30-Year Treasury

  

The 30-Year: It's a 30-year piece of paper guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government's ability to tax its hard-working citizens. You write a check to the government giving it cash. They give you a promise to pay you interest twice a year for 30 years, at which point they then give you back the principal, or your original investment. These bonds are taxed at the ordinary income rate, as if adding salt to a low interest wound.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are High Yield/Junk Bonds?19 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what are high-yield or junk bonds? alright well here are low

00:08

yield bonds, you know Apple Microsoft you know, safe secure sleep [charts]

00:12

like a baby even for Chicken Little those kind of bonds. the sky is not

00:17

falling. all right well here are high-yield bonds Sears you know Toys R

00:20

Us aren't they bankrupt already best buy well someday bankrupt ,yeah not safe not

00:25

secure, the sky among other things like credit ratings is in fact falling. well [definitions on screen]

00:32

why do high-yield bonds yield a lot that is they pay a lot of interest to

00:36

investors why do they do that answer because they have to. right but

00:40

why why do they have to? well because the bonds are risky either the business is

00:45

in danger of dying, or the business has borrowed so much money that it's in [ best buy pictured]

00:50

danger of not being able to pay back the loans. that is their operating profit is

00:54

just barely enough to pay the interest costs on all the loans they've borrowed

00:59

so the risk of default is high and investors demand very high interest for

01:04

taking on the risk of having to go through a potential bankruptcy. the term

01:08

junk was coined in the 1980s when the now-defunct investment bank Drexel [100 dollar bill]

01:13

Burnham Lambert sold boatloads of bonds which had dubious creditworthiness in

01:17

weak backing and so the boatloads of bonds sank and ended up as basically

01:23

junk. and not the Chinese junk that actually sales, a different kind of junk.

01:27

anyway unlike your fancy triple-a bonds which you can see here on this lovely [ boat sails on a lake]

01:31

table ,those junk bonds were riskier than us women in shark-infested waters with a

01:36

bloody nose. so what's the best way to encourage people to do risky possibly

01:40

dangerous things ?well pay them a lot of money. so that's why junk bonds yield

01:45

such killer returns for investors because otherwise well these things [two people frown in front of bond store]

01:49

would never leave the shelf.

Up Next

Finance: What are T-Notes, T-Bonds and TIPS?
19 Views

What are T-Notes, T-Bonds, and TIPS? T-Notes are debt securities (like bonds) that are issued by the government and mature within one to 10 years....

Finance: What are General Obligation, Revenue and Double-barreled Bonds?
92 Views

What are general obligation, revenue and double-barreled bonds? General obligation bonds are backed by the place that issued them. So rather than b...

Finance: What are Bond Ratings, and What Do They Mean?
68 Views

What are bond ratings and what do they mean? Bond ratings are just credit ratings used on bonds. Just like a credit rating, they give the investor...

Finance: What are Treasury Bills?
15 Views

What are Treasury Bills? Like other debt finance platforms, the US government issues its debt in several ways, and has different terms for each. Tr...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)