The Bond Market Just Sent a Reassuring Signal on Inflation — Evening Brief – 06.10.26
The reopening of the 10-year Treasury note — a $39 billion sale of 9-year, 11-month paper — came in well ahead of expectations across virtually every measure, offering a timely vote of confidence from the bond market on the same day May’s Consumer Price Index data showed headline inflation climbing to a three-year high.
Foreign and institutional buyers showed up to this auction with unusual enthusiasm — a sign that, at least for now, the bond market is not sounding the alarm. After Tuesday’s decent three-year sale and today’s blowout 10-year result, demand for U.S. government debt appears considerably more resilient than the inflation headlines might suggest.
The auction priced at a high yield of 4.538%, up from 4.468% last month, and came in just 0.1 basis point through the 4.539% When Issued level — marking the first stop-through after four consecutive tails. A stop-through signals that demand exceeded supply at the expected price, a meaningful show of conviction from buyers. Overall demand was strong, with the bid-to-cover ratio climbing to 2.565 from 2.402, well above the recent six-auction average and the highest since September 2025.
The auction’s internals pointed to particularly robust interest from overseas buyers. Indirect bidders, a proxy for foreign demand, surged to 78.21% from 63.95% in the prior auction, one of the five highest readings on record and another level not seen since September 2025.
The flood of indirect interest left direct bidders at just 9.5%, the lowest since January. As a result, primary dealers were left with only 12.32%, well below the recent average of about 21%, indicating the Street did not need to warehouse much of the new supply.


