It only takes a quick glance at the U.S. bond curve to realize something is off. One Treasury security—the 20-year—is detached from the rest of the market. It hovers at yields that are far higher than those on the bonds surrounding it—the 10-year and the 30-year.

This isn’t just some minor aesthetic for traders to fret about. It costs the American taxpayer money. Since the Treasury reintroduced the 20-year bond in monthly auctions four years ago, their sale has tacked on roughly $2 billion a year in interest expenses on top of what the government would have otherwise paid, a simple back-of-the-envelope calculation shows. That’s some $40 billion over the life of the bonds.

This is, at some level, peanuts for a government that spends almost $7 trillion annually. And yet, $2 billion goes a long way. It’s the same amount the government spends each year to operate the national park system, and more than what goes to home-buying assistance for military veterans.

Raise the matter with most bond-market experts and they’ll hem and haw about whether to eliminate the 20-year bond to save money. It’s more complicated than it seems, they say. But one person—out of the roughly a dozen interviewed for this story—stated without hesitation or stipulation that it should be killed. That person, tellingly, is the very man who brought the bond back to life in 2020: Steven Mnuchin.

“I would not keep issuing them,” Mnuchin, who served as Treasury Secretary under then-President Donald Trump, said when contacted by Bloomberg News. The conceit—to create another maturity to help lock in low borrowing costs for decades—made sense at the time, he contends, but things simply haven’t worked out as planned. “It’s just costly to the taxpayer.”

Mnuchin’s about-face echoes, in some ways, the go-fast-and-break-things approach to policy making that Trump and his team preferred. The Biden administration, by contrast, is taking a more conventional approach and sticking with the 20-year bond—albeit at a scaled-back size—to ensure continuity and stability in the government’s debt sale program. (A spokesperson for the Treasury declined to comment.)

Whichever party takes the White House in November, the takeaway from the rollout of the 20-year is clear: Managing the government’s ballooning deficit is becoming increasingly tricky. At almost $2 trillion, it’s double the level of just five years ago. And investors aren’t necessarily going to eagerly snap up some new bond just because the Treasury dangles it in front of them.

This is simply the grim new reality of America’s finances, bond-market experts say. The country needs as many creditors willing to lend it money as possible. And for those experts who are hesitant to recommend a quick end to the 20-year auctions, that need is paramount—even if it means paying up to lure buyers to a new security in the market.

“Having another maturity point,” says Brian Sack, the head of macro strategy at multi-strategy hedge fund Balyasny Asset Management, “gives them some additional flexibility.”

The U.S. resumed selling 20-year bonds in May 2020 following a more than three-decade hiatus.

There were signs from the beginning that the debt would be expensive. Bond-market advisers who gave the new maturity their blessing warned Mnuchin not to overestimate demand. Yet initial auction sizes were significantly larger than recommended, mostly because the Treasury wanted to sell as much long-term debt as it could. (Mnuchin, who now runs the private equity firm Liberty Strategic Capital, initially wanted to issue 50- or 100-year securities but was talked out of the idea.)

The bonds really began to falter following a series of auction size increases and soon became the highest-yielding U.S. government security. Today, even after auctions have been reduced, it remains the most expensive form of financing beyond short-term T-bills. 

Analysts point to a variety of reasons why the 20-year bond continues to struggle. Prominent among them: it’s not as liquid as the 10-year and it offers less duration, or interest-rate risk, than the 30-year.

At 4.27%, the 20-year yield is currently 0.24 percentage point above the average of the 10- and 30-year securities. It can be difficult to measure alternative financing costs with precision because yields on 10- and 30-year bonds could be a tick higher today if the Treasury had sold more of them rather than issuing the 20-year notes. But that yield gap, when calculated at the time of issuance over the past four years, generates an added-cost estimate of $2 billion annually.

A more conservative calculation of the added cost, based on the gap between yields on Treasurys and interest-rate swaps, puts the figure at about half that amount.

“From the taxpayer perspective, the most important thing is, over time, can you minimize the cost of borrowing?” says Ed Al-Hussainy, a rates strategist at Columbia Threadneedle Investments in New York. “It’s not clear we got that.”

Al-Hussainy is one of the few in the market who shares Mnuchin’s view. The whole thing has been a “mistake,” he says. “There’s not much demand for these particular bonds. It doesn’t make sense.”

To try to better match supply with demand, the Treasury has dramatically scaled back issuance of the maturity in recent years. Quarterly sales of 20-year debt now stand at $42 billion, down from a peak of $75 billion.

“The Treasury has brought 20-year bonds to a more appropriate size,” Sack says. He used to sit on the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee, a panel of bond dealers and investors that advises the government on issuance strategy. In 2020, the committee supported the launch of the 20-year bond. “The market for that security is now in better balance than it was a few years ago.”

And Amar Reganti, a former deputy director of the Treasury’s Office of Debt Management, said the market will likely look even better in a few years. It can take a while, Reganti stressed, for new securities to draw the sort of consistent demand that other maturities attract.

While the four years since their debut seem “like a long period of time in capital markets,” said Reganti, who is now a fixed-income strategist at Hartford Funds, “it’s actually quite a short period of time from a debt management perspective.”

Not for Mnuchin. The market, he said, has had more than enough time to render a verdict.

Meanwhile, one group already has stopped selling 20-year bonds: corporate America. At first, CFOs across the country boosted sales of 20-year bonds when the Treasury reintroduced the maturity. This was one of the positive side effects that policymakers were seeking.

That pickup quickly faded, though, and today the market is all but dead. New offerings totaled just $3 billion through the first half of the year, down from $82 billion over the course of 2020. The maturity accounts for less than 1% of the combined sales of 10-year and 30-year bonds, down from about 10% previously, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“We always say that in the corporate market, supply follows demand and there’s just not a lot of demand for 20-year bonds in general,” said Winnie Cisar, global head of credit strategy at CreditSights. “It’s just a weird tenor.”

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.