Bill Auction

  

Categories: Econ, Banking

Treasury bills, aka T-bills, are auctioned off by the U.S. Treasury at a weekly bill action. T-bills are short-term (under a year) securities meant to help the U.S. dig themselves out of the canyon of debt, bit by bit. T-bills are backed by the U.S. government, making them risk-free.

While there are investors, both people and institutions, that can submit bids for T-bills, there are “primary dealers” who have to submit bids every bill auction. They typically have a par value, under which they are sold. Think: Par at $1,000 for bonds coming due in 9 months being auctioned such that they sell for $973.12, and then boringly come due when the baby IPOs.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are Government Bonds?52 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what are government bonds?

00:05

now we're gonna narrow this question a bit and declare these bonds to be US [hands shape the question]

00:09

government bonds. our answer would be a tad different if we were discussing

00:12

bonds backed by North Korea Nigeria or Egypt so US government bonds come in a

00:19

few flavours. generally speaking they range in duration that is how long it

00:24

takes for them to mature and the principal get paid off. short-term US

00:28

government paper it's a fancy term for a bond ,refers to things that come due in a

00:33

year or less. that's short-term. year or less. and then there are Treasury bills

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which come in a variety of durations and our price like this note how different

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these look versus just you know buying a bond .but when you buy a bond it has a [chart shows prices]

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face amount of say a thousand bucks for what is called its par value. that piece

00:52

of paper might agree that clown shoes incorporated which is where most

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congressmen get their Footwear of course, will pay 30 bucks twice a year to the

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holder for 10 years, and then pay back the original thousand bucks invested

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it's like a normal vanilla bond, the interest rate here in this case is 6%

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per year, but many US government notes are sold at auction which means they

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sell at a discount to their par value. well regardless of how they're sold US [auction with a clown in attendance]

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government bonds are backed by what is generally perceived in the world as the

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most certain or secure financial backing. even more powerful than Google .if sorry

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Larry and Sergey we're just keeping it real. the bonds are backed specifically

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by the US government's right to tax its citizens. and oh they tax us. do they ever.

01:38

so now you can stop wondering about that bottomless hole a third or more of every

01:43

paycheck vanishes into. [portion of paycheck flies down dark hole in the ground]

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