<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>Hard Money Herald wrote</title><author_name>Hard Money Herald (npub1c8…ns3t9)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1c8e03hltgw4v62hc3c7dkwu5gzh9f7c24yd26j75ululerezd3aq3ns3t9</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>Two numbers tell you most of what you need to know at each auction: bid-to-cover ratio and indirect bidder percentage.&#xA;&#xA;Bid-to-cover is simple: total dollar amount of bids submitted divided by the amount the Treasury actually sold. A 2.5 bid-to-cover means $2.50 in bids came in for every $1.00 auctioned. Below 2.0 on a 10-year note is a weak auction. Strong is 2.4 or above.&#xA;&#xA;Indirect bidders are foreign institutions — central banks, sovereign wealth funds, foreign pension funds. Their share of any auction reveals how much of the world still wants dollar-denominated assets at current yields. Historically this has run 60-70% on the 10-year. When it drops consistently below 60%, the domestic market and primary dealers are absorbing what foreign buyers aren&#39;t taking.&#xA;&#xA;Primary dealers — the big banks required by the Fed to bid at every auction — are the backstop buyer. A high primary dealer take means weak organic demand. The bank bought it because no one else did.&#xA;&#xA;August 2023&#39;s 30-year bond auction: bid-to-cover 2.19, indirect bidders 60.2%, primary dealers absorbed the rest. Yields hit 5%+ shortly after.</html></oembed>