The U.S. needs to borrow ``enormous'' amounts
By Bo Nielsen and Wes Goodman

Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. 10-year Treasuries fell the most in almost
three weeks as stocks rallied and the U.S. government prepared a
record $34 billion note sale to help pay for bank rescues.

The U.S. needs to borrow ``enormous'' amounts, according to economic
advisory firm Wrightson ICAP LLC, as it tries to halt a financial
crisis that has wiped out more than $10 trillion of stock-market value
worldwide this month. The Treasury will follow today's two-year sale
with a $24 billion five-year auction on Oct. 30, the biggest since
2003.

``Increasing supply will help push up yields,'' said Rasmus Rousing, a
fixed-income strategist in Zurich at Credit Suisse Group. ``We're also
seeing a slight reversal of stock-market declines of the last few days
and that's helping to take some buying interest out of Treasuries.''

Yields on 10-year notes rose 12 basis points to 3.80 percent as of
9:39 a.m. in London, according to BGCantor Market Data. The 4 percent
security maturing in August 2018 dropped 1 percentage point, or $10
per $1,000 face amount, to 101 20/32.

Two-year yields increased 8 basis points to 1.61 percent.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index of regional shares climbed 3.8 percent,
snapping a four-day decline. The Dow Jones European Stoxx 600 index
gained 2.3 percent, for the first increase since Oct. 20. Futures on
the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 4.2 percent.

``The fundamental environment still argues for firm prices of U.S.
Treasuries,'' wrote Peter Mueller, a fixed-income strategist in
Frankfurt at Commerzbank AG, Germany's second- largest bank by assets.
``However, the equity market rally might overshadow the overall
outlook today.''

Auction

The last two-year auction on Sept. 24 drew a yield of 2.115 percent.
Investors bid for 2.21 times the amount of debt on offer, versus the
average of 2.31 for the past 10 sales. The amount today matches the
record in September.

The U.S. budget deficit may reach a record $1 trillion in 2009 from
$455 billion in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, Wrightson, which is
based in Jersey City, New Jersey, said in a report yesterday. The
Treasury Department is scheduled to announce how it plans to increase
its debt sales on Nov. 5.

The government's bailout includes buying equity stakes in banks and
purchasing soured financial assets. Credit-market losses and
writedowns of securities tied to U.S. subprime mortgages have reached
$678 billion since the start of 2007.

``This will be a tough auction,'' said Yasutoshi Nagai, chief
economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC Co. in Tokyo, part of Japan's
second-largest brokerage. ``Supply is rising. There are few people who
want to buy.''
Ten-year yields will rise to 4.1 percent by year-end, Nagai said.

Bond Returns

Government securities rose 0.8 percent in October, heading for a fifth
monthly gain, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.'s U.S. Treasury Master
index, as tumbling stocks spurred demand for the safest assets.
The U.S. corporate and high-yield index handed investors a 9 percent
loss, the most since the Merrill data began in 1997.

``You have to be careful not to be exposed to the long end'' of the
Treasury market, said Mohamed El-Erian, the co- chief executive
officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., speaking yesterday in a
Bloomberg Television interview from Newport Beach, California.

Pimco's $129.6 billion Total Return Fund, the world's largest bond
fund, last held Treasuries in December, according to the firm's Web
site

U.S. consumers became more pessimistic in October, economists
estimated before the New York-based Conference Board releases its
confidence index today. The gauge slid to 52, which is 1 point above
the 16-year low reached in June, according to the median forecast in a
Bloomberg News survey.

House-Price Slump

A separate report from S&P/Case-Shiller may show a record 16.6 percent
drop in home prices in the 12 months ended in August.

Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show 100 percent odds the
Federal Reserve will lower the target rate for overnight bank loans,
now 1.5 percent, by at least a half-percentage point tomorrow to help
increase bank lending and spur economic growth. The chances of a 0.75
point reduction rose to 34 percent from zero a week ago.

Banks are less willing to lend than they were two months ago. The
difference between what banks and the Treasury pay to borrow money for
three months, the so-called TED spread, was 2.67 percentage points,
more than doubling since Aug. 28. The figure increased to 4.64
percentage points on Oct. 10, the most since Bloomberg began compiling
the data in 1984.

The difference between the rate banks charge for three- month dollar
loans relative to the overnight indexed swap rate, the so-called Libor-
OIS spread, was 2.63 percentage points. It widened from 0.78
percentage point two months ago.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Wes Goodman in Singapore at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Last Updated: October 28, 2008 05:46 EDT

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