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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Uncle Sam’s Debt 2 Views
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Description:
Time to learn about Uncle Sam's debt...but sadly, we'll get no insight as to his fashion choices.
Transcript
- 00:00
llooprinciples of finance a la shmoop Uncle Sam's debt treasure it's not just
- 00:08
for pirates anymore however we're not talking about those big bins of booty [pirate with parrot takes treasure out of chest]
- 00:13
but US federal bonds aka Uncle Sam's debt and yes it's a stretch but federal [bond on a table]
- 00:19
bonds are known as Treasuries at least in pirate circles they're backed by The
- 00:24
Full Faith and Credit of the US ie our ability to tax our hard-working citizens [money being processed]
Full Transcript
- 00:29
meaning that Uncle Sam guarantees that every dollar of debt in whatever flavor
- 00:33
it comes he builds denotes bonds and so on will be paid back big uncle can make
- 00:38
this guarantee because he also owns the only bond printing presses for money [bond printing press]
- 00:43
the only legal ones anyway if it had to the government could crank up the
- 00:47
printing presses and literally print money to pay everyone of course it [women printing money]
- 00:51
doesn't guarantee that this money will actually be worth anything if it does
- 00:55
that print too much paper wealth out of thin air and it can end up well not
- 00:59
buying much check out this carton of milk in Zimbabwe it costs two Zimbabwean
- 01:04
dollars in 1957 today it costs sixteen million yeah they got a little carried
- 01:10
away with their printing presses and in reality just to keep things fair and [money printing press]
- 01:14
square the actual paper money like $20 bills tens fibers etc well they
- 01:19
represent a very small fraction of the total dough that Uncle Sam actually [pie chart]
- 01:23
prints meaning that most of the money raised by the government comes in the
- 01:27
form of bonds they sell to the investing public in batches of zillions like one
- 01:33
bond offering can place a little fifty billion dollars in fifteen minutes and
- 01:37
it take the US Mint while an awfully long time to print that much in 20s but
- 01:41
Uncle Sam's financial cooking comes in a few flavors let's cruise them here just [money thrown onto a skillet]
- 01:45
so everyone's on the same red white and blue page well first up Treasury bonds
- 01:50
Treasuries are referred to by different names depending on the duration or their
- 01:53
maturity let's start with tea bills here short maturity like ours here in the
- 01:58
shmoop writing stable of eleven-year-old their longest maturity is one year but [child typing on laptop]
- 02:02
while most of them are three and six month maturities technically 91 and
- 02:07
82 days accountant well these are very actively traded in secondary markets [money passing hands in alley]
- 02:12
their liquidity is immense so much so that tea bills are considered to be the
- 02:16
equivalent of cash on balance sheets because of their safety and liquidity
- 02:20
yields are very low like you don't get much interest for owning them also [writing on white board]
- 02:25
t-bills don't carry any stated interest rate rather they're sold at a discount
- 02:30
meaning that you pay less than their face value at maturity you receive the
- 02:34
entire face value and the difference between the face and what you paid is
- 02:38
considered the interest or appreciation ie you Biman two dollars and then six
- 02:45
months later they pay you a grand so that eighteen bucks and appreciation
- 02:48
that's considered interest or Lutz's tax that ways ordinary income in this
- 02:52
respect tea bills are the only federal zero coupon bonds
- 02:56
next stop tea notes well these bonds carry a stated interest rates actually
- 03:00
an interest rate number on the face of them the maturity is medium-term and tea
- 03:04
notes are issued n maturities of two three five seven and ten years interest
- 03:08
is paid every six months like a normal bond the sharp-eyed among you might have
- 03:12
noticed that there is a gap between the one year maximum tea bill and the two [t-bill and t-note on table]
- 03:16
year tea note no that's not a typo there's no maturity offered between one
- 03:21
and two years and we have no idea why okay next
- 03:24
tbonz oh wait that's a tea bond so because we had a typo there in the
- 03:28
script to get rid of the e there should be a deep anything with a maturity
- 03:31
longer than 10 years is called a tea bond for a long time the Treasury [writing on white board]
- 03:35
30-year bond was the benchmark for all long-term bonds right it's called just
- 03:40
