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@_Investinq: 🚨 The U.S. just auctioned off ...

@_Investinq
10 views Aug 09, 2025
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🚨 The U.S. just auctioned off $25 billion in 30-year bonds.

And the results were bad. Really bad.

Weak demand, rising yields, and big warning signs for America’s debt future.

(a thread)
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Every month, the U.S. Treasury auctions off bonds to finance the deficit.

These bonds range from short-term (3 months) to long-term (30 years). The longer the term, the riskier it is for buyers.

That’s why 30-year auctions are always closely watched.
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On August 7, 2025, the Treasury auctioned a brand new 30-year bond meaning anyone who bought it is lending to the U.S. government until August 2055.

They aimed to raise $25 billion.

But the market response? It was rough.
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The key number from any bond auction is the yield. A bond's yield is basically the interest rate you earn for lending money.

Higher yield = higher return for the investor but it also means the government is paying more to borrow.

And this time, they had to pay up.
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Before each auction, there's a market expectation for where the yield will land. This is called the “when-issued” yield, the going rate just before the auction.

In this case, it was around 4.792%.

But here’s what happened…
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The bond ended up pricing at 4.813%, which is 2.1 basis points higher than expected.

This is called a “tail.”

A tail means the auction was so weak that the Treasury had to offer more yield than investors thought necessary, just to sell the bonds. That’s a red flag.
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Why is a tail bad? Because it tells you demand wasn’t strong.

Investors weren’t eager to buy unless they got a better deal.

And this wasn’t a minor anomaly. A 2.1 bp tail was the largest in nearly a year for a 30-year bond.
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Another key stat is the Bid-to-Cover Ratio (B/C). This measures demand: it’s the total dollar amount of bids divided by the amount offered.

So if the Treasury sells $25B and gets $50B in bids, the B/C is 2.0.

Higher = stronger demand.
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In this auction, the B/C was 2.27, the lowest for a 30-year bond since Nov 2023, and well below the ~2.4 average.

That means fewer investors were showing up to buy.

And we’re not done with the warning signs yet.
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To understand who’s buying (or not), you need to know the 3 types of bidders:

– Indirects: mostly foreign buyers like central banks
– Directs: U.S. investors like mutual funds & pensions
– Primary dealers: Wall Street banks required to participate
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In a healthy auction, indirects and directs buy most of the bonds. That’s called real money demand, people who actually want to hold the debt long-term.

But in August’s auction, those buyers pulled back.

Here’s how it broke down:
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– Indirects (foreign buyers): 59.5%
– Directs (U.S. funds): 23.0%
– Primary dealers: 17.5%

The indirect share (59.5%) was one of the lowest in years, signaling that foreign demand once rock-solid is now shaky.
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Why would foreign buyers pull back? A few reasons:

– Currency hedging costs: if you’re in Japan or Europe, hedging USD risk wipes out most of the yield
– Geopolitical tension
– Diversification away from Treasuries
- Rising debt

Even at 4.8%, they weren’t buying aggressively.
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Domestic buyers also eased off.

In July, direct bidders bought 27.4% of the 30-year auction. In August? Just 23.0%.

Many of these funds are afraid of duration risk, the danger that if rates go higher later, the value of their 30-year bonds will plummet.
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That left primary dealers, Wall Street’s bond underwriters to pick up the slack. They’re required to bid, even if they don’t want to.

When they end up taking 17.5%, that’s a red flag. It means the bonds were under-loved.

And it gets worse.
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The Fed also bought in as well, through its SOMA account, it bought $8.48 billion about 25% of the total auction.

That’s not quantitative easing, it’s just reinvesting maturing bonds but it helped soften the blow.

Without it? The auction would’ve been uglier.
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So, quick recap:

– Tail = biggest in a year
– Bid-to-cover = weakest in 2 years
– Foreign demand = fading
– Domestic demand = slipping
– Fed support = propping things up
– Dealers = stuck holding the bag

And the market noticed.
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After the auction, yields spiked.

– The 30-year yield rose to 4.83%
– The 10-year jumped to 4.25%, up nearly 8 bps in a single day

That’s a sharp move. When bond yields rise, it means prices are falling—and confidence is being tested.
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Now here’s where things get strange: Stocks didn’t care.

The S&P 500 barely moved. Volatility stayed low. Equity investors acted like nothing happened.

But the bond market was screaming. That’s a major disconnect.
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Why would stocks ignore this? Maybe they think:

– The Fed will step in if things get bad
– Higher yields reflect strong growth
– Bonds don’t matter until they do

But rising long-term yields hurt everything from mortgages to business loans. Stocks can’t ignore that forever.
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And this is all happening because of a core tension:

The U.S. is issuing tons of debt more than ever and buyers are no longer price-insensitive.

The Fed isn’t buying. Foreign central banks are pulling back. Domestic funds are cautious. So what happens?
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Yields rise until someone finally says, “Okay, now I’ll buy.”

But there’s a risk here too, something called the nosebleed steepener.

Let me explain.
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If the Fed cuts short-term interest rates to stimulate the economy but long-term bond demand stays weak then long yields could keep rising.

You’d have short rates going down… but long rates going up.

That’s a steepening yield curve and it can wreck markets.
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It raises mortgage rates. Increases borrowing costs for companies. Undermines the Fed’s stimulus and risks a feedback loop of inflation fears.

This auction gave us a glimpse of how that scenario could start.
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It’s not just about the absolute yield anymore. It’s about confidence.

– Will inflation stay low?
– Is U.S. debt sustainable?
– Can the Treasury find buyers without overpaying?

Right now, the bond market is whispering: “I’m not so sure.”
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In 2011, during the U.S. debt downgrade, demand for Treasuries was strong. Investors flocked to safety.

In 2020, during COVID, the Fed bought trillions in QE, no demand problems.

But in 2025? Neither dynamic exists. We’re in uncharted waters.
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So what’s next? If future auctions look like this one, the pressure will mount. We could see:

– Higher yields
– Weaker equity markets
– Fed intervention

Yes, that includes Yield Curve Control (YCC), where the Fed sets a cap on long-term yields.
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The Treasury could also respond:

– Shift toward more short-term debt
– Increase buybacks
– Adjust auction sizes

But none of that fixes the bigger problem: The U.S. is borrowing more than the world wants to lend.
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The most ironic part? Even at the highest 30-year yield since 2010, investors still said: “No thanks.”

Because this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about trust, in inflation, in fiscal discipline, and in long-term stability.

That trust is eroding.
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The bond market isn’t panicking.

But it is warning.

And if policymakers don’t adjust or if buyers don’t return, yields could keep climbing, costs could explode, and financial conditions could tighten fast.
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And here’s the kicker:

Bond markets care about fundamentals. Equity markets care about vibes.

But when the fundamentals get loud enough, they drown out the vibes. If stocks don’t listen to bonds soon… something will break.
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I hope you've found this thread helpful.

Follow me @_Investinq for more.

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