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One-Year Treasury Constant Maturity T bill 4.14

1,064 1,221 September 25, 2022 at 03:59 PM in Finance (4)
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Last Edited by BeAuMaN | Staff September 25, 2022 at 09:22 PM
+63 Deal Score
65,435 Views
I don't know that much about this. Sharing here to get some feedback. It seems it is highr than CD

Treasury Bills
Treasury bills, or T-bills, are sold in terms ranging from a few days to 52 weeks. Bills are typically sold at a discount from the par amount (par amount is also called face value); rarely, they have sold at a price equal to the par amount.

When a bill matures, you are paid its par amount. If the par amount is greater than the purchase price, the difference is your interest.

You can buy bills from us in TreasuryDirect. You can also buy them through a bank or broker. (We no longer sell bills in Legacy Treasury Direct, which we are phasing out.)

You can hold a bill until it matures or sell it before it matures.

Learn more in "Treasury Bills in Depth"
Buy T-Bills in TreasuryDirect
Use Treasury bills to:

Diversify your investment portfolio
Participate in a secure, short-term investment
More about Treasury bills in the Research Center
at a glance
Original Issue Rate: The discount rate determined at auction.

See rates in recent auctions
Minimum Purchase: $100
Maximum Purchase
(in a single auction): Noncompetitive - $10 million
Competitive - 35% of offering amount
(See types of bidding in "Auctions in Depth")
Investment Increment: Multiples of $100
Issue Method: Electronic

Rates & Terms
Treasury bills are issued for terms of 4, 8, 13, 26, and 52 weeks. Another type of Treasury bill, the cash management bill, is issued in variable terms.
4-week, 8-week, 13-week, 26-week, and 52-week bills are auctioned on a regular schedule.
Cash management bills aren't auctioned on a regular schedule.
More about Treasury Bills rates and terms in the Research Center
Redemption Information
Minimum Term of Ownership: In TreasuryDirect, 45 days
Interest-Earning Period: To maturity
More about Treasury Bills redemption in the Research Center
Tax Considerations
Interest income is exempt from state and local income taxes.
Interest income is subject to federal income tax.
More about Treasury Bills tax considerations in the Research Center



https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...glance.htm

https://home.treasury.gov/resourc...nth=202209

112 Comments

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Joined Feb 2013
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> bubble2 213 Posts
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WineWomenSong
09-26-2022 at 06:58 PM.
09-26-2022 at 06:58 PM.
Quote from MAKNYC :
Look at www.savingsbonds.gov. (It is for all U.S. Government debt…not just savings bonds) All necessary info as well as upcoming and historical auction info can be seen by clicking on the tiles in the lower left. Most people here are probably focusing on 1 of 3 types of treasury securities….1) Bills (1 year or less to maturity) 2) Notes (2-10 years) or 3) Bonds (>10 years). Click on the correct category under the Auction Results tile.

As of this writing, treasuries maturing about 6 months and beyond are yielding in the 4% range. And interest is free from state/local taxes.

