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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK
Fiscal Agent of the United States
r Circular No. 5 4 6 7 1
L
March 4, 1964 J

OFFERING OF TWO SERIES OF TREASURY BILLS
$1,300,000,000 of 91-Day Bills, Additional Amount, Series Dated December 12,1963, Due June 11,1964
(To Be Issued March 12, 1964)
$900,000,000 of 182-Day Bills, Dated March 12, 1964, Due September 10, 1964
To All Incorporated Banks and Trust Companies, and Others
Concerned, in the Second Federal Reserve District:

Following is the text of a notice issued by the Treasury Department, released for publication today at 4 p.m.,
Eastern Standard time:
The Treasury Department, by this public notice, invites
tenders for two series of Treasury bills to the aggregate
amount of $2,200,000,000, or thereabouts, for cash and in ex­
change for Treasury bills maturing March 12, 1964, in the
amount of $2,200,377,000, as follow s:
91-day bills (to maturity date) to be issued March 12,
1964, in the amount of $1,300,000,000, or thereabouts,
representing an additional amount of bills dated
December 12, 1963, and to mature June 11, 1964, origi­
nally issued in the amount of $800,981,000, the addi­
tional and original bills to be freely interchangeable.
182-day bills, for $900,000,000, or thereabouts, to be
dated March 12, 1964, and to mature September 10,
1964.

submitting tenders will be advised o f the acceptance or rejec­
tion thereof. The Secretary of the Treasury expressly
reserves the right to accept or reject any or all tenders, in
whole or in part, and his action in any such respect shall be
final. Subject to these reservations, noncompetitive tenders
for $200,000 or less for the additional bills dated December
12, 1963 (91 days remaining until maturity date on June 11,
1964) and noncompetitive tenders for $100,000 or less for the
182-day bills without stated price from any one bidder will be
accepted in full at the average price (in three decimals) of ac­
cepted competitive bids for the respective issues. Settlement
for accepted tenders in accordance with the bids must be
made or completed at the Federal Reserve Bank on March
12, 1964, in cash or other immediately available funds or in
a like face amount of Treasury bills maturing March 12,
1964. Cash and exchange tenders will receive equal treat­
ment. Cash adjustments will be made for differences be­
tween the par value of maturing bills accepted in exchange
and the issue price of the new bills.

The bills of both series will be issued on a discount basis
under competitive and noncompetitive bidding as hereinafter
provided, and at maturity their face amount will be payable
without interest. They will be issued in bearer form only, and
in denominations of $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, $50,000, $100,000,
$500,000 and $1,000,000 (maturity value).
Tenders will be received at Federal Reserve Banks and
Branches up to the closing hour, one-thirty p.m., Eastern
Standard time, Monday, March 9, 1964. Tenders will not be
received at the Treasury Department. Washington. Each
tender must be for an even multiple of $1,000, and in the case
of competitive tenders the price offered must be expressed on
the basis of 100, with not more than three decimals, e.g.,
99.925. Fractions may not be used. It is urged that tenders
be made on the printed forms and forwarded in the special
envelopes which will be supplied by Federal Reserve Banks
or Branches on application therefor.
Banking institutions generally may submit tenders for
account of customers, provided the names of the customers
are set forth in such tenders. Others than banking institu­
tions will not be permitted to submit tenders except for their
own account. Tenders will be received without deposit from
incorporated banks and trust companies and from respon­
sible and recognized dealers in investment securities. Tenders
from others must be accompanied by payment of 2 percent of
the face amount of Treasury bills applied for, unless the
tenders are accompanied by an express guaranty of payment
by an incorporated bank or trust company.

The income derived from Treasury bills, whether interest
or gain from the sale or other disposition of the bills, does
not have any exemption, as such, and loss from the sale or
other disposition of Treasury bills does not have any special
treatment, as such, under the Internal Revenue Code of
1954. The bills are subject to estate, inheritance, gift or
other excise taxes, whether Federal or State, but are exempt
from all taxation now or hereafter imposed on the principal
or interest thereof by any State, or any of the possessions
of the United States, or by any local taxing authority. For
purposes of taxation the amount of discount at which Treas­
ury bills are originally sold by the United States is con­
sidered to be interest. Under Sections 454(b) and 1221(5)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 the amount of discount
at which bills issued hereunder are sold is not considered
to accrue until such bills are sold, redeemed or otherwise
disposed of, and such bills are excluded from consideration
as capital assets. Accordingly, the owner of Treasury bills
(other than life insurance companies) issued hereunder need
include in his income tax return only the difference between
the price paid for such bills, whether on original issue or on
subsequent purchase, and the amount actually received either
upon sale or redemption at maturity during the taxable year
for which the return is made, as ordinary gain or loss.

