The market is flashing a scary new parallel to the financial crisis that should have everyone worried
- The US Treasury department is seeing the lowest level of auction demand since 2008.
- This can be construed as a financial-crisis signal, adding to a growing list of headwinds facing the US market.
The US Treasury Department keeps running into a big issue as it auctions off the swelling amount of new government debt: the market just isn't that interested.
That much was made clear throughout 2018. The Treasury Department offered $2.4 billion in notes and bonds over the course of the year, and investors submitted bids for just 2.6 times that amount. That marked the lowest demand since 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The multiple - also known as the bid-to-cover ratio - came in at the lowest in a decade despite 10-year Treasury yields spiking to their highest levels since 2011.
So what does this all mean? Put simply, it suggests that demand for Treasurys may struggle to keep up as the US deficit continues to grow.
If that doesn't scare you, perhaps it should. After all, Deutsche Bank's chief international economist, Torsten Slok, listed "tailing US Treasury auctions and/or declining bid-to-cover ratios" as the fourth biggest risk to markets in 2019.
Beyond that, Slok recently told Bloomberg that "all financial crises begin with a declining bid-to-cover ratio."
But faltering demand for Treasurys is just one of a handful of developments threatening to plunge the US into another financial crisis. Another big red flag is the massive surge in debt issuance through highly levered buyouts and low-interest-rate acquisitions, according to research firm CLSA.
Excess leverage suggests that markets could be set for a sudden collapse in asset valuations now that investors have pushed conditions to unsustainably stretched levels.
And then there are the warnings being issued by billionaire investing legend Stanley Druckenmiller. He said in a September interview that investors failed to learn the appropriate lessons from the 2008 meltdown, which was the worst since the Great Depression.
These are all elements to consider as you try to strategize around a financial crisis at some point in the future. Because it's not a question of if it's going to happen, it's when. So it's best to be fully prepared.