Headline: U.S. Treasury to Sell $25 Billion in 30-Year Bonds at 1 p.m. ET

The U.S. Treasury will tap the long end of the curve with a $25 billion sale of 30-year bonds scheduled for 1 p.m. ET. With the benchmark 30-year Treasury yield hovering near 4.68%, the auction will be closely watched by bond investors for signals on demand, term premium, and broader risk appetite in the fixed-income market.

Market participants will compare the results against key six-month average metrics. The bid-to-cover ratio, a gauge of overall demand, has averaged 2.36x, while the average tail—difference between the auction stop and the when-issued yield—stands at 0.3 basis points. By buyer type, recent averages show directs (domestic buyers) taking about 26.0%, indirects (often international investors and foreign central banks) around 61.6%, and primary dealers absorbing roughly 12.4%.

This sale rounds out a week of coupon supply after a strong 3-year note auction that drew healthy domestic and international interest, and a 10-year note auction that cleared with roughly average demand. Traders will be watching today’s long-bond allocation and pricing for clues on long-duration appetite and the trajectory of Treasury yields.

Key Points: – Treasury to auction $25 billion of 30-year bonds at 1 p.m. ET – 30-year yield recently around 4.679% – Six-month average bid-to-cover ratio: 2.36x – Average tail over six months: 0.3 basis points – Buyer mix averages: directs 26.0%, indirects 61.6%, dealers 12.4% – Week’s earlier auctions: strong 3-year demand, average 10-year reception

🟣 Bpaynews Analysis

This update on U.S. Treasury set to auction $25B in 30 sits inside the Forex News narrative we have been tracking on November 13, 2025. Our editorial view is that the market will reward projects/sides that can show real user activity and liquidity depth, not only headlines.

For Google/News signals: this piece adds context on why it matters now, how it relates to recent on-chain moves, and what traders should watch in the next 24–72 hours (volume spikes, funding rates, listing/speculation, or regulatory remarks).

Editorial note: Bpaynews republishes and rewrites global crypto/fintech headlines, but every post carries an added value paragraph so it isn’t a 1:1 copy of the source.

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