1 / 25

Treasury Auctions

Treasury Auctions. Jake Thompson. Outline. ?. What they are How they work Who uses them History. DEBT. The U.S. national debt is approximately $ 16.7 TRILLION . We fund this debt through the sale of securities. Treasury Auctions - What They Are -. Competitive auction

carl
Télécharger la présentation

Treasury Auctions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Treasury Auctions Jake Thompson

  2. Outline ? • What they are • How they work • Who uses them • History

  3. DEBT The U.S. national debt is approximately $ 16.7 TRILLION. We fund this debt through the sale of securities.

  4. Treasury Auctions - What They Are - • Competitive auction • Market to issue new treasury securities • Tool to fund public debt

  5. Securities- Overview - • Backed by the faith and credit of the U.S. Department of the Treasury • “no credit risk” • Large volume • High liquidity • 2 types • Discount – pay at maturity only • Coupon – pay interest every 6 months and principle at maturity

  6. Securities- Types - • There are 4 types of securities currently sold at treasury auctions: • Bills • Notes • Bonds • TIPS

  7. Securities- Treasury Bills - • Mature in 1 year or less • 4, 13, 26, and 52 week maturities, auctioned at different intervals • Discount Securities

  8. Securities- Treasury Notes - • 2, 3, 5, 7, and 10 year maturities, auctioned at different intervals • Coupon securities

  9. Securities- Treasury Bonds - • Mature in 30 years • Quarterly auctions • Coupon securities

  10. Securities- TIPS - • Treasury Inflation Protection Securities • 5, 10, and 30 year maturities

  11. Auction Process- Announcements - • Auctions are announced online with information: • Amount of the security being offered • Auction date • Issue date • Maturity date • Terms and conditions of the offering • Noncompetitive and competitive bid closing times • Other information necessary

  12. Auction Process- Competitive vs. Noncompetitive - • Competitive: • Each bidder is competing for securities at their best yield rate. • No bids > 35% of total offering • Non-competitive: • Based on quantity, not yield • Receive tenders at single-price yield • Up to $1 million face value

  13. Auction Process- Competitive vs. Noncompetitive - Total amount of securities offered − Noncompetitive bids = Total amount of securities auctioned to competitive bidders

  14. Auction Process- Auction Methods - • Multiple-Price method • Single-Price (Dutch) method

  15. Auction Process- Multiple-Price - • All accepted bids are given the yield they were bid for

  16. Auction Process- Single-Price (Dutch) Auctions - • starting from the lowest yield bid, all bids are accepted until all the securities are allocated • the highest yield bid accepted is the “Stop Yield” • bidders at the stop yield are awarded a percentage of their tender on a pro rata basis • all bidders above the stop yield are missed or “shut out”

  17. Auction Process- Auction Methods - 3 Volunteers! • Single-price (Dutch) • Multiple-price

  18. Auction Price Which auction method is better for the Federal Reserve?

  19. Treasury Auctions- People - • Any firm can deal in government securities • Only primary dealers can deal directly with the Federal Reserve • Firms must informally report positions and trading volume to be a “reporting dealer” • Reporting dealers become primary dealers when the Federal Reserve determines they meet the criteria

  20. Treasury Auctions- Secondary Markets - OTC market to trade outstanding securities Government brokers trade with investing public and other dealer firms

  21. Treasury Auctions- History - • Started in 1929 • only a competitive auction • hand-delivered sealed bids • sold through subscription offerings, exchange offerings, and advance refundings • multiple-price method for auctions

  22. Treasury Auctions- History - • 1947 – allow for noncompetitive bids with a weighted average sale price • 1970 – bids were made by “price” • 1983 – bids were made on basis of yield • 1997 – issuance of TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protection Securities) • 1998 – adopted single-price method for all auctions (Dutch auctions)

  23. Treasury Auctions- History - • competitive and non-competitive bidding • single-price (Dutch) method for all auctions • sells 4 types of securities • Treasury Bills • Treasury Notes • Treasury Bonds • TIPS

  24. Treasury Auctions- Summary - • Treasury auctions are a tool to fund debt through the issuance of government securities • Securities are currently sold as bills, notes, bonds, and TIPS • Currently, treasury auctions allow competitive and noncompetitive bids, in a single-price auction method • Only primary dealers can interact directly with the Treasury, but any firm or individual can purchase securities

  25. QUESTIONS ??

More Related