Treasury bonds

RECENT NEWS
FX Street  May 14  Comment 
Markets: Rates On Monday, global core bonds traded mostly range-bound, digesting last week’s heavy... For more information, read our latest forex news and reports.
Wall Street Journal  May 13  Comment 
Selling hit the Treasury bond market again, sending bond yields to the highest levels since late March and extending the market's price rout this month.
Financial Times  May 8  Comment 
Universities, which profited in recent years from the rally in Treasury prices, fear they could be caught flat-footed by a reversal of the Fed’s low interest-rate policy
Forbes  May 1  Comment 
In trading on Wednesday, shares of the SPDR Barclays International Treasury Bond ETF (AMEX: BWX) crossed above their 200 day moving average of $60.12, changing hands as high as $60.18 per share. SPDR Barclays International Treasury Bond shares are...
Sydney Morning Herald  Apr 22  Comment 
Australian bond futures have weakened following a similar move in US Treasuries.     
Wall Street Journal  Apr 19  Comment 
BlackRock Inc., the world's biggest money manager, has turned bullish on 30-year Treasury bonds at a time when worries over the economy have derailed some investors' expectations for higher yields and lower prices.
CHARTLINES (tm)  Apr 6  Comment 
Are US Treasury bonds moving into position for a flash crash? This sobering possibility is starting to look realistic, based on the charts and technicals. Yesterday's spike flight to safety as equity markets fell hard early Friday morning was...




 
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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.

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