There is no good reason to purchase bonds thru the treasurydirect website. And there is a major disadvantage. You can purchase all treasuries thru brokerage firms such as Schwab and Fidelity. There are no fees whatsoever to purchase treasuries thru them. And you can purchase treasuries in the secondary market (those that were previously sold in an auction) as well as brokered bank CD's which have finally caught up to treasury rates @ intermediate maturities. And by holding your positions at the brokerage firm you retain the ability to sell them at any point whereas positions purchased in a treasurydirect account can only be held to maturity or transferred to a brokerage firm.
It is possible to sell, but you will lose money...lots of it if you do not hold to maturity as you cannot ask for the price of the treasury to be sold at. Brokerage houses will tell you theybwill try for the "best price"...but best price for who?
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Joined Jun 2021
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Hawaiiana
09-26-2022 at 07:10 PM.
09-26-2022 at 07:10 PM.
Iam lost. I have a CD in BMO but why is this so hard to understand. Let's say I have 20k. How do I apply, and where should I apply?🙏🙏🙏 Please help Sders.
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Joined Sep 2011
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,220 Posts
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spoolin01
09-26-2022 at 07:26 PM.
09-26-2022 at 07:26 PM.
Quote from WineWomenSong :
It is possible to sell, but you will lose money...lots of it if you do not hold to maturity as you cannot ask for the price of the treasury to be sold at. Brokerage houses will tell you theybwill try for the "best price"...but best price for who?
It's an enormous auction market, so you get what the market offers. You may lose by selling early, you may gain, but the brokerage has nothing to do with that part. No doubt somewhere there is a tiny bid/ask spread that you lose out on, just like buying and selling gold or stocks or anything else. It's not enough to make any difference - other factors have bigger influence and may make for a good reason to sell before maturity.
1
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Last edited by spoolin01 September 26, 2022 at 07:28 PM.
Joined Apr 2011
L1: Learner
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slickdealers3
09-26-2022 at 08:09 PM.
09-26-2022 at 08:09 PM.
Quote from androidf58 :
People saying about buying the tbills from your brokerage, I tried on TDA. Every offering needed like $100,000 minimum.
You need to click on "new issue/auction". For secondary market, most require 100k+
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Joined Apr 2011
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 363 Posts
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MAKNYC
09-26-2022 at 08:12 PM.
09-26-2022 at 08:12 PM.
Quote from WineWomenSong :
It is possible to sell, but you will lose money...lots of it if you do not hold to maturity as you cannot ask for the price of the treasury to be sold at. Brokerage houses will tell you theybwill try for the "best price"...but best price for who?
The spreads on treasury securities are minuscule. And they can be seen in advance on the brokers website, so you know what you will get before hitting the trade button. Regardless, the point about selling was not to suggest trading bonds for gains or losses. The concept of selling a bond prior to its maturity should be compared to an EWP (Early Withdrawal Penalty) on a bank CD. Depending on the term of the CD the EWP could be 90 days to a few years of forgiven interest. You would be hard pressed to describe many realistic scenarios where the price change of the treasury is greater than the EWP on a CD at a given point in time, although it is possible.
1
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Joined Sep 2011
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spoolin01
09-26-2022 at 08:34 PM.
09-26-2022 at 08:34 PM.
Quote from slickdealers3 :
You need to click on "new issue/auction". For secondary market, most require 100k+
Is that something about TDA? I have traded amounts as little as $5K worth of T-Bills on e-Trade. None of my 20 or so trades has been as high as $100K.
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Joined Nov 2018
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Hope4Best
09-26-2022 at 09:02 PM.
09-26-2022 at 09:02 PM.
Why I have to pay taxes on interest on the money that I already paid taxes and then give to same Government and they earn money on that and give me 4% of inflation money and then ask me to pay taxes. BS better to keep the money with myself 😜
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Joined Dec 2009
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RyanMPLS
09-26-2022 at 10:41 PM.
09-26-2022 at 10:41 PM.
Quote from spoolin01 :
Still by far the best option for the limited amount you can put into I-bonds.
No limit if a person creates LLCs.
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Joined Sep 2011
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spoolin01
09-26-2022 at 10:45 PM.
09-26-2022 at 10:45 PM.
Quote from Hope4Best :
Why I have to pay taxes on interest on the money that I already paid taxes and then give to same Government and they earn money on that and give me 4% of inflation money and then ask me to pay taxes. BS better to keep the money with myself 😜
That's the game, unless you know some loopholes or can go underground.
Quote from RyanMPLS :
No limit if a person creates LLCs.
How does that work?
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Joined Jan 2013
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EBGwd
09-27-2022 at 02:54 AM.
09-27-2022 at 02:54 AM.
Quote from Fanime :
I see 6-month CDs at 3.938 and 9-month at 4.020 thru Schwab, doesn't that make more sense?

I bought 2yr cd at 4.2% last week. Figure it will be 2 yr before "fruit loops" is gone and we go back to sanity.
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Joined Mar 2007
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jimk59
09-27-2022 at 05:45 AM.
09-27-2022 at 05:45 AM.
Quote from weikewl :
There are ROTH 401Ks available too.
There are no taxes on qualified Roth withdrawals. I was addressing the post incorrectly stating there are different tax rates on trad 401k.
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Joined Sep 2010
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akatti
09-27-2022 at 05:57 AM.
09-27-2022 at 05:57 AM.
Quote from MAKNYC :
I can't see any reason to purchase bills, notes or bonds in a Treasury Direct account, except perhaps you already have one set up AND you don't already have a brokerage account. Otherwise there are advantages to doing such transactions in the brokerage account and there are no disadvantages.

I routinely buy 28 day bills at both brokerages (they typically auction every Thursday) and use that as a better alternative to their purchased/sweep money market funds. But this also means that aside from selling a security I only get access to my funds once every 7 days when one set of bills mature. The purchased money market funds would allow daily access.

At least at TD Ameritrade, there is a $25 fee for anything other than Bonds. Is this not true for your 28-day purchases? Checking if there are no-fee brokerages (for Treasuries).
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Joined Apr 2011
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MAKNYC
09-27-2022 at 06:12 AM.
09-27-2022 at 06:12 AM.
Quote from akatti :
At least at TD Ameritrade, there is a $25 fee for anything other than Bonds. Is this not true for your 28-day purchases? Checking if there are no-fee brokerages (for Treasuries).
Neither Schwab nor Fidelity charge anything for any duration U.S Treasury if you do it online. Trades placed with a representative would be subject to a fee and of course bid/ask spreads would apply to secondary market trades.
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Joined Sep 2011
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spoolin01
09-27-2022 at 06:35 AM.
09-27-2022 at 06:35 AM.
No brokerage fees for Treasuries at E-Trade either. I've bought as little as $5K worth, it looks like you can go down to at least $1K.
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Joined Oct 2004
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jeffsnyder
09-27-2022 at 06:37 AM.
09-27-2022 at 06:37 AM.
Quote from BraveWing3390 :
Despite any gains, I won't invest in a corrupt Treasury manipulating our currency. Read into such investments before you hand your money over to a system screwing you, daily.
What's the name of your financial investment company? What kind of returns do they offer?
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