The types and procedures for marketable security issues are described in the Treasury's Uniform Offering Circular (31 CFR 356).
Treasury bill Treasury bills (
T-bills) are
zero-coupon bonds that
mature in one year or less. They are bought at a
discount of the
par value and, instead of paying a coupon interest, are eventually redeemed at that par value to create a positive
yield to maturity. Regular T-bills are commonly issued with maturity dates of 4, 6, 8, 13, 17, 26 and 52 weeks. These lengths approximate different numbers of months, or 1.5 months for the 6-week bill. The bills are sold by
single-price auctions that are held every four weeks for the 52-week bill and every week for the rest. The minimum purchase is $100; it had been $1,000 prior to April 2008. Banks and financial institutions, especially
primary dealers, are the largest purchasers of T-bills. Like other securities, individual issues of T-bills are identified with a unique
CUSIP number. The 13-week bill issued three months after a 26-week bill is considered a re-opening of the 26-week bill and is given the same CUSIP number. The 4-week bill issued two months after that and maturing on the same day is also considered a re-opening of the 26-week bill and shares the same CUSIP number. For example, the 26-week bill issued on March 22, 2007, and maturing on September 20, 2007, has the same CUSIP number (912795A27) as the 13-week bill issued on June 21, 2007, and maturing on September 20, 2007, and as the 4-week bill issued on August 23, 2007, that matures on September 20, 2007. During periods when Treasury cash balances are particularly low, the Treasury may sell
cash management bills (
CMBs). These are sold through a discount auction process like regular bills, but are irregular in the amount offered, the timing, and the maturity term. CMBs are referred to as "on-cycle" when they mature on the same day as a regular bill issue, and "off-cycle" otherwise. Before the introduction of the four-week bill in 2001, the Treasury sold CMBs routinely to ensure short-term cash availability. Since then CMB auctions have been infrequent except when the Treasury has extraordinary cash needs. Treasury bills are quoted for purchase and sale in the secondary market on an annualized discount percentage, or
basis. General calculation for the discount yield for Treasury bills is: : \text{discount yield}\,(\%) = \frac{\text{face value} - \text{purchase value}}{\text{face value}} \times \frac{360}{\text{days till maturity}} \times 100 \,\%
Treasury note Treasury notes (
T-notes) have maturities of 2, 3, 5, 7, or 10 years, have a
coupon payment every six months, and are sold in increments of $100. T-note prices are quoted on the secondary market as a percentage of the
par value in thirty-seconds of a dollar. Ordinary Treasury notes pay a fixed interest rate that is set at auction. Current yields on the 10-year Treasury note are widely followed by investors and the public to monitor the performance of the U.S. government bond market and as a proxy for investor expectations of longer-term macroeconomic conditions.
Treasury bond Treasury bonds (
T-bonds, also called a
long bond) have the longest
maturity at twenty or thirty years. They have a
coupon payment every six months like T-notes. The U.S. federal government suspended issuing 30-year Treasury bonds for four years from February 18, 2002, to February 9, 2006. As the U.S. government used budget surpluses to pay down federal debt in the late 1990s, the 10-year Treasury note began to replace the 30-year Treasury bond as the general, most-followed metric of the U.S. bond market. However, because of demand from
pension funds and large, long-term
institutional investors, along with a need to diversify the Treasury's liabilities—and also because the flatter
yield curve meant that the
opportunity cost of selling long-dated debt had dropped—the 30-year Treasury bond was re-introduced in February 2006 and is now issued quarterly. In 2019, Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin said that the
Trump administration was considering issuance of 50-year and even 100-year Treasury bonds, a suggestion which did not materialize.
TIPS and FRNs Both TIPS and FRNs adjust conditions of the bonds to limit the exposure of bondholders to the change in the financial climate during the bond's lifetime. They differ significantly in the parameters they adjust.
Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (
TIPS) are
inflation-indexed bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury. Introduced in 1997, they are currently offered in 5-year, 10-year and 30-year maturities. The
coupon rate is fixed at the time of issuance, but the principal is adjusted periodically based on changes in the
consumer price index (CPI), the most commonly used measure of
inflation. When the CPI rises, the principal is adjusted upward; if the index falls, the principal is adjusted downwards. The adjustments to the principal increase interest income when the CPI rises, thus protecting the holder's purchasing power. This "virtually guarantees" a real return over and above the rate of inflation, according to finance scholar Dr. Annette Thau. Finance scholars Martinelli, Priaulet and Priaulet state that inflation-indexed securities in general (including those used in the United Kingdom and France) provide efficient instruments to diversify portfolios and manage risk because they have a weak correlation with stocks, fixed-coupon bonds and cash equivalents. A 2014 study found that conventional U.S. Treasury bonds were persistently mispriced relative to TIPS, creating
arbitrage opportunities and posing "a major puzzle to classical
asset pricing theory". Another type of Treasury note, known as the
floating rate note, pays interest quarterly based on rates set in periodic auctions of 13-week Treasury bills. As with a conventional fixed-rate instrument, holders are paid the par value of the note when it matures at the end of the two-year term.
Coupon stripping The secondary market for securities includes T-notes, T-bonds, and TIPS whose interest and principal portions of the security have been separated, or "stripped", in order to sell them separately. The practice derives from the days before computerization, when treasury securities were issued as paper
bearer bonds; traders would literally separate the interest coupons from paper securities for separate resale, while the principal would be resold as a
zero-coupon bond. The modern versions are known as
Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal Securities (
STRIPS). The Treasury does not directly issue STRIPS – they are products of investment banks or brokerage firms – but it does register STRIPS in its book-entry system. STRIPS must be purchased through a broker, and cannot be purchased from TreasuryDirect. ==Nonmarketable securities==