Some more info from Bloomberg.
The guy on CNBC just said it went "extremely well."
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Treasury Five-Year Note Rises as Auction Draws Foreign BuyersBy Dakin Campbell
May 27 (Bloomberg) -- Treasury five-year notes rose for the first time in four days as the government’s auction of $35 billion of the securities drew the most demand from a group of investors that includes foreign central banks in three months.
The sale helped to ease concern international investors are focusing purchases on the shortest-term securities as record U.S. borrowing raises the threat of inflation. Indirect bidders, the class of investors that includes foreign central banks, bought 44.2 percent of the notes, compared with an average of 32.4 percent in the last 10 auctions.
“We have had this backup and all this conjecture about the U.S. credit rating,” said Kevin Flanagan, a Purchase, New York- based fixed-income strategist for Morgan Stanley’s individual investor clients, before the auction results. “The further out the curve you go there could be more difficulty” in getting the debt sold, he said.
The five-year notes auctioned today were sold at a yield of 2.31 percent, compared with an average forecast of 2.335 percent by eight bond-trading firms surveyed by Bloomberg News before the 1 p.m. bidding deadline.
Today’s so-called bid-to-cover ratio, which gauges demand by comparing total bids with the amount of securities offered, was 2.32, compared with a 2.17 average at the past 10 sales of the securities. The Treasury sold $40 billion in two-year notes yesterday and will sell $26 billion in seven-year notes tomorrow.
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We'll keep our fingers crossed again for tomorrow's 7-year auction.