# Tail (Auction)

Source: https://www.yieldcurve.pro/learn/tail

The **tail** at a Treasury auction is the difference between the highest yield accepted at the auction (the "stop") and the yield at which the security was trading in the when-issued market just before the auction. It is reported in basis points.

- **Positive tail** (auction stops through): the auction yield exceeds the when-issued yield, meaning the government had to pay more than the market expected. This signals weak demand.
- **Negative tail** (auction stops rich): the auction yield is below the when-issued yield, meaning demand was stronger than expected. This is a strong result.
- **On the screws**: the auction prices exactly at the when-issued yield.

Tail size matters relative to history. A 1 bp tail on a 2-year note auction is more significant than a 1 bp tail on a 30-year bond auction because the shorter-maturity market is tighter. The [auctions tool](https://www.yieldcurve.pro/auctions) normalizes each tenor's tail against its own historical distribution.

Tails are among the most closely watched auction metrics because they provide a real-time read on demand that isn't available from the bid-to-cover ratio alone. A high bid-to-cover can coexist with a positive tail if bidders are concentrated at lower prices.

Large positive tails (3+ bps) can trigger immediate selloffs across the curve, while negative tails often spark rallies.
