Treasury Bonds

RECENT NEWS
FX Street  Oct 27  Comment 
December T-Bond and T-Notes traders are cautiously supporting prices in the pre-market in anticipation of the start of this week’s auction.  The Treasury will be auctioning 2-Year Notes.  Investors will be watching to see how much demand there...
Commodity Online  Sep 23  Comment 
Deliverable securities for the new Long Term Bond future will comprise cash Treasury bonds with at least 25 years of remaining term to maturity. By comparison deliverable securities for the existing Treasury Bond contract are bonds with remaining...
George Washington's Blog  Sep 14  Comment 
Everyone knows that the American government is gaming the market for treasury bonds to some extent. For example, the government has itself bought some U.S. Treasuries. Some writers, such as Rob Kirby and Ellen Brown, go much further, alleging ...
The Technical Take  Aug 26  Comment 
For over 8 months now , I have been chronicling the plight of the 10 year Treasury bond. Based upon the "next big thing" indicator it was my expectation that yields on the 10 year Treasury bond would rise once there was a monthly close...
FX Street  Aug 4  Comment 
A report showing that U.S. Pending Sales of Existing Homes rose in June for the fifth straight month helped turn around September Treasury Bonds and September Treasury Notes. Both of these contracts were called better on the opening because of...
FX Street  Aug 3  Comment 
Quote: ‘One of television’s greatest contributions is that it brought murder back into the home, where itbelongs.’ Sir Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) The News: US officials suggest Unemployment benefits might be extended as the New York Times...
The Technical Take  Jun 30  Comment 
I am on record stating that yields on the 10 year Treasury bond will move higher over the next 12 months, and this will represent a secular trend change. This has been a major theme that I have been touting for the past 6 months. See figure...
Sober Look  Jun 17  Comment 
The media is barely covering this story. Must be that the ratings are just not there to discuss two guys carrying some bonds. Who cares. The fact that this could be the biggest international financial scandal in history doesn't seem to interest...
The Technical Take  Jun 10  Comment 
One of the major themes that I have been highlighting on this blog since its inception 6 months ago is the potential for a secular trend change in long term Treasury bonds. Starting back in December, 2008, there was a high likelihood of higher...
Forbes  Jun 1  Comment 
The U.S. government can't print its way out of elevating debt.
Suggest a News Source
Topic
Top news source/blog that we're missing
Why do you recommend this news source?
Close 
Thanks for your suggestion!
 
 
TOP CONTRIBUTORS

Treasury bills, notes, and bonds are examples of default-free securities. Treasury bonds (T-Bonds, or the long bond) have the longest maturity, from ten years to thirty years. They have coupon payment every six months like T-Notes, and are commonly issued with maturity of thirty years.

Treasury notes and bonds operate differently from a Treasury Bill. A note denotes a security with a date of maturity larger than one year up to ten years. A bond is a security that exceeds ten years in maturity. Notes are offered in lengths of two, three, five, and ten years. Bonds are only offered in a length to maturity of thirty years.

Treasury notes and bonds pay coupon payments every six months including the final date of maturity. For example, if you purchased a $100,000 two-year Treasury note on January 15 2008 at an annual rate of 5%, then your income stream would look like this:

Date Income ($)
7/15/08 2,500
1/15/09 2,500
7/15/09 2,500
1/15/10 102,500

A stock chart for the 30 YR T-Bond



Inflation-Protected Treasury Notes and Bonds

The U.S. government also offers inflation-indexed notes and bonds, also known as TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities). They are offered in lengths of five, ten, and twenty years to maturity. While the interest-rate payments stay the same, they are applied to the principal, which is adjusted for inflation every six months.

For more information, see also

Wikinvest © 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009. Use of this site is subject to express Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer. By continuing past this page, you agree to abide by these terms. Any information provided by Wikinvest, including but not limited to company data, competitors, business analysis, market share, sales revenues and other operating metrics, earnings call analysis, conference call transcripts, industry information, or price targets should not be construed as research, trading tips or recommendations, or investment advice and is provided with no warrants as to its accuracy. Stock market data, including US and International equity symbols, stock quotes, share prices, earnings ratios, and other fundamental data is provided by data partners. Stock market quotes delayed at least 15 minutes for NASDAQ, 20 mins for NYSE and AMEX. Market data by Xignite. See data providers for more details. Company names, products, services and branding cited herein may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The use of trademarks or service marks of another is not a representation that the other is affiliated with, sponsors, is sponsored by, endorses, or is endorsed by Wikinvest.
Powered by MediaWiki