U.S. Treasury holds debt auctions steady, plans cyber test

dollar note

By Jason Lange

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury announced on Wednesday it will hold the size of coupon auctions steady in the upcoming quarter when it conducts a small “contingency auction” that an official said would test its ability to borrow following a cyber attack.

It was unclear how much of a role, if any, the White House had in crafting the Treasury’s quarterly debt policy statement, which was the first since President Donald Trump took office last month.

The U.S. Senate has yet to confirm Trump’s Treasury secretary nominee, Steven Mnuchin. Several Treasury officials from the Obama administration have left, with their positions filled on a temporary basis by career bureaucrats or political appointees from the last administration.

The latest policy statement was made by Monique Rollins, Treasury’s acting assistant secretary for financial markets and a holdover from the Obama administration. A Treasury official told reporters separately that the new political leadership was aware of the debt policies announced on Wednesday.

Rollins said in the policy statement that Treasury plans to offer $62 billion in notes and bonds next week, raising approximately $17 billion in new cash.

The contingency test was part of regular auction infrastructure testing, Rollins said.

The Treasury official who briefed reporters separately said the test would gauge the government’s ability to borrow money if a cyber attack disrupted normal auctions.

On future coupon sizes, Rollins said the department “will continue to monitor projected financing needs and make appropriate adjustments as necessary.”

(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Paul Simao)

Family Christian Stores Will Stay Open If Bidder Is Approved

The nation’s largest Christian-focused retailer will likely stay open if a bid at a private auction for their assets is approved in bankruptcy court.

FC Acquisition, controlled by an Atlanta businessman who also controls the non-profit company that owns Family Christian Stores, submitted the highest bid and will pay up to $43.6 million dollars for the company’s assets.

Other bidders had planned to liquidate the company and close the stores.

The second-highest bidder plans to challenge the FC Acquisitions bid, claiming their bid was at least $15 million higher than the FC bid.

Richard Jackson, operator of FC Acquisition, explained to the Christian Post in March why he was taking this step.

“We are gonna lose millions of dollars ourselves, all we did was loan money to the parent and its out,” said Jackson to CP. “It’s gone, and we don’t get interest. So we can either quit, [file a] Chapter 7, which means all stores go out of business immediately, or [do] a reorganization called a 363 sell, which is where Family Christian Ministries forms a new entity to buy assets and it cleans out any other debts and so forth, positioning to be successful going forth.”

Family Christian Stores filed for bankruptcy in February.