Hi Hope! This is definitely a tricky game, and happy to help you out with this
To understand why we diagrammed rule 2 as V5 or VB
SB, let's take a careful look at how rule 2 is presented to us. Rule 2 says that if V offers 5-year bonds, then S must offer both types. There are two ways for V to offer 5-year bonds: either V offers only 5-year bonds, or V offers both types of bonds. If V offers both bonds, that also triggers the conditional and means that S must offer both, since if V offers both, then they definitely offer 5-year bonds.
Let's turn to how S has been represented on the diagram. Jon placed S as a split option, in either 5 or B. This is just meant to show that S can offer only 5-year bonds, or they can offer both types of bonds, but they can never offer only 10-year bonds (which is then represented by Not Laws).
Jeremy did a great job articulating why S can never offer only 10-year bonds above, but I'll also explain it another way: if S offers
only 10-year bonds, then the contrapositive of the second rule is triggered because if S offers
only 10-year bonds, then S cannot offer both types of bonds. If S cannot offer both types of bonds, then (according to the contrapositive of rule 2) V offers only 10-year bonds, R offers both, and G offers both. But this gets us into trouble, because if V and S occupy both 10 slots and R and G occupy both B slots, then this leaves H and L to both occupy the 5 slots, violating the first rule of the game (H and L cannot offer the same type of bonds). Since S offering only 10-year bonds leads to a rule violation, we can put S Not Laws under the 10 slots.
To sum up, one of the toughest parts of this game is remembering what only offering one type of bond means and how that gets represented on the diagram. The diagram that Jon drew helps us keep track of the difference between offering only one type of bond and offering both types of bonds.
I hope this helps, and let me know if you have any other questions!