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Budget Deficit

July 2013 Monthly Statement Of Public Debt

By | Commentary

I stumbled across this series a few months ago and have started digging into the July issue released yesterday to see if there is anything interesting. Well…interesting is probably not the right word…but I think you know what I mean.

The MSPD gives us some insight into the makeup of the public debt…giving us a summary  all of the outstanding debt…from the $40B of 1 month bills issued 7/25 at 0.02% to the $10.5B of 30 year bonds issued back in 1985 at 11.25%…a rate that is 562.5X higher than the current one month. That’s interesting right?

First…some thoughts. The treasury bills (0-12 months) are not particularly interesting at this point in time. The average rate on the $1.6T outstanding is less than 0.1%, and as discussed in a prior post….the interest paid annually on this is something like $1.5B. The rate paid could double, triple, or even grow 10X, and it would still more or less be a rounding error. So…I look at it, but until the rate gets up past 0.5% or so…it’s just not material. Why would anyone lend Uncle Sam $1.6T at effectively zero? I have no idea!!

Bonds… the 30 year securities…we don’t get a lot of movement here. They are only issued every 3 months, and none are due until 2015. The average rate on the $1.4T outstanding is around 6%, though the latest issue back on 5/15/2013 was at 2.88%. It will be interesting to see what the new August issues go for…looks like it may be over 3.5%. That’s a pretty big hike, but still well under the average of the bonds outstanding, including everything issued after 2011. Of the bonds expiring in the next 3 years, the average is about 10%…so rolling those into new bonds today would result in a reduction of annual interest expenses.(but who knows what they will be in 3 years)

Notes (2-10 years)… This is where all of the action is….we have notes expiring and being issued each and every month, and the balance…at $7.7T makes up 64% of the public debt outstanding. In July, we had $94B of notes expire. Since of course the US never actually pays off debt…they just roll it…it is interesting to see what is rolling off, and what it is being replaced with.

So… In July, we have a 2 year issued at 0.38% roll off…and we had two new 2 year issues…averaging 0.31%. √

A 3 year at 1% rolled off…and a new 3 year was issued at 0.63%. √

And… a 60 month at 3.38% rolled off…replaced by a 60 month at 1.38%…a big improvement. √

And this has been the story over the last 3 years or so. Debt outstanding is increasing at around $1T per year, but the interest rates are being driven down by Fed manipulation. So..in July 2011, the cash interest paid over the prior 12 months was $204B on 9.8T of public debt outstanding. 2 years later…the cash interest paid on 11.9T of public debt was only$218B. This could continue on for a few more years…even as rates have bounced off some extraordinary lows…they are still extremely low historically speaking.


8/5/2013 Cash Deficit

By | Daily Deficit

The Daily Cash Surplus for 8/5/2013 was $5.2B bringing the deficit through 5 days to $54B…right in line with 2012.

08-05-2013 USDD

Revenues picked up $3B…of the $31B they needed as of the last report to make it to +10%. I really don’t expect a lot of action until next week. Wednesday 8/14 round 2 of SS goes out and it looks like 8/15 has ~30B of interest payments due. But the main thing we should be looking at is revenues. I don’t expect a lot of uncertainty around outlays for the rest of the year…they will probably end the year down 1-2%..I don’t anticipate any large swings either way. Revenues… on the other hand…after a +15% to start the year (Jan-Apr)…have stepped down a notch to around 10%. Any further degradation of these YOY gains…say down to the 5% or do range is going to have a big effect on the 2014 deficit and beyond.

8/2/2013 US Cash Deficit

By | Daily Deficit

The US Cash Deficit for 8/2/2013 was $23.8B thanks primarily to the first round of Social Security checks going out. Through 2 days, the August 2013 deficit is at $59B…on it’s way to $155B if my calculations are correct:)

08-02-2013 USDD

As expected…due to the extra business day last year, August 2013 starts in a small revenue hole, but it’s not huge…$11B at this point. In order to reach the +10% we’ve come to expect, we need to get to about +20B. I’m a bit skeptical at this point, but crazier things have happened.

July 2013 Deficit Review

By | Commentary
The July 2013 deficit at $90B, was $8B higher than last July’s $82B deficit. It’s not a huge miss, but a deep dive into the details will tell a little bit different story.
Revenues:
Net cash revenues came in at $220B compared to $201B last year for a 9% YOY growth. Without a doubt, it’s a good number, but it is a material step down from the 15%+ we averaged over the Jan-April period. The chart below shows the YOY revenues for a selection of the larger cash revenue categories.

