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US 3-Month Treasury Bill Rates

US 3-Month Treasury Bill Rates data, recent 12 years (traceable to Oct 02,2014), the yield unit is %, latest yield value is 3.69, updated at Apr 03,2026

Price

Current: 99.13 USD (-0.001 / -0.001%)

Apr 03,2026

Time Range: Oct 02,2014 ~ Apr 03,2026

Average: 99.51 USD
Median: 99.62 USD
Max: 100.00 USD (Mar 26,2020)
Min: 98.63 USD (Aug 22,2023)

Yield

Current: 3.69 % (+0.005 / +0.141%)

Apr 03,2026

Time Range: Oct 02,2014 ~ Apr 03,2026

Average: 2.02 %
Median: 1.55 %
Max: 5.51 % (Oct 06,2023)
Min: -0.11 % (Mar 26,2020)
Share:

FAQ

Global Government Bond Rates & Historical Data Charts

Track global treasury bond rates with daily historical charts. Access data for US, Germany, Japan, UK, Australia, and China bonds to analyze market trends.

1

What do changes in 3-month Treasury yield curves predict?

Changes in 3-month Treasury yield curves reflect market expectations for short-term economic prospects. Rising yields typically indicate expectations of inflationary pressure or Fed policy tightening, while falling yields may signal economic slowdown or policy easing.

2

What's the difference between 3-month Treasuries and commercial paper?

3-month Treasuries are government-issued with the highest credit rating and extremely low risk. Commercial paper is issued by corporations with higher credit risk but also higher yields. In uncertain economic environments, investors often prefer Treasury safety.

3

Transmission mechanism of US 3-month Treasury rates to global economy?

US 3-month Treasury rates affect the global economy by influencing dollar financing costs, international trade financing, and global capital flows. Changes transmit to 1-month Treasuries, 6-month Treasuries and other short-term rates, affecting global economic growth and inflation expectations.

4

Comparison of US 3-month Treasuries with major Asian economies' bonds?

US 3-month Treasuries have higher yields compared to Japanese 2-year bonds and stronger international liquidity compared to Chinese 1-year bonds. Japanese bonds are affected by yield curve control policies, while Chinese bonds face capital controls with relatively lower liquidity.