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U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent's Message on the Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Report of the U.S. Government

U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Public Affairs Press Release: March 19, 2026 Contact: Treasury Public Affairs, Press@treasury.gov Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Report of the U.S. Government Secretary’s Message I am pleased to present the 2025 Financial Report of the United States Government, which provides a comprehensive view of the federal government’s fiscal position, its long-term outlook, and the progress we are making toward restoring fiscal responsibility. This Report arrives at a consequential moment. Under the previous administration, deficits averaged roughly 7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). There was no recession, no pandemic, and no major war to justify those deficits. Instead there was only an addiction to government spending that distorted the economy, slowed growth, and fueled inflation. This administration inherited an unsustainable fiscal trajectory. Whether we now rise to that challenge is, in no small part, a test of our national character. To that end, in 2025, the administration has focused on reigning in government spending and growing the economy through tax reform, a fundamental reset of regulatory policy, and energy abundance. Through growth, we can over time reduce the federal deficit to 3 percent of GDP, an attainable benchmark that is consistent with long-term fiscal sustainability. Already we have made real progress. The deficit-to-GDP ratio declined from 6.4 percent in fiscal year 2024 to 5.9 percent in fiscal year 2025. Measured on a calendar-year basis—which better reflects the President’s time in office—the improvement is even larger: a 1.6 percentage point reduction. This Report highlights these trends in federal revenues and expenditures and presents long-term fiscal projections that underscore both the seriousness of the challenge and the importance of continued reform. It reflects our commitment to transparency, accountability, and responsible stewardship of taxpayer dollars. A government that lives beyond its means ultimately erodes the foundations of its own strength. Getting our fiscal house in order is not only an economic imperative, it is also essential to preserving the strength and credibility of the United States at home and abroad. Under President Trump’s leadership, this administration intends to restore the United States Government to sound fiscal foundations, securing America’s Golden Age far beyond our own time. Scott K. H. Bessent Secretary of the Treasury Department of the Treasury FY 2025 Financial Report.pdf

Treasury International Capital Data for January

U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Public Affairs Press Release: March 18, 2026 Contact: Treasury Public Affairs, Press@treasury.gov Treasury International Capital Data for January WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of the Treasury today released Treasury International Capital (TIC) data for January 2026. The next release, which will report on data for February 2026, is scheduled for April 15, 2026. The sum total in January of all net foreign acquisitions of long-term securities, short-term U.S. securities, and banking flows was a net TIC outflow of $25.0 billion. Of this, net foreign private outflows were $76.1 billion, and net foreign official inflows were $51.1 billion. Foreign residents increased their holdings of long-term U.S. securities in January; their net purchases were $63.5 billion. Net purchases by private foreign investors were $42.0 billion, and net purchases by foreign official institutions were $21.4 billion. U.S. residents increased their holdings of long-term foreign securities, with net purchases of $47.9 billion. After including adjustments, such as estimated foreign portfolio acquisitions of U.S. stocks through stock swaps, overall net foreign purchases of long-term securities are estimated to have been $15.5 billion in January. Foreign residents decreased their holdings of U.S. Treasury bills by $10.2 billion. Foreign resident holdings of all dollar-denominated short-term U.S. securities and other custody liabilities increased by $17.8 billion. Banks’ own net dollar-denominated liabilities to foreign residents de creased by $58.3 billion. Complete data are available on the Treasury website here . ### About TIC Data The monthly data on holdings of long-term securities, as well as the monthly table on Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities, reflect foreign holdings of U.S. securities collected primarily on the basis of custodial data. These data help provide a window into foreign ownership of U.S. securities, but they cannot attribute holdings of U.S. securities with complete accuracy. For example, if a U.S. Treasury security purchased by a foreign resident is held in a custodial account in a third country, the true ownership of the security will not be reflected in the data. The custodial data will also not properly attribute U.S. Treasury securities managed by foreign private portfolio managers who invest on behalf of residents of other countries. In addition, foreign countries may hold dollars and other U.S. assets that are not captured in the TIC data. For these reasons, it is difficult to draw precise conclusions from TIC data about changes in the foreign holdings of U.S. financial assets by individual countries. ### slt_table5 2026 Jan.csv npr_history 2026 Jan.csv slt_table1 2026 Jan.csv PR table for press 2026 Jan.csv slt_table4 2026 Jan.csv