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Graph and download economic data for Market Value of Marketable Treasury Debt (MVMTD027MNFRBDAL) from Jan 1942 to Sep 2025 about market value, debt, Treasury, and USA.
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TwitterOf the nearly ** trillion U.S. dollars of marketable U.S. treasury securities that were outstanding as of June 2025, ************** were for treasury notes. Treasury notes have maturities of two, three, five, seven or 10 years, and have a coupon payment every six months. This contrasts to treasury bills, with maturity of one year or less, and treasury bonds, which have a maturity of 30 years.
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Graph and download economic data for Market Value of Gross Federal Debt (MVGFD027MNFRBDAL) from Jan 1942 to Sep 2025 about market value, debt, gross, federal, and USA.
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United States - Market Value of Marketable Treasury Debt was 28320.90000 Bil. of $ in September of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, United States - Market Value of Marketable Treasury Debt reached a record high of 28320.90000 in September of 2025 and a record low of 40.60000 in January of 1942. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for United States - Market Value of Marketable Treasury Debt - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on December of 2025.
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TwitterAs of December 2024, Japan held United States treasury securities totaling about 1.06 trillion U.S. dollars. Foreign holders of United States treasury debt According to the Federal Reserve and U.S. Department of the Treasury, foreign countries held a total of 8.5 trillion U.S. dollars in U.S. treasury securities as of December 2024. Of the total held by foreign countries, Japan and Mainland China held the greatest portions, with China holding 759 billion U.S. dollars in U.S. securities. The U.S. public debt In 2023, the United States had a total public national debt of 33.2 trillion U.S. dollars, an amount that has been rising steadily, particularly since 2008. In 2023, the total interest expense on debt held by the public of the United States reached 678 billion U.S. dollars, while 197 billion U.S. dollars in interest expense were intra governmental debt holdings. Total outlays of the U.S. government were 6.1 trillion U.S. dollars in 2023. By 2029, spending is projected to reach 8.3 trillion U.S. dollars.
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TwitterA table that summarizes the amounts outstanding for the securities issued by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service adjusted for Unamortized Discount on Treasury Bills and Zero Coupon Treasury Bonds, Other Debt (old debt issued before 1917 and old currency called United States Notes), Debt held by the Federal Financing Bank and Guaranteed Debt of Government Agencies that makes up the Total Public Debt Subject to Limit amount.
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TwitterAs of 2023, the United States had the largest bond market worldwide, accounting for nearly 40 percent of the total. The European Union was second in the ranking, accouting for almost one fifth of the total outstanding value of corporate and government bonds worldwid, followed by China with 16.3 percent.
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Graph and download economic data for Monetary Authority; Total Treasury Securities; Asset, Market Value Levels (BOGZ1LM713061103A) from 1945 to 2024 about monetary authorities, market value, Treasury, securities, assets, and USA.
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Net Purchases of US Treasury Bonds and Notes increased by 23700 million dollars in September of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Net Purchases of US Treasury Bonds and Notes - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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TwitterAs of July 22, 2025, the yield for a ten-year U.S. government bond was 4.38 percent, while the yield for a two-year bond was 3.88 percent. This represents an inverted yield curve, whereby bonds of longer maturities provide a lower yield, reflecting investors' expectations for a decline in long-term interest rates. Hence, making long-term debt holders open to more risk under the uncertainty around the condition of financial markets in the future. That markets are uncertain can be seen by considering both the short-term fluctuations, and the long-term downward trend, of the yields of U.S. government bonds from 2006 to 2021, before the treasury yield curve increased again significantly in the following years. What are government bonds? Government bonds, otherwise called ‘sovereign’ or ‘treasury’ bonds, are financial instruments used by governments to raise money for government spending. Investors give the government a certain amount of money (the ‘face value’), to be repaid at a specified time in the future (the ‘maturity date’). In addition, the government makes regular periodic interest payments (called ‘coupon payments’). Once initially issued, government bonds are tradable on financial markets, meaning their value can fluctuate over time (even though the underlying face value and coupon payments remain the same). Investors are attracted to government bonds as, provided the country in question has a stable economy and political system, they are a very safe investment. Accordingly, in periods of economic turmoil, investors may be willing to accept a negative overall return in order to have a safe haven for their money. For example, once the market value is compared to the total received from remaining interest payments and the face value, investors have been willing to accept a negative return on two-year German government bonds between 2014 and 2021. Conversely, if the underlying economy and political structures are weak, investors demand a higher return to compensate for the higher risk they take on. Consequently, the return on bonds in emerging markets like Brazil are consistently higher than that of the United States (and other developed economies). Inverted yield curves When investors are worried about the financial future, it can lead to what is called an ‘inverted yield curve’. An inverted yield curve is where investors pay more for short term bonds than long term, indicating they do not have confidence in long-term financial conditions. Historically, the yield curve has historically inverted before each of the last five U.S. recessions. The last U.S. yield curve inversion occurred at several brief points in 2019 – a trend which continued until the Federal Reserve cut interest rates several times over that year. However, the ultimate trigger for the next recession was the unpredicted, exogenous shock of the global coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, showing how such informal indicators may be grounded just as much in coincidence as causation.
