Banking

Goldman Sachs execs see steeper Treasuries curve, softer demand


Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker at a bank in Westminster

Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

NEW YORK, Nov 21 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs (GS.N) expects the U.S. Treasuries curve to steepen in the long term, driven by rising fiscal spending, top executives said.

“Fiscal spending has not abated. It’s strange for us to be spending this much” when employment is high, Ashok Varadhan, Goldman’s co-head of global banking and markets, said on a company podcast.

“It doesn’t feel like we’re going to see fiscal discipline any time soon. … It’s hard to see long-term rates coming down meaningfully,” he said.

“And so our base case on the trading desk is we expect a more normalized yield curve, a steeper yield curve, but really more with normalized and lower rates in the front end and not a lot of relief in the back end.”

Concerns over rising fiscal deficits and an increase in government bond issuance helped lift long-term Treasury yields earlier this year, while pushing rating agencies Fitch and Moody’s to turn negative on the U.S. government’s creditworthiness.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields, which move inversely to prices, hit 5% last month for the first time since 2007.

Demand for long-dated Treasuries has slipped in the last six months from central banks, U.S. regional banks and sovereign wealth funds, said Jim Esposito, who jointly runs Goldman’s global banking and markets division.

“Every major central bank has moved from QE (quantitative easing) to QT (quantitative tightening),” he said. “The U.S. regional banks had been some of the largest holders of U.S. Treasuries – they got caught offside in a duration mismatch, so they’ve been a lot less active in recent auctions.”

Sovereign wealth funds, particularly in China, have been less active in part because of geopolitical tensions with the U.S. and a slowing of international trade, Esposito said.

Treasury yields have retrenched in recent weeks on expectations that the Federal Reserve has reached a peak in its interest-rate hiking cycle, and as the Treasury announced a more modest year-end schedule of Treasury debt sales.

Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note on Tuesday bond yields had likely peaked, while higher yields had made fixed income assets more attractive ahead of an expected easing in monetary policies next year.

“Our economists think most central banks will start cutting rates next year, albeit slowly. This should trigger more deployment of cash into bonds and equities with $8 trillion currently in money market funds,” they said.

Reporting by Lananh Nguyen and Davide Barbuscia; Editing by Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Lananh Nguyen is the U.S. finance editor at Reuters in New York, leading coverage of U.S. banks. She joined Reuters in 2022 after reporting on Wall Street at The New York Times. Lananh spent more than a decade at Bloomberg News in New York and London, where she wrote extensively about banking and financial markets, and she previously worked at Dow Jones Newswires/The Wall Street Journal. Lananh holds a B.A. in political science from Tufts University and an M.Sc. in finance and economic policy from the University of London.

Davide Barbuscia covers macro investment and trading out of New York, with a focus on fixed income markets. Previously based in Dubai, where he was Reuters Chief Economics Correspondent for the Gulf region, he has written on a broad range of topics including Saudi Arabia’s efforts to diversify away from oil, Lebanon’s financial crisis, as well as scoops on corporate and sovereign debt deals and restructuring situations. Before joining Reuters in 2016 he worked as a journalist at Debtwire in London and had a stint in Johannesburg.



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