08-04-2013 July Revenues

The top line has total cash revenues. Most of the story can be seen in the next line…Federal Tax Deposits (FTD’s). Up $22B, 14%. It was aided by an extra day, but no matter how you look at it, this is a good solid number. Taxes not withheld were also up…this time 24%, but this is a slow month, and that only netted $1.5B. The only other material change worth noting was the 56% reduction ($4.7B) in unemployment deposits from the states. Believe it or not, this program is kinda sorta actually run like an insurance program, so I can only guess that perhaps premiums have decreased as we ease ourselves away from the Great Recession?? In any case, this category is usually good for $50-60B per year of cash revenues that I had projected to grow at 5%…I may need to revisit that assumption. But bottom line on revenues…up by a healthy amount, just not as much as before. It wouldn’t shock me one bit if we saw this ~10% growth continue through the rest of the year…It’s what comes in January 2014 that we should be concerned about.
Outlays:
Cash Outlays were up $27B YOY from last year’s $283B to $310B in July 2013. However….last July was about $35B light due to payments due 7/1 going out early because of the weekend. If we adjust for this, we actually see an $8B overall reduction.

08-04-2013 July Outlays

Of note in July, we see Social Security’s constant and scary growth….8.9%….$62B per year annualized  and accelerating. Nearly all of the reductions appear to come from Defense Vendors and Education…but it is interesting that we continue to see small reductions in cash interest expense…no surprise as discussed in detail here. Basically, even though rates have come up a bit from extraordinary lows, the debt coming due is being rolled at lower rates than it was issued, bringing the weighted average rates down enough to lower the total interest paid, even with $800B of additional debt.
DEBT:
External debt was up a mere $16B from June, from $11.901T to $11.917T as the debt limit continues to suppress “reported” debt. YOY, debt was up $800B from $11.1T to $11.9T, pretty much in line with the TTM deficit. Now…it is important to note that “extraordinary measures”(EM) used to circumvent the debt limit do not affect the cash deficit, which as far as I can tell remains correctly reported. Instead… EM essentially lets the government park debt off balance sheet unreported…while still issuing new debt (for cash). It’s hard to tell exactly how much has been hidden over the last few months, but I’d guess it is between $50-$100B….wild ass guess.
Summary:
While the headline number was disappointing, adjusted for timing, outlays were down and revenues were up….what more could you ask for? Outlays should continue to run a little under  last year at least through September…after that…who knows?? It really depends on what kind of deal the Republicans and Democrats hammer out. Higher outlays would seem like the safe bet, but anything could happen. Revenues will likely stay around +10% or so for the rest of the year. 2014….I’m not so sure. CBO is projecting another 2 years of +10% revenue gains, but just I don’t see how we get there. So…let’s just enjoy this deficit “improvement” while it lasts.

8/1/2013 US Cash Deficit

By | Daily Deficit
The US Cash Deficit for 8/1/2013 was $35.7B as typically strong first of the month outlays overwhelmed the $18B of revenues.
Let’s start off the month by talking about timing of August 2013 vs 2012. 2012 started on a Wednesday and ended on a Friday. 2013 starts a day later on a Thursday and also ends on a Friday… and thus has one less business day. Since deficit timing better relates to days of the week, and 2012 has an extra day anyway…I’m going to give 2012 that extra day from the start rather than waiting till the end….So…today, I am comparing Thursday August 1 2013 to August 1&2 of 2012. From here on out, my days of the week are synchronized, and within a week or so, the extra day should more or less become noise. Two more timing things to note. First…Social security checks for rounds 2-4 will be six days delayed from last year due to the timing of the 2nd through 4th Wednesdays of the month. And finally…in August 2012, due to the Labor day holiday…about $60B due 9/1 through 9/3 was paid  on 8/31. This month…only ~35B of that will get pulled forward…the $25B SS payment due on 9/3 will likely go out on 9/3 since the holiday is 9/2.

08-01-2013 USDD

So…with all of that behind us…last August we posted a $211B deficit. After adjusting for timing, increased revenues and a decrease in outlays, my initial deficit estimate for August 2013 is $155B.

Cash on hand to fund the estimated $119B deficit (remaining for the month)…remember we can’t borrow any more… is only $79B. Treasury shouldn’t have any trouble funding this shortfall…on 7/31, they managed to create $58B of cash out of thin air (or we would be at $21B), it would be foolish to think they couldn’t do it again. That is what makes forecasting the debt limit nearly impossible. I can take the current cash balance and forecast what day it runs out with pretty good accuracy. But I can’t forecast when Lew will wiggle his nose and poof…create $50-$60B…. and I can’t forecast when his magic will run out…making the whole exercise more or less a fools errand. They say October-November…sure why not…