>
>>Irgendwo im Archiv (vor ca. 1 - 2 Wochen) gibts einen Chart um den 19.10.1987 dazu, von T-Bills, T-Notes und T-Bonds.
>>Bitte selber suchen....
>
>Ok, um Euch das Suchen zu Ersparen:
>(Was sind eigentlich T-Bills?)
[b]Danke!
T-Bills:
"Treasury bills (or T-bills) are short-term securities that mature in one year or less from their issue date. You buy T-bills for a price less than
their par (face) value, and when they mature we pay you their par value. Your interest is the difference between the purchase price of the
security and what we pay you at maturity (or what you get if you sell the bill before it matures). For example, if you bought a $10,000
26-week Treasury bill for $9,750 and held it until maturity, your interest would be $250."
T-Notes:
"Treasury notes and bonds are securities that pay a fixed rate of interest every six months until your security matures, which is when we pay
you their par value. The only difference between them is their length until maturity. Treasury notes mature in more than a year, but less than
10 years from their issue date. Bonds, on the other hand, mature more than 10 years from their issue date. You usually can buy notes and
bonds for a price close to their par value."
Quelle: <a rref="http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/of/ofbasics.htm">http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/of/ofbasics.htm</a>
[b]In dieser Quelle steht auch folgendes:
"U.S. Treasury securities are debt instruments. The U.S. Treasury issues securities to raise the money needed to operate the Federal
Government and to pay off maturing obligations - its debt, in other words."
Auf deutsch:"Schulden werden aufgenommen, um Schulden zu bezahlen."
Na bitte!
<center>
<HR>
</center> |