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Treasury Bills

This document discusses yield calculations for Treasury bills. It provides an example of a 91-day T-bill quoted with a bid price of $97.95 per $100 face value and an ask price of $98 per $100 face value. The best measure of yield is the bond yield equivalent (b.y.e.), which for this bill is 8.186%. The discount rate, which is what dealers typically quote, is calculated differently and would be 7.91% for the ask price and 8.11% for the bid price. While the discount rate was easier to calculate before calculators, the b.y.e. is a more accurate reflection of the actual yield earned.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
193 views3 pages

Treasury Bills

This document discusses yield calculations for Treasury bills. It provides an example of a 91-day T-bill quoted with a bid price of $97.95 per $100 face value and an ask price of $98 per $100 face value. The best measure of yield is the bond yield equivalent (b.y.e.), which for this bill is 8.186%. The discount rate, which is what dealers typically quote, is calculated differently and would be 7.91% for the ask price and 8.11% for the bid price. While the discount rate was easier to calculate before calculators, the b.y.e. is a more accurate reflection of the actual yield earned.

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vijaydh
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Yield Calculations for Treasury Bills

William L. Silber
Question
Suppose you could buy a 91-day T-bill at an asked price of $98 per $100 face value and
you could sell to the dealer at a bid price of $97.95 per $100 face value. What are the
quotation conventions on this bill and how is the yield calculated? What is the best
measure of the yield on a T-bill?
Answer
1) This T-bill would be listed in a table as follows:
Days to Maturity
91

Bid
8.11

Ask
7.91

Ask Yield
8.186

2) The ask yield in the last column is the bond yield equivalent (b.y.e) of this T-bill. This
is the yield (assuming simple interest) if you bought the bill at the ask price of 98 per
100 face value and held it for the full 91 days.
F -P
B.Y .E. =
/t
P
F = Face Value (=$100)
P = Price Paid
t = Fraction of a year
In our case,
B.Y .E. =

100 - 98 91
/
365
98

= .08186 = 8.186%

NB:

This formula is simple interest because it comes from:


P (1 + rt ) = F

which can be solved for r as


F -P
r =
/t
P
3. The 7.91 under the word Ask in the table comes from the discount rate calculated on
the bill. The discount rate is defined as:

F -P x
discount rate =
/
F 360

where X = days to maturity


In our case (using the ask price):

100 - 98 91
(ask ) discount rate =
/ 360
100

= .0791 = 7.91%
4) The 8.11 in the table under the word bid uses the same discount rate calculation as
above except it uses the bid price (=97.95) in the formula

100 - 97.95 91
(bid ) discount rate =
/ 360
100

= .0811 = 8.11%
5) Note that the (ask) discount rate will always be lower than the ask yield based on the
b.y.e. formula because F appears in the denominator of the discount rate formula while
P is in the denominator of the b.y.e. formula (and F>P as long as yields are positive). In
addition, 360<365 in the year part of the formulas and those numbers wind up in the
numerator.
6) Of these calculations, the best measure of yield earned when buying a T-bill is the
b.y.e. since it uses P as the base rather than F (and because 365 is correct). Why does
the discount rate calculation exist? Because it is a shorthand calculation that was
easier before hand calculators existed. It allowed people to translate price into yield
quickly. In fact, this tradition is perpetuated by dealers who quote T-bills in discount

rates rather than prices. Thus our T-bill in the table is quoted as 8.11 bid, offered at
7.91.
7) The effective annual rate on this bill would annualize the b.y.e. of 8.18% (which uses
simple interest) using the familiar formula:
n

quoted rate
EAR = 1 +
-1
n

where n = number of compounding periods per year.


365

.08186

EAR = 1 +

365 / 91
= .0844 = 8.44%

91

-1

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