The United States held a 4-week Treasury bill auction with an unchanged yield of 3.595%.
The result indicates the auction cleared at the same rate as the previous comparable sale.
The unchanged 4-week bill auction at 3.595% confirms the market’s belief that the Federal Reserve is firmly on hold. For us, this signals that front-end interest rate volatility will likely remain low in the immediate term. There is little reason to position for a surprise rate move at the next FOMC meeting.
This stability aligns with recent economic data, such as the March CPI which came in at a manageable 2.8% and the latest jobs report showing a moderate gain of 175,000. These figures are not strong enough to warrant a rate hike, nor weak enough to force a cut. The market sees the Fed in a comfortable wait-and-see position for at least the next month or two.
Derivative traders should consider strategies that benefit from this expected calm. Selling premium on short-dated options, such as May or June SOFR futures, could be advantageous as low volatility will likely compress option prices. This environment is less favorable for buying options, as the lack of a clear catalyst will likely lead to time decay eating away at profits.
The real opportunity may lie further out on the yield curve, where uncertainty about the second half of the year remains. While the 4-week rate is anchored, we are seeing more activity in options on 2-year and 10-year note futures. The debate is not about the next few weeks, but whether slowing growth will force the Fed’s hand later this year.
Looking back, this period of calm is a sharp contrast to the aggressive rate adjustments we navigated through 2023 and the careful easing cycle we saw through much of 2025. Historical data from that period shows that such stability can be a precursor to a significant move once a clear economic trend emerges. We should therefore use this time to position for potential shifts in the longer-term rate outlook.