Finance & economics | Braced for impact

The Fed’s balance-sheet is about to shrink. Wall Street is not ready

Could the giant market for Treasury bonds seize up?

|NEW YORK

CONSIDER THE life of a Treasury bill or bond. Typically once or twice a week, a batch of fresh Treasuries are born. Their first home is usually, briefly, an investment bank's dealing desk. Those dealers might hold on to a few for themselves, but generally they distribute the bulk to more permanent owners, like the bond portfolios of a mutual fund, a foreign government or a company or the Federal Reserve. A certain slice will swap hands repeatedly—some $700bn or so are traded each business day—but many will stay put for their lifetimes. Their deaths are predetermined: they come of age, or “mature”, as little as one month or as long as 30 years after their birth, at which point they are settled and cease to exist.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Braced for impact”

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