Tepid Reception to $125B U.S. Treasury Supply May Be A Warning Shot — Evening Brief – 08.08.25
Global investor skepticism toward long-term U.S. government debt is transforming routine U.S. Treasury auctions into high-stakes barometers of fiscal and monetary credibility. This week’s trio of refunding auctions — spanning 3-year, 10-year, and 30-year maturities totaling $125 billion — drew notably weak demand.
The across-the-board tailing and poor internals signal a clear shift in investor sentiment — one that could prove problematic for a U.S. Treasury set to borrow aggressively in the coming quarters. Despite growing expectations for a September Fed rate cut, and declining yields across the curve, the weak auction results suggest demand for long-term U.S. debt is not keeping pace with supply — a function of both fiscal concerns and uncertainty about long-run inflation and term premia.
For the bond market, this may put upward pressure on longer yields even in a falling-rate environment. If this trend persists, the Treasury may be forced to adjust issuance strategies, potentially relying even more heavily on short-duration T-Bills — a dynamic that adds to curve steepening risks.
Furthermore, the lack of foreign participation — particularly among Indirect bidders — raises questions about the U.S. dollar’s role in global reserves and demand for U.S. duration as a haven.
What began as a routine refunding week has morphed into a warning shot: investors are demanding more compensation to hold U.S. government debt, and that could reshape everything from rate policy to debt management in the second half of 2025 and beyond.
3-Year Auction: Tepid Start to the Week
The Treasury kicked off the refunding cycle with the sale of $58 billion in 3-year notes on Tuesday. The auction priced at a high yield of 3.669%, down from 3.891% in July and marking the lowest since September 2023. However, it tailed the 3.662% When-Issued rate by 0.7 basis points, marking the third consecutive tail and the ninth in the past 11 auctions. The bid-to-cover ratio of 2.526 was slightly better than last month but below the six-auction average.
In terms of internals, Indirect bidders (often foreign central banks and institutions) took just 53.99%, the lowest since December 2023. Directs remained elevated at 28.1%, just off July’s record, while Dealers were left with 17.9%, their highest since April — a sign of muted buyside enthusiasm.
10-Year Auction: Softness Extends to the Benchmark
On Wednesday, the Treasury sold $42 billion in reopened 10-year notes, which also disappointed. The auction cleared at a 4.255% high yield, lower than July’s 4.362%, but still tailed the 4.244% When-Issued by 1.1 basis points — the first tail for a 10-year auction since February.
Demand metrics deteriorated across the board: the bid-to-cover ratio plunged to 2.351, the lowest since August 2024 and well below the six-auction average. Indirects took just 64.2%, a seven-month low, while Directs fell to 19.6%, pushing Dealer allocation to 16.2%, the highest since August 2024. The results suggest global investors may be reluctant to commit to duration ahead of Fed decisions and amid term premium volatility.
30-Year Auction: The Weakest of the Week
The final auction of the week — $25 billion in 30-year bonds — may have been the most troubling. It priced at a 4.813% high yield, lower than July’s 4.889% but still tailed the When-Issued by 2.1 basis points, the largest tail since August 2024. The bid-to-cover ratio fell to 2.266, the lowest since November 2023.
Internals showed continued investor fatigue: Indirects took 59.5%, the lowest since May and second lowest since 2021. Directs dipped to 23.03%, slightly below average, leaving Dealers with 17.46% — their largest share in nearly a year.


