20Y Auction Sees Lackluster Demand Despite 6th Consecutive Stop Through
In a day when the markets have tried to make sense of today’s near record downward revision to payrolls, moments ago the US sold $16BN in 20Y paper, and despite the prevailing confusion (does the dire BLS data confirm a 50bps rate cut, or do we stick with 25bps), there were plenty of buyers, even if the auction metrics were not remarkable by any stretch.
The auction, which passed without a hitch, sold at a high yield of 4.16%, which was 30bps below last month’s 4.466%, and the lowest yield since last July; it also stopped through the When Issued 4.161 by the smallest possible margin: 0.1bps, and follows last month’s identical 0.1bp stop through. In fact, this was the 6th consecutive stopping through auction in a row, and 9th of the past 12.
The bid to cover was less impressive, dropping to 2.54 from last month’s 2.68 and below the six-auction average of 2.65.
The internals were also subpar, with Indirects awarded just 71.0%, the lowest since May and far below both last month’s 77.2% and the recent average of 72.2%. And with Directs taking 19.3%, the most since February, Dealers were left holding 9.7%, the most since May.
In short, a closer look at the auction metric revealed a rather disappointing auction, the tiny stop through notwithstanding. Still, it was good enough and yields remained near session lows, just above 3.78% after the auction prices.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 08/21/2024 – 13:18