Raising the U.S. Debt Ceiling Is Going to Drain Liquidity

 | May 19, 2023 03:08AM ET

Over the last few months, the debt ceiling topic has dominated mainstream media.

And for good reason.

But let’s assume the debt ceiling’s going higher – even if it’s at the last second.

Is that the end of all problems?

Well, it is in the sense that the U.S. won’t default on payments.

But it has its own set of potential consequences that may come with it.

I’m referring to the liquidity drain that’ll happen when the U.S. Treasury raises the debt ceiling, sucking out a massive amount of dollars as they issue bonds. And it’s occurring at a time when the banking sector has grown increasingly fragile and global liquidity is sinking.

I wrote about this same issue back in August 2019. And one month later, the Federal Reserve lost control of the Fed Funds Rate (FFR) as bank liquidity dried up (aka the ‘September Squeeze’ event).

And while I understand that things are different today. There’s still potential for unintended consequences. Especially now as global liquidity continues evaporating.

So, let’s take a closer look at this important – yet little talked about – topic. . .

As The Treasury Refills Its Coffers, Liquidity Drains From The Banking System

Fredric Bastiat – the 19th-century French economist – once wrote about the difference between the ‘good’ economist and the ‘bad’ economist.

Simply put, Bastiat believed that the ‘good’ economist looks beyond the immediate and apparent outcomes to try and forecast the hidden consequences (aka what’s not seen). While the ‘bad’ only looks at the immediate effects and ignores what may follow later (aka what’s seen).

And while this is an important concept, you may be wondering, “Why does this matter?”

Well, because as the mainstream media focuses on the debt ceiling (the seen), it’s critical to look at potential issues it may cause in the U.S. bank sector’s plumbing (the unseen).

For starters, the U.S. Treasury’s general account (aka TGA, basically the government’s savings account held at the New York Fed) is sitting at just $87 billion as of Monday. Down from $140 billion the day before. And well below the Treasury’s targeted year-end balance of $600 billion.