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Published byKasey Twiner Modified over 9 years ago
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Dan Huang Ben Misley
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Huge influence on the investment world Issues bills, bonds, and notes Considered to have no default risk as the U.S. government has never defaulted
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STRIPS and TIPS are creative investment vehicles issued by the Treasury that offer different investment advantages beyond the normal issuance of standard bills, bonds, and notes STRIPS: Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities TIPS : Treasury Inflation-Protection Securities
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CATS: introduced by Solomon Brothers in August 1982. TIGRs: created by Merrill Lynch Process:
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Other investment banks also invented their own receipts called trademark zero-coupon Treasury security Limited liquidity in the secondary market There existed default risk TRs: issued by a group of primary dealers in the government market The settlement required physical delivery In February 1985, the Treasury carried out STRIPS program
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Security Par: $100 million Coupon: 10%, semiannual Maturity: 5 years Coupon: $5 million Receipt in: 6 months Coupon: $5 million Receipt in: 1 year Coupon: $5 million Receipt in: 5 years Maturity value: $100 million Receipt in 5 years Maturity value: $5 million Maturity: 6 months Maturity value: $5 million Maturity: 1 year Maturity value: $5 million Maturity: 5 years Maturity value: $100 million Maturity: 5 years Cash flow Zero-coupon Treasury securities created
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Minimum amount: $100 Investment increment should be multiples of $100 The components can be reassembled into a fully constituted security the CUSIP numbers of interest components are different from the CUSIP numbers of principal components and fully constituted securities
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Interest earned on STRIPS must be reported in the year in which it is earned Some countries consider the interest from principal strips as capital gain which enjoys a preferential tax treatment
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Zero-coupon security backed by Treasury No credit risk Good for investors who want to receive a known payment on a specific future date No reinvestment risk because the payment to the investor only occurs at maturity. Tax-deferred accounts such as individual retirement accounts Non-taxable accounts such as pension funds
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The coupon and principal payments are “stripped” from a T-bond and sold as individual zero-coupon bonds STRIPS are debts of the U.S. government so no default risk Good investment choice for pension funds and retirement accounts though the gain is subjected to federal tax
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Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities ◦ Securities issued by the Treasury (bonds or notes) ◦ Protected from inflation by adjusting principal and coupon payments accordingly Designed to protect the purchasing power of the investor Created in 1997 by the U.S. Treasury
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TIPS uses the Consumer Price Index (CPI) as a standard for inflation measurement Each coupon payment (and eventually the principal) are adjusted for inflation or deflation by multiplying the principal value by the inflation rate
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No default risk, as they are offered by the U.S. Treasury No inflation risk real rate of return is protected as coupon payments and principal payments are adjusted by yearly inflation (as stated by CPI)
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TIPS are used as a way to hedge inflation risk However, as it is known with other hedges, such as futures contracts, while downside is limited, the upside is taken away as well With TIPS, when deflation occurs, our security value decreases proportionally With a normal bond, deflation would be a good thing as rates are locked in and our real rate of return would increase
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“Safest investment in the world” ◦ No default risk ◦ No inflation risk However, because of these advantages, TIPS do not offer a high return
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Both issued by the Treasury without default risk Interests of both securities are taxable Both offer unique advantages beyond normal treasury securities of bonds, notes, and bills ◦ STRIPS – Zero-coupon security backed by Treasury ◦ TIPS – Protects purchasing power of investor
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