Ugly, Tailing 10Y Auction Stops At Highest Yield Since 2009 As Foreign Buyers Flee
We said that yesterday’s subpar auction was a harbinger that today’s benchmark sale of 10Y paper (in the form of the 9-Year 10-Month reopening of Cusip FF3). We were right, because moments ago the Treasury sold $32BN in 10Y notes in another very poor auction.
The high yield of 3.930% was not only 60bps higher than last month’s 3.33%, it was also just shy of the cycle high hit in June 2009, when the 10Y priced at 3.99%. Notably, the auction tailed then When Issued 3.914% by 1.6bps, an ugly result but it could have been worse: last month’s tail was 2.7bps, and amazingly, 7 of the past 8 auctions have tailed!
And while the Bid to Cover was sub-mediocre at best, at 2.34, below the 2.40 six-auction average, it was the internals that were truly ugly, because at 56.8%, Indirects were well below last month’s 62.3%, below the recent average of 66.1%, and was the lowest going back all the way to November 2020 in the aftermath of the presidential election. And with Directs taking down 23.5%, or the most since March 2014, that left Dealers holding on to 19.7%, or practically unchanged from last month’s 19.8%.
To summarize, an ugly, tailing auction although it probably could have been worse, and likely will be tomorrow during the sale of 30Y paper especially if the CPI print comes hotter than expected.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 10/12/2022 – 13:27