By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK, May 4 (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury said on Monday it now expects to borrow $189 billion in the second quarter, $79 billion more โthan it projected in February, with the increase largely driven by weaker cash โflows than anticipated, which were partly offset by higher cash at the start of the quarter.
Treasury said the โforecast assumes a cash balance of $900 billion at the end of June. Stripping out the benefit of the largerโthanโexpected starting cash balance, secondโquarter borrowing would be $122 billion higher than the February estimate.
Looking ahead, Treasury said it expects to borrow $671 billion in the third quarter and โend September with a cash balance โ of $950 billion.
For the first quarter, Treasury said it borrowed $577 billion in privately held net marketable debt, finishing March with a cash balance of $893 โ billion. In February, it had projected $574 billion in borrowing and an endโMarch cash balance of $850 billion.
The slightly higher borrowing reflected the largerโthanโexpected cash balance at the end of the first quarter, โpartly โoffset by stronger cash flows. Excluding the cash โbalance difference, actual borrowing came in $40 โbillion lower than forecast.
Bond investors are now focused on Wednesday’s refunding announcement, which will outline Treasury’s financing plans for the second and third quarters.
Treasury is widely expected to leave auction sizes for notes and bonds unchanged for a ninth consecutive quarter. However, the prospect of large tariff refunds has heightened attention on whether โ and when โ the government may boost โissuance of longerโdated debt.
As much as $166 billion could โbe returned to importers.
J.P. Morgan estimates that roughly $127 billion โof that total will be eligible โfor electronic refunds, with the first meaningful payments likely to land โin June and July after a 60โto-90โday โprocessing window. The bank โexpects about $30 billion in refunds to be paid in 2026 and the remaining $90 billion or so in 2027.
Morgan Stanley said in a research note that the balance โof risks points to coupon โincreases occurring later than its February 2027 baseline, likely concentrated in shorterโdated โmaturities, particularly the fiveโ to sevenโyear sector.
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss in New York; โEditing by Nick Zieminski and Matthew Lewis)