Treasury Notes

RECENT NEWS
FX Street  Oct 26  Comment 
Markets: Fixed Income On Friday, global bonds lost further ground, as the correction on the equity markets failed to offer support. The eco data were mixed with the euro zone PMI surveys and the US existing home sales coming out much stronger than...
FX Street  Sep 11  Comment 
Markets: Fixed Income On Thursday, US and EMU bonds made a stellar performance, despite economic news that pointed to a further strengthening of the global recovery, a dollar under severe ongoing pressure and at least in the US higher equities....
FX Street  Sep 3  Comment 
Markets: Fixed Income On Wednesday, government bonds extended recent gains and moved (further) above first key resistance levels . Indeed, following the Bund, the US T-Note future trades now also above the neckline of a double bottom formation,...
FX Street  Sep 2  Comment 
Markets: Fixed Income On Tuesday, better than expected manufacturing surveys out of China, Europe and the US failed to boost market optimism, as a buy the rumour sell the fact reaction pushed equities and commodities sharply lower and helped...
Bloomberg  Jul 29  Comment 
Treasury notes fell after a government auction of a record amount of notes drew higher-than- forecast yields for a second consecutive day, renewing concern a deluge of U.S. debt will overwhelm investor demand.
The Essentials of Trading  Jul 13  Comment 
Peter Boockvar made a bit of a boo-boo on the Big Picture blog in his post 10 year bond yield/50% retracement. Since leaving a comment requires logging in, which requires being registered - which I'm not - I'll use this blog post as a corrective...
EX-SKF  Jun 10  Comment 
And judging by the market reaction, it is not good. Both stock market and bond market are sinking deeper.I frankly don't know what the traders were expecting, for them to get disappointed like this. The key numbers of the auction is posted in the...
EX-SKF  May 19  Comment 
The chart looks very bullish, and that's what you exactly DO NOT want, particularly if you are a Fed official. It means the yield may go a lot higher, which will make the interest rates on mortgage loans much higher.The chart plots the YIELD (not...
UnBiasedTrading (TM)  Apr 25  Comment 
U.S. Treasuries, both T-notes and bonds, have languished since their drop from peaks late last year. Are they ready to move in another leg down, or will they rally up? If down, then I've got the level of 116.88 for T-notes ($UST) as a C=A price...
the Underground Investor  May 4  Comment 
3 May, 2007 - I came across a very interesting story yesterday that seemed to attract little attention among the mainstream media. This, out of Washington today: WASHINGTON, May 2 (Reuters) – “The U.S. Treasury on Wednesday said it will end...
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Treasury bills, notes, and bonds are examples of default-free securities. Treasury notes (or T-Notes) mature in two to ten years. They have a coupon payment every six months, and are commonly issued with maturities dates of 2, 5 or 10 years, for denominations from $100 to $1,000,000.

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

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

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