<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>Here&#39;s how it works.&#xA;&#xA;The US government runs a deficit. To cover it, the Treasury sells debt: bills (short-term, under a year), notes (2 to 10 years), and bonds (20 to 30 years). These are auctioned regularly. Participants submit bids specifying the yield they&#39;ll accept and the amount they want.&#xA;&#xA;Once a month, the 10-year note goes to auction. Once a month, the 30-year bond. Every week, short-term bills. Four times a year, the Treasury publishes its refunding statement: how much it plans to issue, in what maturities, for the coming quarter.&#xA;&#xA;The maturity mix is the first signal. When Treasury shifts issuance toward shorter maturities — more bills, fewer bonds — it often means confidence in long-end demand is low. You&#39;re borrowing short because you don&#39;t know if the long-end market will show up. That works until short-term rates rise or maturities pile up and the refinancing wall gets expensive.</html></oembed>