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frontpagechunmanc123 posted Aug 07, 2023 04:53 AM
frontpagechunmanc123 posted Aug 07, 2023 04:53 AM

U.S. Treasury: Short Term Treasury Bills (4-Week-52-Week Maturity) Up to

5.50% Interest

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Note: Rates are subject to change daily; rates are the daily secondary market quotations on the most recently auctioned Treasury Bills for each maturity tranche (4-week, 8-week, 13-week, 17-week, 26-week, and 52-week) for which Treasury currently issues new bills. Up to Date Rates can be found here (scroll to bottom of list)

U.S. Government Treasury is offering Up to 5.499% Coupon Rate (Interest Rate) on Short Term Treasury Bills which can be Purchased for a Duration of 4-Weeks-52 Weeks Maturity.

Thanks community member chunmanc123 for sharing this deal

Note, if interested, you may choose to purchase Treasury Bills through your preferred Brokerage Firm

Example Current Rates (8/9/23): (Coupon Rates [Interest Rates] change daily):
  • 13-Week Maturity: 5.451%
  • 26-Week Maturity: 5.499%
  • 52-Week Maturity: 5.351%

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • Interest paid: When the bill matures
    • Minimum purchase : $100
    • In increments of: $100
    • Maximum purchase: $10 million (non-competitive bid)
    • Auction frequency:
      • Every four weeks for 52-week bills
      • Weekly for 4, 8, 13, 17, 26-week bills
      • No regular schedule for Cash Management Bills
      • See the Auction calendar for specific date
      • More Info
    • Taxes: Federal tax due on interest earned. No state or local taxes
  • Refer to forum thread for discussion from the community regarding this offer. -slickdewmaster

Original Post

Written by chunmanc123
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Note: Rates are subject to change daily; rates are the daily secondary market quotations on the most recently auctioned Treasury Bills for each maturity tranche (4-week, 8-week, 13-week, 17-week, 26-week, and 52-week) for which Treasury currently issues new bills. Up to Date Rates can be found here (scroll to bottom of list)

U.S. Government Treasury is offering Up to 5.499% Coupon Rate (Interest Rate) on Short Term Treasury Bills which can be Purchased for a Duration of 4-Weeks-52 Weeks Maturity.

Thanks community member chunmanc123 for sharing this deal

Note, if interested, you may choose to purchase Treasury Bills through your preferred Brokerage Firm

Example Current Rates (8/9/23): (Coupon Rates [Interest Rates] change daily):
  • 13-Week Maturity: 5.451%
  • 26-Week Maturity: 5.499%
  • 52-Week Maturity: 5.351%

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • Interest paid: When the bill matures
    • Minimum purchase : $100
    • In increments of: $100
    • Maximum purchase: $10 million (non-competitive bid)
    • Auction frequency:
      • Every four weeks for 52-week bills
      • Weekly for 4, 8, 13, 17, 26-week bills
      • No regular schedule for Cash Management Bills
      • See the Auction calendar for specific date
      • More Info
    • Taxes: Federal tax due on interest earned. No state or local taxes
  • Refer to forum thread for discussion from the community regarding this offer. -slickdewmaster

Original Post

Written by chunmanc123

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Top Comments

OliveFlag247
42 Posts
14 Reputation
To clarify...

Treasury BILLS are currently paying over 5% for various maturity lengths under 1 year. These can be bought through most brokerages even without a TreasuryDirect account.

Treasury BONDS are paying 4% or less and have 20 or 30 year terms.
if200
992 Posts
327 Reputation
Have learned so much on this site so am trying to return the favor with what I've learned that I don't see anyone else talking about.

The 4 week bill ordering opens tomorrow 8/8, the deadline to buy it is sometime Thursday 8/10 morning depending on where you are buying it and it settles on 8/15.

On TD Ameritrade, they take your money on the 10th (take it out of the money you can trade with when you hit purchase which can be as early as the 8th) and buy the bill on the 15th during time which you earn no interest. Thus the reason that I stopped buying 4 and 8 week bills at auction. Secondary markets settle the next day so often a better deal. Treasury direct does not take the money from your bank account till the day it settles and Vanguard keeps it in the settlement fund earning interest till the day it settles as well. Not sure about the other brokerage houses. Also, not sure if you rollover the t-bills how the time between redemption and the next auction works as far as any interest you are losing as that is often a week of interest as well.