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TwitterA table that summarizes the amounts outstanding for all the securities issued by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service that makes up the Total Public Debt Outstanding amount.
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TwitterA table that shows in detail by CUSIP, the interest rate, the STRIP CUSIP, maturity date, and amounts outstanding for securities held in unstripped form, stripped form and amount that have been reconstituted. STRIP stands for Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities. This is a security that has been stripped down into separate securities representing the principal and each interest payment. Each payment has its own identification number and can be traded individually. These securities are also known as zero-coupon bonds.
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Graph and download economic data for Assets: Securities Held Outright: U.S. Treasury Securities: All: Wednesday Level (TREAST) from 2002-12-18 to 2025-11-26 about maturity, Treasury, securities, and USA.
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If you find this dataset useful, pls drop a like.
Here you can find daily in-depth data about the most liquid US bonds ETFs. I provide prices, volumes, and connected options' data. In my opinion, it's the best ETFs datasets on Kaggle you can find.
The data is presented in CSV format as follows: 1. Date. 2. Close Price. 3. Open Price. 4. Low Price. 5. High Price. 6. Volume - Total number of shares traded on security on the date. 7. Average Bid Ask Spread % - Average of all bid/ask spreads taken as a percentage of the mid price. 8. Total Put Volume - The total amount of put option contracts (all strike prices and all expiration dates) traded during the previous trading day. If there were no trades the previous day, this field will return the latest volume available, if any, from the most recent 10 trading days. 9. Total Call Volume - The total amount of call option contracts (all strike prices and all expiration dates) traded during the previous trading day. If there were no trades the previous day, this field will return the latest volume available, if any, from the most recent 10 trading days. 10. Put Call Open Interest Total - Total number of call and put option contracts (all strike prices and expiration dates) that have not been closed, liquidated, or delivered for the security during the previous trading day. 11. Call Open Interest Total - The total number of call option contracts (all available strikes and expirations) outstanding for a given underlying as of the close of the previous trading day, as reported by the exchange. 12. Short Interest - Total number of shares investors have sold short but have not yet bought back. 13. Short Interest Ratio - Short Interest divided by the average daily trading volume.
P.S. For historical values, the dates represent the end date of the period the data is for, not the date when the data was made publicly available. For example, if the data is for the two-week period ending on October 15 and that data is made publicly available on October 25, the date shown is October 15. For options' columns and bid-ask spread the data available from 2012 year.
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The Global Bond Market is Segmented by Type (Treasury Bonds, Municipal Bonds, Corporate Bonds, High-Yield Bonds, Mortgage-Backed Securities, and More), by Issuer (Public Sector Issuers, Private Sector Issuers), by Sectors (Energy and Utilities, Technology, Media and Telecom, Healthcare, Consumers, Industrial, Real Estate and More), and Region. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
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TwitterIn 2018, the average total volume of treasury securities traded per day was over 547 billion U.S. dollars. This means that every day the market was open, the average amount of U.S. government securities bought and sold amounted to half a trillion U.S. dollars in that year.
What are treasury securities?
Treasury securities are U.S. government debt, bonds sold to finance the United States government. Since the United States is seen as a guaranteed investment, these bonds are often used by large financial firms as collateral. The yield on a Treasury bond is minimal, but these institutions often do not hold them until maturity, instead trading them on secondary market.
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The federal funds rate is the rate the Federal Reserve charges banks for overnight loans. Other assets, such as mortgaged backed securities, can also be used like treasury securities. Mortgage backed securities are bundles of home loans packaged together. Such bundling makes the overall security safer, unless there is a systemic shock to the housing market which would undermine the entire package.
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TwitterHigh-level information on the federal government's outstanding debts, holdings, and the statutory debt limit. Data is reported monthly.
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TwitterForeign holdings of U.S. securities, and U.S. holdings of foreign securities. Major foreign holders of US Securities. Monthly Holdings of U.S. Long-term Securities at Current Market Value by Foreign Residents. Monthly Holdings of Foreign Long-term Securities at Current Market Value by U.S. Residents. Includes: Total holdings by all U.S. residents; by type, holder and issuer. U.S. holdings by country of issuer (files include both recent and historical data). Monthly Holdings of Short-term Debt. Types of foreign portfolio investment in the United States (quarterly). Total U.S. banking & securities liabilities to foreign residents
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Graph and download economic data for Market Value of Privately Held Gross Federal Debt (MVPHGFD027MNFRBDAL) from Jan 1942 to Sep 2025 about market value, debt, gross, federal, private, and USA.
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TwitterA table that shows in detail by CUSIP, interest rate, the issue date, maturity date, interest payment dates and amounts outstanding for unmatured Bills, Notes, Bonds, Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and Floating Rate Notes as of the last business day of the month.
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Graph and download economic data for Market Value of Marketable Treasury Debt (MVMTD027MNFRBDAL) from Jan 1942 to Sep 2025 about market value, debt, Treasury, and USA.