Weak 7-Year Auction Caps Tough Week for U.S. Treasury — Evening Brief – 03.26.26
A difficult week for the Treasury market ended on a subdued note Thursday, as the government’s $44 billion sale of seven‑year notes drew another tepid response. Following lackluster two‑ and five‑year auctions earlier in the week, investors again showed limited enthusiasm for new supply, reflecting persistent concerns over higher yields, expanding deficits and weaker foreign participation.
While not as poor as the prior auctions, the 7-year offering still reflected soft investor appetite. The auction stopped at a high yield of 4.255%, sharply higher than February’s 3.790% and the highest level since January 2025. It also tailed the when-issued level by 0.8 basis points; the largest tail since August 2024, indicating investors required a concession to absorb supply.
Demand metrics reinforced the cautious tone. The bid-to-cover ratio came in at 2.432, down from 2.498 last month and marking the lowest level since September 2025. Auction internals were similarly weak, with indirect bidders, often viewed as a proxy for foreign demand, taking down 62.56% of the issue, a decline from 63.57% and the lowest share since December.
Direct bidder participation also slipped modestly to 25.03%, while primary dealers were left to absorb 12.41% of the supply, the largest share since November; another signal of tepid end-user demand.
The results point to a continued cooling in appetite for intermediate-duration Treasurys. While foreign demand has not collapsed, it appears increasingly cautious, particularly as investors weigh macro uncertainty, persistent inflation risks and the growing scale of U.S. deficit financing.