FYI, if you do the math, 4 weeks for $10,000 usually gets you about $40 in interest for letting them hold your money for 5 weeks.

The Monday auctions for 3 months and six months settle on Thursday so much less time to hold your money for nothing and less redemption downtime.

The money market funds often have repurchase agreements that are taxed at the state and local level but obviously more liquid. Am looking into the ETFs now.

Good luck to everyone!
oonchie
199 Posts
143 Reputation
I'd recommend searching for diamondnestegg on youtube. She has a bunch of very useful videos on how to purchase and where explaining step by step on how to do it.

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Aug 09, 2023 06:00 PM
521 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
UsermemeAug 09, 2023 06:00 PM
521 Posts
Quote from GhostNoteSymphonies :
Those are taxed, but best deal is bank bonus + high interest money market (I just got $2500 from Wells Fargo + 5+%). Before that Ally.
How did you get 2500??
Aug 09, 2023 06:01 PM
521 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
UsermemeAug 09, 2023 06:01 PM
521 Posts
At the end of the financial year, do we need to declare this interest when filing taxes? Do we get a 1099 INT kind of a statememt from TreasureDirect?
Aug 09, 2023 06:07 PM
3,815 Posts
Joined Aug 2005
labboyproAug 09, 2023 06:07 PM
3,815 Posts
Quote from Usermeme :
At the end of the financial year, do we need to declare this interest when filing taxes? Do we get a 1099 INT kind of a statememt from TreasureDirect?
Of course. Yes.
Aug 09, 2023 06:09 PM
1,081 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
crablover2Aug 09, 2023 06:09 PM
1,081 Posts
Quote from mrdizle :
Thank you. You are very helpful.

How can a person like me see that the auctions for 13 weeks are on Monday ? Maybe I missed it.
When you've logged into your Treasury Direct account, click the 'BuyDirect' tab and choose the type of Treasury you want to buy (like 'Bills'). Then a full list of each bill (4week, 8week, etc) will show, including the auction date and the issue date. You don't have to buy, you can see all that's available and then exit. You have to put your order to buy before the auction date, and Treasury Direct will withdraw your money for it on the issue date. Sometimes I put in a lot of orders in advance and forget what I've pre-ordered. I can go to the 'History' tab and click 'Security History' to see the orders that are still open and/or are already fulfilled (you'll see Purchase Requested and just above it you'll see Security Issued). You can click on any 'Purchase Requested' and see the details, and if the auction hasn't happened yet, you can cancel. You can click on any 'Security Issued' and see the details there of the new issue, including interest rate, etc. You can see these if you look at 'Current Holdings' tab as well. The Treasury Direct site may be a little clunky, and they timeout with no movement rather quickly -- and NEVER use the back button as that kicks you out, but they've made some improvements. If you go through a brokerage firm, those days in between the auction date and issue date, when your money is taken out, and when you actually have access to the bill in the brokerage account can be a little funny. Once I bought a Treasury note through TD Ameritrade, and come tax time, I got some weird tax thing indicating that I had paid interest to a 3rd party (sorry, I can't remember the term). It was a small amount, and usually I might have overlooked it, but saw it this time. For example, I got paid $100 in interest from the Treasury note and would pay fed tax on the $100. There was a cryptic line that upon researching meant I actually received $5 less, ie $5 of the $100 was paid someone else. Usually this is the case if you buy a bond from a 3rd party, ie they earn the interest up to the day they deliver the note to you. But I bought at auction, so this should never have happened. TD Ameritrade could not explain this, and during busy tax time, no 'fixed income specialist' ever got back to me. So either TD took delivery of the note, held onto it for a couple of days before delivering to me and thus they earned that $5 (like TD 'bought' it with my money under their name, then late 'sold' it to me but kept that interim interest since it was in 'their' name??), or they didn't actually put in an auction buy for me, but instead sold me the note from some other 3rd party. Regardless, I don't need any additional middleman of unexplained weirdness (this was reported by TD on their consolidated 1099, so they did do something bizarre), hence I only deal with Treasury Direct now.
Aug 09, 2023 06:09 PM
636 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
jroth3Aug 09, 2023 06:09 PM
636 Posts
just purchased my first 17 week bill. wish me luck! no idea what I am doing, moved money from my CIT savings currently making 4.6% into a 17 week bill worth over 5%.
Aug 09, 2023 06:14 PM
6,270 Posts
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Truth-SerumAug 09, 2023 06:14 PM
6,270 Posts
Market correction ahead with student loan repayment about to kick in...
Aug 09, 2023 06:17 PM
287 Posts
Joined Mar 2013
mir3aclesAug 09, 2023 06:17 PM
287 Posts
Quote from Usermeme :
And also, I noticed, Fidelity charges a brokerage whereas buying directly from TreasuryDirect doesnt involve any brokerage.
Fidelity does not charge a fee if you do it yourself. I have called and checked with them in the past. Only if you have someone at fidelity do it for you there is a fee.

