The US treasury to auction 10 year notes. Why is it so important?
The US treasury will auction off $39 billion of 10 year notes at the top of the hour. The current 10 year yield is at 4.534%. At the last auction the yield was set at 4.468%.
Since the war started on February 28, the low yield was at 3.926% on March 2, the high was reached at 4.687% on May 19. The corrective low reached since the high has dipped to 4.422% reached last week.
Why the 10-Year Yield Matters
- Mortgage Rates – Higher yields usually lead to higher mortgage rates, which can slow home sales and construction.
- Business Borrowing – Companies pay more to borrow when yields rise, potentially reducing investment and hiring.
- Stock Valuations – Higher yields make bonds more attractive and can pressure stock prices, especially growth and tech stocks.
- Government Debt Costs – Rising yields increase the government’s interest expense on new borrowing.
- Economic Outlook – The 10-year yield reflects market expectations for growth, inflation, and future Fed policy.
Why Traders Watch It
The 10-year yield influences housing, business investment, government finances, stock valuations, and Fed expectations, making it one of the most important indicators in financial markets.
Other key components to eye from the auction results (6 auction average):
- Bid to cover 2.44X
- Tail 0.6 basis points
- Dealers 11.4%
- Directs 21.1%
- Indirects 67.6%
A higher bid to cover and negative Tail (the difference between the WI level at the time of the auction and the high yield at the auction) is indicative of strong demand.
if Dealers are saddled with less than the average it implies either domestic or international (or both) buyers were strong.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.