bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : How does a 2 year treasury note work? The current prices of a 2 year seem to be near the 52 week low. Is that good? Let's say I had ,000 to spend and I put it all in 2 year treasury notes. Could I sell them in a year like - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

How does a 2 year treasury note work?
The current prices of a 2 year seem to be near the 52 week low.

Is that good?
Let's say I had ,000 to spend and I put it all in 2 year treasury notes.
Could I sell them in a year like stocks (if the price went up to say 0.56 cents?
How does it work?


Load Full (3)

Login to follow hoots

3 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

There is a large market where notes/bills/bonds are traded, so yes you can sell them later. However, if interest rates go up, the value of any bond that you want to sell goes down, because you now have to compete with what someone can get on a new issue, so you need to 'discount' the principal value of your bond in order for someone to want to buy it instead of a new bond that has a higher interest rate.

The reverse applies if interest rates fall (although it's hard to get much lower than they are now). So someone wanting to make money in bonds due to interest rate changes, generally wants to buy at higher interest rates, and then sell their bonds after rates have gone down. See my answer in this question for more detail Why does interest rate go up when bond price goes down?

To answer 'is that good' the answer depends on perspective:

For someone wanting to buy a bond and get a return on their investment beyond the security that comes with T-notes/bills/bonds, it's not good at all. It means very low returns right now for risk adverse investors, in some cases not even keeping pace with inflation.
For the Government, and taxpayers, it's good because the government can finance the national debt (either items coming due, or new debt) for almost free, and that means we are not taking an even larger hit out of the budget for finance charges on the debt. So for taxpayers and the Government that's been on a spending spree (with the brief exception of a few years during the clinton era) since Reagan was elected, the low rates are a good thing.
If we step beyond Treasury issues, it's also good for Business that wants to finance new projects, capital improvements, etc, since it also means they can get money fairly cheaply via the corporate bond market.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

Notes and Bonds sell at par (1.0). When rates go up, their value goes down. When rates go down, their value goes up.

As an individual investor, you really don't have any business buying individual bonds unless you are holding them to maturity. Buy a short-duration bond fund or ETF.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

Look at this question here. In my answer there, I put a link to an Investopedia article about the bond prices.

Keep in mind that speculating over a short term period is pretty dangerous, even with the Treasury notes, and the prices may be affected temporary but greatly by the ordeals like the latest Republican shenanigans in Washington.


Back to top Use Dark theme