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Aug 09, 2023 06:18 PM
557 Posts
Joined Dec 2008
mikek753sdAug 09, 2023 06:18 PM
557 Posts
can someone with Fidelity account and real experience to answer those questions? pls.
I've used Schwab and hate it holds funds for too long, for any transfer in and at 0.45% rate only, and upon maturity also the settlement time for another 1-3 days to milk you for no reason, while Fidelity sweep rate is above 4%
the TD isn't a bank so, it doesn't provide required for me Checking account option.
but, TD doesn't hold your money for any time at all, it pulls your funds from your bank at the settlement date only, as well as transfers it back at maturity date, also the same day to buy another TBill works via Zero Percentage C account, or reinvest on the same day

how it's on Fidelity side?
how long is the settlement time for incoming transfer to buy TBill?
how long is the settlement upon TBill maturity?
Can you buy another TBill on the same day as maturity day? as example matured 8 weeks TBill and to buy new 4 weeks TBill as the settlement date is the same for those.
When funds are required? upon announcement date or auction date or settlement date?

it's not simple to pre set TBill buy order for TD as it has to be before the announcement date, or about 5-7 days ahead. Sure your funds will be needed on settlement date only, but the order in so much time ahead.

Can at Fidelity you pre select which TBill to buy for a month ahead as at TD?
I can't do it at Schwab, that shows and allow only current auction week ...

tnx
Aug 09, 2023 06:18 PM
1,081 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
crablover2Aug 09, 2023 06:18 PM
1,081 Posts
Quote from gironhe :
This is not even a deal when banks are offering similar rates with no long term commitment on their savings accounts.
I used to do CDs/Savings accounts chasing all the highest rates. But the short term Treasury Bills (1yr and under) all seem to be earning close to 5.5% which beats most CDs/savings rates, and that's not even counting the state & local tax savings (Treasuries are state and local tax free). I live in high tax CA, so Treasuries save close to 10% in state income tax, so I'd have to be getting close to 6% from a state taxable CD/savings acct to equal the 5.5% from Treasuries. I've moved all my savings money to Treasury bills now. And Bills are 1yr duration and under, so it's not long term commitment at all. Low $100 min to buy, and no real cap on how much money you can put in. And it's one of the safest investments you can have.

I hold my savings money in CIT Platinum Savings, which earns 5.05% today. I have it linked to my Treasury Direct account, so it pulls and pushes money to this Savings account. Treasury Direct is very quick to pay and reliable when they pull money out (the issue day is the day they will take the money, usually at the end of the day, and the day the bill/note matures is the day it's sent/received at my savings acct). At least this has been my experience. And for me, CIT bank is the fastest at ACH of all the many savings accts I've tried. Within 1-2 days the money sent ACH from CIT will be at it's destination.
Last edited by crablover2 August 9, 2023 at 12:37 PM.
Aug 09, 2023 06:22 PM
2,454 Posts
Joined Jan 2019
blahbooboo2Aug 09, 2023 06:22 PM
2,454 Posts
Quote from mikek753 :
can someone with Fidelity account and real experience to answer those questions? pls.
I've used Schwab and hate it holds funds for too long, for any transfer in and at 0.45% rate only, and upon maturity also the settlement time for another 1-3 days to milk you for no reason, while Fidelity sweep rate is above 4%
the TD isn't a bank so, it doesn't provide required for me Checking account option.
but, TD doesn't hold your money for any time at all, it pulls your funds from your bank at the settlement date only, as well as transfers it back at maturity date, also the same day to buy another TBill works via Zero Percentage C account, or reinvest on the same day

how it's on Fidelity side?
how long is the settlement time for incoming transfer to buy TBill?
how long is the settlement upon TBill maturity?
Can you buy another TBill on the same day as maturity day? as example matured 8 weeks TBill and to buy new 4 weeks TBill as the settlement date is the same for those.
When funds are required? upon announcement date or auction date or settlement date?

it's not simple to pre set TBill buy order for TD as it has to be before the announcement date, or about 5-7 days ahead. Sure your funds will be needed on settlement date only, but the order in so much time ahead.

