Submitted by hamta_ball t3_11eegh5 in personalfinance
I bought a 4-week T-Bill at par amount $4,000 at price per $100 being $99.65. My issue date was 1/31/2023 and maturity date being 02/28/2023.
My Investment/Interest rate was 4.579% and my yield was 4.50%.
My discount (interest earned) is $14.00.
Not sure if my calculations are proper. Let me establish some notation:
- R = return
- Par Amount/Face Value = PA
- Purchase Price = PP
- Annual Return = APY
R = [(PA/PP)] / PP = [(4,000/3,986)] / 3,986 = 0.35%
APY = ((1 + r/n)^{n/m}-1) * 100
Where:
- R = 0.0035 (defined above)
- n = 52/4 = 13 (number times compounded per year) [I'm assuming this, not sure]
- m = number months = 12
APY = ((1 + 0.0035/13)^{13/12} - 1) * 100 = 4.30%.
Are the 4.579% and 4.50% advertised (at auction) interest subject to volatility or something, or is my math wrong?
Wish I could format this with LaTex for you all, it'd be easier to read. I'm pretty sure r/personalfinance doesn't support the plugin.
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Thanks!
1hotjava t1_jadj8ok wrote
There is no compounding on a T-bill.
You have to get more refined. Use days, not months. Include cents and fractions of a cent. You didn’t buy at $99.65, it’s like $99.65113 (or whatever, I didn’t look yours up for the exact)
See top of page 2 here:
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2004/ofcalc6decbill.pdf