The fermion fields are anti-commuting with each other,$$\{\Psi_{\alpha},\Psi_{\beta}\}=(\gamma^{0})_{\alpha\beta}~\delta^{3}(\vec{x}-\vec{y})\tag1$$ I was reading Srednicki's book quantum field theory, in section 40, eq.(40.43)&eq.(40.44), the charge conjugate of $~\bar{\Psi}A\Psi~$ transforms as $$C^{-1}\bar{\Psi}A\Psi C=\Psi^{T}CAC\bar\Psi^{T} \tag2$$ Since $\Psi^{T}CAC\bar\Psi^{T}$ is a $1\times1$ matrix, we can transpose it without changing its value, so $$C^{-1}\bar{\Psi}A\Psi C=(\Psi^{T}CAC\bar\Psi^{T})^{T}=-\bar\Psi C^{T}A^{T}C^{T}\Psi,\tag3$$ there is an extra minus sign because we have exchanged the two fermion fields $\Psi$,$\bar\Psi$ here.
My question is according to the anti-commuting relation $(1)$, we should have $$\Psi\bar\Psi \sim \delta^{3}(\vec{x}-\vec{y})-\bar\Psi\Psi,$$ rather than $\Psi\bar\Psi \sim -\bar\Psi\Psi,$ so why there is no term$\sim \delta^{3}(\vec{x}-\vec{y})$ in equation $(3)$? I think the fields here are operators rather than the classical fields.