Last year, as a hedge against inflation I bought a moderate position of 10-year US Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS). I have watched the value of these securities go up by more than 10% -- not because of 10% inflation, but because of falling interest rates. I feel tempted to sell them to cash in on the unrealized gain. Perhaps gold would be better as an inflation hedge anyway (though I have read there is no clear correlation), and I can be fairly certain that at some point in the next ten years interest rates will creep up again from their absurdly low present levels, and I will lose my 10% gain if I hold the TIPS to maturity as I originally intended.
Now, with the various branches of the government flailing about in so-far fruitless attempts to raise the debt ceiling and avoid default by August 2, I wonder if it might be a good time to sell. On the other hand, no one else seems to be selling -- yields on US Treasuries do not seem to be rising and falling based on political news about the debt ceiling--the market is sanguine, and it almost seems unpatriotic to sell at this point
This puts me in mind of the temporary Newt Gingrich-led government shut-down of 1995. I was working in the client administration area of a large international financial institution, which was custodian for a good chunk of US Government Debt held by Japanese institutional investors--billions of dollars worth of T/Notes and T/Bonds. At that time, we used to receive a pile of faxes every day from our customers in Tokyo: inquiries on everything from fee bills to 1 penny rounding differences on multi-million dollar settlements. There was virtually nothing on the looming government shut down which was all over the press, and how it would effect them.
I wish I had kept a journal back then. As I recall, a day finally did come that we did not get paid interest on some Treasury issues (the operations staff had to manually reverse automatic postings that the system had made) I approached the head Japanese relationship manager, and asked him how we would explain this to the customers. He asked me to draft something. I made a brief write-up, explaining that processing of the payments had been delayed because of the government shut-down, which they had probably read about in the newspaper. The fax went out, the payments were made a couple of days late, and we never heard anything more about it.
There are about $14 trillion of US Treasuries outstanding, and foreign countries hold over $4 trillion, of which China and Japan each hold about $1 trillion (see http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/tic/Documents/mfh.txt) . Maybe the market is sanguine because there is so much money involved --the vested interests are so powerful-- that no amount of political in-fighting can change the basic facts. I also suspect that any S&P, Moody's or Fitch downgrade will also be a non-event. Those who hold debt balances in the hundreds of billions will do their own analysis, and make their own decisions, regardless of what a few analysts in an office in Manhattan decide.
Let's hope I'm right.
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