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    MarketForces Africa » MarketForces News » US Treasury to Offer $125bn Securities to Refund Privately Held Notes

    US Treasury to Offer $125bn Securities to Refund Privately Held Notes

    Anthony PersuaderBy Anthony PersuaderNovember 5, 2025Updated:November 6, 2025 News No Comments4 Mins Read
    US Treasury to Offer $125bn Securities to Refund Privately Held Notes
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    US Treasury to Offer $125bn Securities to Refund Privately Held Notes

    The U.S. Treasury has announced a decision to offer $125 billion of Treasury securities to refund approximately $98.2 billion of privately held Treasury notes maturing on November 15, 2025. 

    According to the Treasury department, the issuance will raise new cash from private investors of approximately $26.8 billion through a 3-year note in the amount of $58 billion, maturing November 15, 2028.

    The securities offering includes a 10-year note in the amount of $42 billion, maturing November 15, 2035, and 30-year bond in the amount of $25 billion, maturing November 15, 2055.

    The securities: 3-year note will be auctioned at 1:00 p.m. ET on Monday, November 10, 2025.  The 10-year note will be auctioned at 1:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, November 12, 2025. 

    The 30-year bond will be auctioned at 1:00 p.m. ET on Thursday, November 13, 2025, adding that all these auctions will take place on a yield basis and will settle on Monday, November 17, 2025.

    The Treasury expects its financial requirement for the quarter to be met with regular weekly bill auctions, cash management bills (CMBs), and monthly note, bond, Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), and 2-year Floating Rate Note (FRN) auctions.

    Treasury believes its current auction sizes leave it well positioned to address potential changes to the fiscal outlook and to the size and composition of the SOMA portfolio. 

    Based on current projected borrowing needs, Treasury anticipates maintaining nominal coupon and FRN auction sizes for at least the next several quarters.

    Looking ahead, Treasury department announced it has begun to preliminarily consider future increases to nominal coupon and FRN auction sizes, with a focus on evaluating trends in structural demand and assessing potential costs and risks of various issuance profiles.

    Treasury plans to address any seasonal or unexpected variations in borrowing needs over the next quarter through changes in regular bill auction sizes and/or CMBs.

    TIPS FINANCING

    Over the November 2025 to January 2026 quarter, Treasury plans to maintain the November 10-year TIPS reopening auction size at $19 billion, increase the December 5-year TIPS reopening auction size by $1 billion to $24 billion, and maintain the January 10-year TIPS new issue auction size at $21 billion.

    BILL ISSUANCE

    Based on current fiscal forecasts, Treasury expects to maintain the offering sizes of benchmark bills into late-November.  Given projections for receipts associated with the mid-month corporate and non-withheld tax date, Treasury expects to implement modest reductions to short-dated bill auction sizes during the month of December.  Thereafter, by the middle of January 2026, Treasury anticipates increasing bill auction sizes based on expected fiscal outflows.

    As always, Treasury said it will continue to evaluate near-term borrowing needs and assess additional adjustments to bill auction sizes as appropriate.

    BUYBACKS

    Today, Treasury is releasing a tentative buyback schedule for the upcoming refunding quarter.  In both the 10- to 20-year and 20- to 30-year nominal coupon buckets, Treasury plans to conduct four operations over the refunding quarter, each for up to $2 billion. 

    In the other nominal coupon buckets, Treasury plans to conduct one liquidity support buyback of up to $4 billion.  Treasury also plans to conduct two operations in the 1- to 10-year TIPS bucket, each for up to $750 million, and one operation for up to $500 million in the 10- to 30-year TIPS bucket.

    Treasury paused cash management buybacks in September and, as indicated in the tentative buyback schedule, anticipates resuming cash management buybacks in December 2025.  Amounts purchased in cash management buybacks temper reductions to bill auction sizes that would otherwise occur over the same timeframe.

    Treasury anticipates that over the course of the upcoming quarter it will purchase up to $38 billion in off-the-run securities across buckets for liquidity support and up to $25 billion in the 1-month to 2-year bucket for cash management purposes.

    As announced at the last quarterly refunding, in the first half of 2026 Treasury plans to offer direct buyback access to a limited number of additional counterparties based on their participation in Treasury auctions.  Oando Plc: Resilient Energy Group Faces Earnings Storm

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    Anthony Persuader
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    Financial Journalist with global coverage.

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