a cash-surplus backdrop. Going forward, what is more important is optimizing the maturity structure, reducing market friction, and stabilizing financing costs amidst uncertainties in revenue and policy shifts. For the bond market and broader asset pricing, "volume mitigation" is underway, but "quality management" is the true test.