Immediately after the closing hour, tenders will be opened
at the Federal Reserve Banks and Branches, following which
public announcement will be made by the Treasury Depart­
ment of the amount and price range of accepted bids. Those

Treasury Department Circular No. 418 (current revision)
and this notice prescribe the terms o f the Treasury bills and
govern the conditions of their issue. Copies of the circular
may be obtained from any Federal Reserve Bank or Branch.

This Bank will receive tenders for both series up to 1 :30 p.m., Eastern Standard time, Monday, March 9,
1964, at the Securities Department of its Head Office and at its Buffalo Branch. Tender forms for the respective
series are enclosed. Please use the appropriate forms to submit tenders and return them in an envelope marked
“ Tender for Treasury Bills.” Tenders may be submitted by telegraph, subject to written confirmation; they may
not be submitted by telephone. Payment fo r the Treasury bills cannot be made by credit through the Treasury
Tax and Loan Account. Settlement must be made in cash or other immediately available funds or in maturing
Treasury bills.
Results of the last offering o f Treasury bills (91-day bills to be issued March 5, 1964, representing an addi­
tional amount of bills dated December 5, 1963, and maturing June 4, 1964; and 182-day bills dated March 5, 1964,
maturing September 3, 1964) are shown on the reverse side of this circular.


19 14


A

lfred

H ayes,

President.
F I F T I E T H

A N N I V E R S A R Y

( over)

19 6 4

RESULTS OF LAST OFFERING OF TREASURY BILLS (TW O SERIES TO BE ISSUED
MARCH 5, 1964)

Range of Accepted Competitive Bids
91-Day Treasury Bills
Maturing June 4, 1964
Price

182-Day Treasury Bills
Maturing September 3, 1964

Approx. equiv.
annual rate

Price

Approx. equiv.
annual rate

99.096a

3.576%

98.093b

3.772%

......................................

99.092

3.592%

98.086

3.786%

Average ................................

99.093

3.589%!

98.090

3.777%!

H i g h ......................................
Low

b Excepting

a Excepting one tender of $100,000.

one tender of $50,000.

1 On a coupon issue of the same length and for the same amount invested, the return on these bills would provide yields
of 3.67 percent for the 91-day bills, and 3.90 percent for the 182-day bills. Interest rates on bills are quoted in terms of bank
discount, with the return related to the face amount of the bills payable at maturity rather than the amount invested, and their
length in actual number of days related to a 360-day year. In contrast, yields on certificates, notes, and bonds are computed
in terms of interest on the amount invested, and relate the number of days remaining in an interest payment period to the
actual number of days in the period, with semiannual compounding if more than one coupon period is involved.

(97 percent of the amount o f 91-day bills
bid for at the low price was accepted.)

(23 percent of the amount of 182-day bills
bid for at the low price was accepted.)

Total Tenders Applied for and Accepted (By Federal Reserve Districts)
91-Day Treasury Bills
Maturing June 4, 1964

Boston ..........................
New York .....................
Philadelphia

................

Cleveland ......................
Richmond
Atlanta

....................

........................

$

40,388,000
1,634,531,000
28,373,000
27,596,000
10,162,000
25,502,000

$

18,926,000

Accepted

Applied for

Accepted

A pplied for

District

182-Day Treasury Bills
Maturing September 3, 1964

$

3,983,000

$

2,833,000

896,830,000

1,777,915,000

758,220,000

13,373,000

8,852,000

3,406,000

26,676,000

41,215,000

20,700,000

10,127,000

2,420,000

2,395,000

18,640,000

8,518,000

6,748,000
44,204,000

........................

219,105,000

123,588,000

130,771,000

St. Louis ......................

41,714,000

34,851,000

13,784,000

12,284,000

Minneapolis

................

17,683,000

9,083,000

5,795,000

3,095,000

Kansas City ................

25,990,000

20,630,000

10,494,000

6,194,000

Dallas

..........................

25,633,000

16,591,000

9,217,000

3,957,000

San F ran cisco..............

149,052,000

112,479,000

84,971,000

38,410,000

Chicago

Total

............

$2,245,729,000

$ 1,301,794,000c

$2,097,935,000

c Includes $220,510,000 noncom petitive tenders accepted at the average price of 99.093.
d Includes $56,678,000 noncom petitive tenders accepted at the average price of 98.090.




$902,446,000d