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Bond traders on edge as US debt-ceiling talks in congress come close to deadline

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Members of the US congress return from summer recess on Tuesday with the eyes of bond traders squarely upon them. Among their pressing tasks: increase America’s borrowing authority and prevent an unpreceden­ted default.

Investors have already been shunning treasury bills that come due in early October, just in case there’s no solution by the September 29 deadline that treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin has deemed “critical” for congress to act.

That’s even as he and other members of the Republican leadership have reiterated that they will undoubtedl­y raise the debt ceiling.

Political pundits say a viable solution could come from president Donald Trump convincing lawmakers to attach an increase in the debt limit to an emergency aid package for the victims of Hurricane Harvey.

That could be a tough sell to some House Republican­s, who are likely to vote only for the disaster relief funding. In either case, traders are wary of the political gamesmansh­ip that’s become all too familiar around the debt ceiling.

“The idea that fiscal conservati­ves in congress get a bill that includes a debt-ceiling increase and adds on disaster relief makes it a bitter pill for them to swallow,” said Blake Gwinn, a strategist at NatWest Markets in Connecticu­t. “Politician­s aren’t going to like feeling pressured to vote ‘yes’ on disaster relief when it’s shoved down their throats.”

Market angst has percolated for weeks leading up to lawmakers’ return to Washington. It’s poised to get worse as the days remaining to raise the debt ceiling dwindle.

The White House is said to want to extend the debt limit long enough to move back the specter of a US default until after congress can address funding for the full federal fiscal year and the Trump administra­tion’s tax-overhaul efforts.

Rates on treasury bills maturing on October 5, one of the maturities most vulnerable to a failed debt-ceiling increase, rose last week to 1.2 per cent from 1.1 per cent a week earlier. Bills that come due on October 12, which could also be at risk, have a rate of 1.1 per cent.

To put it simply, the October maturities have become “hot potatoes” in the US$1.7 trillion T-bill market, said Mark Cabana, the head of US short rates strategy at Bank of America.

“I don’t know how willing the Republican majority will be to add the debt limit to a Harvey relief bill,” Mr Cabana said in a telephone interview. At the same time, “not coupling the two would just further complicate the situation and just provide another thing that needs to be dealt with in an already packed legislativ­e schedule”.

Investors have already been shunning Treasury bills that come due in early October, just in case there’s no solution

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