Can at Fidelity you pre select which TBill to buy for a month ahead as at TD?
I can't do it at Schwab, that shows and allow only current auction week ...

tnx
Fidelity is not as crappy as schwab. Fidelity instantly removes the money from your account when you use them to place an auction bid for weekly treasury.So you lose any interest for those days before the auction hits.

Schwab is even worse. Best way is to use Treasury direct and automatic rollover no loss of interest days.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W...p=2AEBkAIB
Pro
Aug 09, 2023 06:22 PM
1,150 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
everestsun
Pro
Aug 09, 2023 06:22 PM
1,150 Posts
Quote from mrdizle :
Thank you. You are very helpful.

How can a person like me see that the auctions for 13 weeks are on Monday ? Maybe I missed it.
You will see it on TreasuryDirect website or you can google it. I am attaching the screenshot from TreasureDirect listing all the upcoming Tbills auctions as of yesterday. You can see which Tbill is auctioned on which day. Mondy - 13-week and 26-week; Wednesday - 17-week; Thursday - 4-week and 8-week;
Last edited by everestsun August 9, 2023 at 12:28 PM.
Aug 09, 2023 06:32 PM
1,081 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
crablover2Aug 09, 2023 06:32 PM
1,081 Posts
Quote from jroth3 :
just purchased my first 17 week bill. wish me luck! no idea what I am doing, moved money from my CIT savings currently making 4.6% into a 17 week bill worth over 5%.
Open a new CIT Platinum Savings account and move over your CIT Savings Connect account money over. This is one thing I dislike about CIT bank. Sometimes they will create a 'new' savings account for higher rates, but still leave the old (used-to-be-great) savings account behind earning lower rates. The CIT Platinum Savings is currently earning 5.05%. The CIT Connect is earning 4.65%
Aug 09, 2023 06:33 PM
7 Posts
Joined Jun 2016
BD207Aug 09, 2023 06:33 PM
7 Posts
Quote from 02nz :
Honestly, most people are better off buying an ETF that holds short-term treasuries, like SGOV or BIL. These hold treasuries up to about 3 mos in duration, so they have very little interest rate risk (where the value goes down if interest rates go up), plus they're just easier to buy/sell than buying treasuries outright at TreasuryDirect.
Not really. Buying treasury bills through brokerage that doesn't charge fees is better than etf as you don't pay state taxes on "interest."
Aug 09, 2023 06:33 PM
15 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
ShiftySheikAug 09, 2023 06:33 PM
15 Posts
I've been using Treasury Direct for a couple years. It works well. Usually buy the 4 week bill. On the Thursday before expiration I decide if I want to roll it over. When I roll over the proceeds hit my bank account early Tuesday morning so the money is there for the new purchase which gets pulled the same day.

For buying in brokerage accounts I use Merrill Edge, Fidelity and TD Ameritrade. The Merrill Edge fixed income screener is very good. I've noticed recently that the minimum purchase amount is $10,000 for most (if not all) T-bills on Merrill Edge and Fidelity. Used to be able to buy T-Bills with a $1000 minimum. I avoid TD Ameritrade because they markup T-bill prices so the yield is lower.
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Aug 09, 2023 06:34 PM
2,818 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
02nzAug 09, 2023 06:34 PM
2,818 Posts
Quote from BD207 :
Not really. Buying treasury bills through brokerage that doesn't charge fees is better than etf as you don't pay state taxes on "interest."
No it's not - and please do a modicum of research before you post misinformation. The interest on treasuries held by funds such as SGOV are also free from state income tax. The underlying content is the same, the only difference is the "wrapper" in which the treasuries are packaged.
Last edited by 02nz August 9, 2023 at 12:37 PM.
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