Anonymous ID: babdf0 Nov. 24, 2020, 12:38 p.m. No.11769454   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9565 >>9575 >>9745 >>9876 >>0035

Brazil faces $112 bln refinancing cliff in early 2021

 

Brazil’s debt has ballooned to unprecedented levels due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the government faces a $112 billion refinancing cliff early next year, with April’s funding needs the highest ever for a single month.

 

Publicly, at least, Treasury officials in Latin America’s top economy insist there will be no problem getting investors to extend their loans. Their so-called liquidity cushion can cover at least three months of borrowing.

 

Additionally, almost all of Brazil’s debt is denominated in reais and over 90% of it is held by domestic investors, many of whom are compelled to hold it by banking rules.

 

Financial analysts also see little risk of a boycott by lenders, which would likely trigger a serious crisis and wreak havoc on Brazilian financial markets.

 

But the chances of the Treasury running into difficulty rolling over the debt, due to sudden unfavorable political, economic or market conditions, are not zero. And it is likely to pay a premium for shifting so much debt at once, analysts say.

 

According to Treasury figures, some 605 billion reais ($112 billion) of domestic federal debt is coming due in the first four months of next year. That is 14.1% of Brazil’s domestic debt pile of 4.82 trillion reais.

 

The month to watch is April, when 283 billion reais of debt needs to be rolled over. That is 6.6% of Brazil’s outstanding debt and will be the biggest single month for maturing debt on record, according to the Treasury.

 

“It’s a big amount, and if people want to cut back their exposure a bit for whatever reason, it becomes a significant amount,” said Sergi Lanau, deputy chief economist at the Washington-based International Institute of Finance (IIF).

 

“It’s not a great situation to be in, but it would be a lot worse if it was external debt. We are not too concerned about the bunching of maturities. If anything goes wrong at that time though, then you are exposed,” he said.

 

IIF analysis shows that the government’s domestic debt maturing in April amounts to 3.7% of GDP, also an all-time high for a single month.

 

Economy Minister Paulo Guedes has said he sees “no problem” for the Treasury rolling over its debt. Around half of the 600 billion reais coming due early next year may already covered by an influx of cash from the central bank and public sector banks, he said. The government’s surprisingly aggressive fiscal response to the pandemic, mainly via direct income transfers to the poor, has exploded its deficit and debt to record levels far above most other emerging countries.

 

Brazil’s primary deficit, excluding interest payments, is forecast to hit almost 12% of GDP this year, with overall debt rising to around 95% of GDP, according to the government. That has forced the Treasury to borrow more, increasingly in short-dated paper because it is cheaper and because growing concern around the fiscal outlook means investors are reluctant to lend longer term to the government.

 

While reducing the average length of debt maturities and record low official interest rates have brought average interest costs down to their lowest on record, the so-called “roll over risk” for the Treasury has increased sharply.

The difference between longer- and short-dated interest rates has widened sharply. Pre-pandemic, the gap between January 2022 and January 2027 rates futures was 180 basis points or less. That tripled to 460 basis points in September, and is now creeping back up to that all-time peak. The Treasury has failed to sell the full allocation of bonds on offer at several auctions in recent weeks, both fixed-rate ‘LTN’ notes and floating-rate ‘LTF’ notes linked to the central bank’s official Selic rate.

 

To attract buyers, Treasury has had to pay higher premiums. It has also relied on other sources of financing, including a recent transfer of 325 billion reais from the central bank.

https://www.reuters.com/article/brazil-economy-funding/analysis-brazil-faces-112-bln-refinancing-cliff-in-early-2021-idUSL8N2I43VT

Anonymous ID: babdf0 Nov. 24, 2020, 12:51 p.m. No.11769621   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9745 >>9876 >>0035

Mnuchin to Put $455 Billion in Funds Out of Yellen’s Easy Reach

 

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will put $455 billion in unspent Cares Act funding into an account that his presumed successor, former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, will need authorization from Congress to use.

 

Mnuchin plans to place the money into the agency’s General Fund, a Treasury Department spokesperson said Tuesday. That fund can only be tapped with “authority based on congressionally issued legislation,” according to the Treasury’s website. The money includes $429 billion that Mnuchin is clawing back from the Federal Reserve which backed some of the central bank’s emergency lending facilities and $26 billion that Treasury received for direct loans to companies. Both initiatives were created under the sweeping Cares Act that was passed earlier this year as the coronavirus pandemic inflicted economic pain on the U.S.

 

The move will leave Yellen selected by president-elect Joe Biden as his nominee for Treasury secretary with just under $80 billion available in the Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund, a pot of money that can be used with some discretion by the Treasury chief. Mnuchin sent a letter to Powell last week asking for the return of money provided to the Fed by the Treasury as a backstop that allowed the central bank to lend to certain markets in times of stress. The Fed publicly objected to the move, but agreed to return the funds.

 

Mnuchin said that many markets are no longer in danger of seizing up and don’t need aid beyond next month, when the programs are scheduled to expire. He said that the funds can be better applied to specific areas of the economy with the greatest need, through congressionally approved grants. “For companies that are impacted by Covid such as travel, entertainment and restaurants they don’t need more debt, they need more PPP money, they need more grants,” Mnuchin said in an interview last week.

 

Mnuchin isn’t required to move the money into the General Fund – the Cares Act states that the Treasury Department can maintain access to the money by keeping it in its Exchange Stabilization Fund until 2026. Yet moving the unspent money will make it virtually impossible for Yellen, if confirmed by the Senate as Treasury secretary, to deploy on her own. The Biden transition team last week called Mnuchin’s clawing back of unspent money from the Fed “deeply irresponsible.”

https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/mnuchin-to-put-455-billion-in-funds-out-of-yellen-s-easy-reach-1.1527279