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FED ER AL RESERVE BANK O F NEW YORK
Fiscal Agent of the United States
C ircular No. 8 7 8 2 *1
M arch 26, 1980
J

[

OFFERING OF TWO SERIES OF TREASURY BILLS
$3,400,000,000 of 91-Day Bills, Additional Amount, Series Dated January 3, 1980, Due July 3, 1980
(To Be Issued April 3, 1980)
$3,400,000,000 of 182-Day Bills, Dated April 3, 1980, Due October 2, 1980
To A ll 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 D epartm ent:
The Department of the Treasury, by this public notice, invites
tenders for two series of Treasury bills totaling approximately
$6,800 million, to be issued April 3, 1980. This offering will pro­
vide $500 million of new cash for the Treasury as the maturing bills
are outstanding in the amount of $6,306 million, including $515
million currently held by Federal Reserve Banks as agents for
foreign and international monetary authorities and $1,746 million
currently held by Federal Reserve Banks for their own account.
The two series offered are as follows:
91-day bills (to maturity date) for approximately $3,400
million, representing an additional amount of bills dated
January 3, 1980, and to mature July 3, 1980 (C U SIP
No. 912793 4U7), originally issued in the amount of
$3,373 million, the additional and original bills to be
freely interchangeable.
182-day bills for approximately $3,400 million to be dated
April 3, 1980, and to mature October 2, 1980 (C U SIP
No. 912793 5H5).
Both series of bills will be issued for cash and in exchange for
Treasury bills maturing April 3, 1980. Tenders from Federal
Reserve Banks for themselves and as agents of foreign and inter­
national monetary authorities will be accepted at the weighted
average prices of accepted competitive tenders. Additional amounts
of the bills may be issued to Federal Reserve Banks, as agents of
foreign and international monetary authorities, to the extent that
the aggregate amount of tenders for such accounts exceeds the
aggregate amount of maturing bills held by them.
The bills will be issued on a discount basis under competitive and
noncompetitive bidding, and at maturity their par amount will be
payable without interest. Both series of bills will be issued entirely
in book-entry form in a minimum amount of $10,000 and in any
higher $5,000 multiple, on the records either of the Federal Reserve
Banks and Branches, or of the Department of the Treasury.
Tenders will be received at Federal Reserve Banks and Branches
and at the Bureau of the Public Debt, Washington, D.C. 20226, up
to 1 :30 p.m., Eastern Standard time, Monday, March 31, 1980.
Form PD 4632-2 (for 26-week series) or Form PD 4632-3 (for
13-week series) should be used to submit tenders for bills to be
maintained on the book-entry records of the Department of the
T reasury.
Each tender must be for a minimum of $10,000. Tenders over
$10,000 must be in multiples of $5,000. 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.
Banking institutions and dealers who make primary markets in
Government securities and report daily to the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York their positions in and borrowings on such
securities may submit tenders for account of customers, if the
names of the customers and the amount for each customer are
furnished. Others are only permitted to submit tenders for their
own account. Each tender must state the amount of any net long
position in the bills being offered if such position is in excess of $200
million. This information should reflect positions held at the close of
business on the day prior to the auction. Such positions would in­

clude bills acquired through “when issued” trading, and futures and
forward transactions as well as holdings of outstanding bills with
the same maturity date as the new ottering, e.g., bills with three
months to maturity previously offered as six month bills. Dealers
who make primary markets in Government securities and report
daily to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York their positions in
and borrowings on such securities, when submitting tenders for cus­
tomers, must submit a separate tender for each customer whose net
long position in the bill being offered exceeds $200 million.
Payment for the full par amount of the bills applied for must
accompany all tenders submitted for bills to be maintained on the
book-entry records of the Department of the Treasury. A cash
adjustment will be made on all accepted tenders for the difference
between the par payment submitted and the actual issue price as
determined in the auction.
No deposit need accompany tenders from incorporated banks
and trust companies and from responsible and recognized dealers
in investment securities for bills to be maintained on the book-entry
records of Federal Reserve Banks and Branches. A deposit of
2 percent of the par amount of the bills applied for must accom­
pany tenders for such bills from others, unless an express guaranty
of payment by an incorporated bank or trust company accompanies
the tenders.
Public announcement will be made by the Department of the
Treasury of the amount and price range of accepted bids. Competi­
tive bidders will be advised of the acceptance or rejection of their
tenders. The Secretary of the Treasury expressly reserves the right
to accept or reject any or all tenders, in whole or in part, and the
Secretary’s action shall be final. Subject to these reservations,
noncompetitive tenders for each issue for $500,000 or less without
stated price from any one bidder will be accepted in full at the
weighted average price (in three decimals) of accepted competitive
bids for the respective issues.
Settlement for accepted tenders for bills to be maintained on the
book-entry records of Federal Reserve Banks and Branches must
be made or completed at the Federal Reserve Bank or Branch on
April 3, 1980, in cash or other immediately available funds or
in Treasury bills maturing April 3, 1980. Cash adjustments will
be made for differences between the par value of the maturing bills
accepted in exchange and the issue price of the new bills.
Under Sections 454(b) and 1221(5) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1954 the amount of discount at which these bills are sold
is considered to accrue when the bills are sold, redeemed or other­
wise disposed of, and the bills are excluded from consideration as
capital assets. Accordingly, the owner of these bills (other than
life insurance companies) must include in his or her Federal in­
come tax return, as ordinary gain or loss, the difference between
the price paid for the bills, whether on original issue or on sub­
sequent purchase, and the amount actually received either upon sale
or redemption at maturity during the taxable year for which the
return is made.
Department of the Treasury Circulars, Public Debt Series—Nos.
26-76 and 27-76, and this notice, prescribe the terms of these Treas­
ury bills and govern the conditions of their issue. Copies of the
circulars and tender forms may be obtained from any Federal Re­
serve Bank or Branch, or from the Bureau of the Public Debt.