the 30 because it was so popular well the government discontinued their
- 03:44
issuance in the 1990s but demand was so great that the government reinstituted
- 03:48
them it was a big oops well lastly show us your tips wait what [bond does strip tease]
- 03:52
does that mean tea notes and tea bonds do not adjust for inflation and
- 03:56
inflation risk is one of the risks that investors assume in purchasing [writing on white board]
- 04:01
Treasuries right because the interest is so low a lot of times inflation beats
- 04:05
them well inflation over the last decade or
- 04:07
so has been around two and a half percent a year give or take with
- 04:11
government paper hovering right around the same rate well if you're a 40%
- 04:15
marginal tax payer your after-tax return on two and a half percent paper is only [writing on white board]
- 04:19
about one and half percent meaning that you're actually
- 04:22
losing a percent in buying power each year and it's compounded year after year
- 04:27
that you're invested in this kind of government paper so you're losing more
- 04:30
and more as you go along well not everyone in the government is completely
- 04:34
clueless however and the Fed came up with a piece of paper which answers the [government meeting]
- 04:38
above big issue in the form of tips that is Treasury inflation-protected
- 04:42
securities well these bonds carry interest which [writing on white board]
- 04:46
goes up and down based on government stated interest rates avoiding much of
- 04:50
the inflation risk associated with very low interest rate government bonds well
- 04:55
these bonds will typically have maturities of between five and fifteen
- 04:58
years and as the name suggests they adjust in lockstep with inflation so
- 05:02
your purchasing power will be M more or less protected that's the upside the
- 05:07
downside is that the interest rate on tips is usually really paltry so you're
- 05:11
in for the long run and I'll think about equities instead how do you invest in
- 05:15
Treasuries well if you're buying in size like in hundreds of millions of dollars
- 05:19
well you call different dealers and you just get quotes the unwashed masses like
- 05:24
the rest of us can buy them through a normal broker but a cheaper way to do it
- 05:27
is just through an arm of the US Treasury called Treasury direct recall [website]
- 05:31
that the interest that any bond pays is called the coupon and it's expressed as [writing on white board]
- 05:36
a percentage of the face value and remember that bonds are usually issued
- 05:39
with face values of a thousand bucks so a five percent bond will pay five
- 05:43
percent of a thousand dollars or fifty dollars each year paid in two
- 05:47
installments of twenty five dollars every six months the most issuers come
- 05:51
right out and say what the coupon will be Treasuries do not know the feds like
- 05:56
to toy with investors those back interest rates for Treasuries are set by [uncle sam with a rattle plays with baby]
- 06:00
what's called an auction process think eBay for government bonds know the
- 06:04
details of Treasury auction are way above what you need to know in real life [Ebay website]
- 06:08
and for this course but here are the basics one the Treasury announces that
- 06:11
it'll be auctioning a particular maturities say five hundred million
- 06:14
dollars worth of three year notes interested buyers will then submit the
- 06:19
amount they want to purchase and the yield or interest rate they're willing
- 06:22
to accept all of this is done electronically it's not a physical [hands typing]
- 06:25
auction where the Treasury secretary drops the hammer and yells I sold to the
- 06:29
lady in the fish at three on auction day the Treasury opens the submitted bids
- 06:33
and then parcels out the bonds the folks with the lowest yield bids get their
- 06:37
orders filled first followed by the next lowest yield and so on and so on until
- 06:41
all the bonds are sold well if you wonder why it's done based on yield
- 06:45
remember that the price and yield are inverse to each other the lower the [writing on white board]
- 06:49
yield of the higher the price of the bond and the government is trying to pay
- 06:52
the lowest amount of yield that has to to rent money perceived as the safest
- 06:56
debt on the planet everything is priced in the world as a spread to Treasuries
- 07:01
that is whatever Treasuries are paying plus some incremental markup because
- 07:05
well regardless of whom you're lending to it's riskier than US Treasuries so
- 07:09
want to guaranteed but maybe modest retirement yeah all right set sail for
- 07:14
Treasury Island yeah safest pirate island [pirate sailing on ship with parrot]
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