As we put “pen to paper” for this blog post, U.S. Treasury (UST) 10-Year yields have fallen to levels not seen since right after Election Day. An obvious question comes to mind: Can this declining trend be sustained through Q4, and if so, where are the buyers going to come from?

Certainly, one visible buyer of Treasuries, the Federal Reserve (Fed), may be on the verge of paring back its purchases in the not-too-distant future. Indeed, if all goes according to the Fed’s plan, the U.S. central bank will announce at next week’s FOMC meeting that it is going to start down the balance sheet normalization path, beginning the process in October. 

Major Foreign Holders of U.S. Treasuries–June 2017

Major foreign holders of us treasuries

Some perspective is needed here in order to determine just what the UST market could be facing in the months and quarters ahead. According to the Fed’s addendum to its Policy Normalization Principles and Plans released following the June FOMC meeting, the approach will be to start Treasury paydowns.

at $6 billion per month “and will increase in steps of $6 billion at three-month intervals over 12 months until it reaches $30 billion per month.” Got that? Translation: $18 billion in Q4, going up to as high as $90 billion per quarter a year later. 

Back to who’s going to pick up the Fed’s slack. More often than not, the reply that investors give me is this: How about foreign purchasers? The latest data from the Treasury on this front did reveal that China has, once again, resumed its perch at the top. To be sure, back in October, China had relinquished the No. 1 position to Japan, with its share of total foreign holdings bottoming out at 17.6% in December, the lowest figure since 2006. For the record, a peak reading of 28% was recorded in 2011, while the current tally has nudged back up to 18.6%.

On a year-over-year basis, China’s UST holdings actually declined by nearly $95.0 billion. In fact, total foreign holdings fell by about $110.0 billion, with Japan down $56.3 billion, and the Cayman Islands/Switzerland/Luxembourg/Belgium grouping (countries and areas considered to be custody holders for other nations) dropping $80.9 billion. The only notable buyers were Saudi Arabia ($+44.6 billion) and the UK/Ireland ($+38.6 billion).

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