This Bank will receive tenders for both series up to 1 :30 p.m., Eastern Standard time, Monday, March 31,
1980, 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 the enclosed envelope marked “T en­
der for Treasury Bills.” Form s for submitting tenders directly to the Treasury are available from the Government
Bond Division of this Bank. Tenders not requiring a deposit may be submitted by telegraph, subject to w rit­
ten confirmation; no tenders may be submitted by telephone. Payment for 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 weekly offering of Treasury bills are shown on the reverse side of this circular.




T

homas

M. T

im l e n

,

F irst Vice President.

RESULTS OF LAST WEEKLY OFFERING OF TREASURY BILLS
(TWO SERIES TO BE ISSUED MARCH 27, 1980)

Range of Accepted Competitive Bids
9 1 -Day Treasury Bills
Maturing June 26, 1980
P r ic e

H ig h ..................................................
L o w ....................................................
A v erag e............................................

95.862 a
95.803
95.821

D is c o u n t
R a te

I n v e s tm e n t
R a te 1

16.370%
16.604%
16.532%

17.31%
17.57%
17.49%

182 -Day Treasury Bills
Maturing September 25 , 1980
Discount
Investment
Price
Rate
Rate 1
92.174
91.936
92.063

15.480%
15.951%
15.700%

17.03%
17.59%
17.29%

1 Equivalent coupon-issue yield.
a Excepting one tender of $500,000.

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

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

Total Tenders Received and Accepted
9 1 -Day Treasury Bills
Maturing June 26, 1980
By F.R. District (and U.S. Treasury)

B oston......................................... .
New Y o rk ...................................
Philadelphia...............................
C leveland....................................
R ichm ond....................................
A tlan ta.........................................
C hicago........................................
St. L o u is......................................
M inneapolis................................
Kansas C ity ................................
D allas...........................................
San F ran cisco ............................
U.S. T re a su ry ............................
T

o t a l s ...........................................

Received

$

66,305,000
7,244,235,000
42,325,000
95,620,000
80,030,000
77,750,000
400,425,000
51,780,000
19,370,000
50,250,000
25,425,000
360,380,000

182 -Day Treasury Bills
Maturing September 25 , 1980
Received

Accepted

$

66,305,000
2,733,415,000
38,795,000
64,460,000
55,030,000
69,750,000
77,315,000
26,865,000
19,370,000
48,030,000
25,425,000
120,380,000

$

Accepted

60,235,000
4,230,390,000
25,675,000
29,010,000
47,585,000
66,855,000
307,035,000
42,665,000
8,105,000
43,960,000
13,500,000
355,825,000

$ 60,235,000
2,562,340,000
25,675,000
29,010,000
47,585,000
56,855,000
187,035,000
25,665,000
8,105,000
43,960,000
13,500,000
265,575,000

55,990,000

55,990,000

74,520,000

74,520,000

$8,569,885,000

$3,401,130,000

$5,305,360,000

$3,400,060,000

$6,265,340,000
1,016,995,000

$1,096,585,000
1,016,995,000

$3,655,270,000
680.025.000

$1,749,970,000
680.025.000

$7,282,335,000
935,000,000
352,550,000

$2,113,580,000
935,000,000
352,550,000

$4,335,295,000
944.165.000
25,900,000

$2,429,995,000
944.165.000
25,900,000

$8,569,885,000

$3,401,130,000

$5,305,360,000

$3,400,060,000

B y c la s s o f b id d e r

Public
Competitive .......................... .
Noncompetitive .................... .
S

ubtotals

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

Federal R eserv e........................
Foreign Official Institutions ...
T

otals

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