The value of a Series EE US Treasury savings bond depends on its original purchase date, interest rate, and current market conditions. You can check the value of your specific bond by using the US Treasury's online Savings Bond Calculator.
Savings bonds are sold in different denominations (also known as face value). The purchase price (also known as the issue price) of a savings bond is half of the face value. An EE savings bond purchased twenty years ago in December 1993 for $250 with a face value of $500 is currently worth $536.00. The current value of the bond is based on the original issue price of $250 plus $286 in accrued interest. EE savings bonds issued in 1993 have a final maturity date of 30 years and pay a fixed rate of 4.0%. A savings bond purchased in December 1993 would have a final maturity date of December 2023. The tax liability for interest on a savings bond can be deferred until the bond is cashed in. The exact details on any particular savings bond can be found by going to the official government website . In order to obtain information on a savings bond, you must enter the bond series, the denomination, the bond serial number and the issue date.
You can calculate the value of savings in an account by multiplying your savings by the annual interest rate eg savings of 500 with 1% interest are worth (500 x 0.01) + 500 = 505.
500 or so
The population of Alterna Savings is 500.
Theft 50$ to 500$ is a 500$ bond.
Stock Bond costing 500 and 1000 BDT
Playstation, xbox 360, iPad, new phone, anything electronic which has a screen, really.
50-500 usd
Check the auction sites. Based on description 100-500
Bobby Rahal won the 1986 Indianapolis 500.
Zero coupon bonds do not pay interest and are therefore sold at a steep discount to face value depending on the maturity date of the bond. Due to the time value of money, the discount on a 30 year zero coupon bond will be much greater than on a 10 year zero coupon bond. At maturity bondholders will receive the full face value of the bond which provides bondholders a return. For example, a 30 year zero coupon bond with a face value of $1,000 and sold for $500 would return a $500 profit after 30 years. Holders of zero coupon bonds can sell the bonds at any time before maturity. If an investor bought zero coupon bonds prior to a steep drop in interest rates, the value of the zero coupon bonds would increase and could be sold at a profit.