Home > Glossary > Treasury Note
Treasury Note
Categories: Bonds and Treasuries, Legal, ,
Like us treasury bills, treasury notes are debt securities issued by the US government and backed by its full faith and credit. They are available at issue through treasury direct in denominations of $1,000 to $5 million and are traded in the secondary market after issue.Notes are intermediate-term securities, with a maturity dates of two, three, five or ten years. The interest you earn on treasury notes is exempt from state and local, but not federal, taxes. And while the rate at which the interest is paid is generally less than on long-term corporate bonds, the shorter term means less inflation risk.
Featured term of the day
Definition / Meaning of
Synthetic Investment
Categories: Finance,
A synthetic investment simulates the return of an actual investment, but the return is actually created by using a combination of financial instruments, such as options contracts or an equity index and debt securities, rather than a single conventional investment. For example, an investment firm might create a synthetic index that seeks to outperform a particular index by purchasing options contracts rather than the equities the actual index owns, and using the money it saves to buy cash equivalents or other debt securities to enhance its return on the derivatives. Options spreads, structured products, and certain investments in real estate and guaranteed investment contracts can be described as synthetic products. While they are artificial, they can play a legitimate role in an individual or institutional investor's portfolio as a way to reduce risk, increase diversification, enjoy a stronger return, or meet needs that conventional investments don't satisfy. However, synthetic investments may carry added fees and add more complexity than you are comfortable dealing with.
Most popular terms
1. NASD2. Margin Clause
3. Lifetime Learning Credit
4. Price-to-earnings Ratio (P/E)
5. Act-as-one Provision
6. Call Option
7. Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation And Amortization
8. Section 8 Declaration Of Excusable Nonuse
9. Concurrent Causation
10. Competence
Search a term
Browse by alphabet
A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
H | I | J | K | L | M | N |
O | P | Q | R | S | T | U |
V | W | X | Y | Z | # |
Browse by category
AccountingBanking
Bankruptcy Assistance
Bonds and Treasuries
Brokerages
Business and Management
Compliance and Governance
Credit and Debt
E-commerce
Economics
Estate Planning
Forex
Fraud
Fundamental Analysis
Futures
Global
Insurance
International Trade
Investing and Trading
Ipos
Legal
Loan and Mortgage
Mergers and Acquisitions
Mutual Funds
Operation and Production
Options
Patent
Personnel Management
Real Estate
Retirement and Pension
Statistics and Risk Management
Stocks
Strategies
Tax
Technical Analysis
Venture Capital