Discount Yield
Key takeaways
- Discount yield estimates the return on a bond sold at a discount to par and held to maturity.
- It uses money-market conventions (30-day month, 360-day year).
- Commonly applied to Treasury bills, commercial paper, municipal notes and zero-coupon bonds.
- It differs from yield-to-maturity and accretion because it expresses return relative to face value, not purchase price.
What discount yield is
The discount yield is a standardized way to compute the expected return on a discount security (one sold below its face value) if held until maturity. It is widely used for short-term, discount-issued instruments such as Treasury bills, commercial paper, municipal notes and zero-coupon bonds.
Formula
Discount yield (annualized) is calculated as:
Explore More Resources
Discount yield = (Discount / Face value) × (360 / Days to maturity)
where:
* Discount = Face value − Purchase price
* The 360/30 convention is used to annualize short-term money‑market yields.
Explore More Resources
Because the formula uses face value in the denominator, discount yield typically understates the effective return compared with yields computed on the purchase price (e.g., yield-to-maturity or holding-period yield).
Example
An investor buys a $10,000 Treasury bill for $9,700 (a $300 discount) that matures in 120 days.
Explore More Resources
Discount yield = (300 / 10,000) × (360 / 120) = 0.03 × 3 = 0.09 = 9%
So the standardized discount yield is 9% annualized by the 360-day convention.
Explore More Resources
Practical notes and limitations
- If the security is sold before maturity, the realized return will differ and must be calculated from the actual sale price.
- Discount yield uses face value rather than purchase price, so it does not reflect the true economic yield an investor earns on the money invested. For that, use holding-period yield or yield-to-maturity.
- The 30/360 convention simplifies comparisons across short-term instruments but is an approximation.
Discount yield versus accretion
Accretion is an accounting method that spreads a bond’s discount into income over the bond’s life. For example, if an investor buys a $1,000 bond for $920 (an $80 discount) with a 10-year maturity, that $80 is recorded as income over the 10 years. Methods include:
* Straight-line accretion — equal dollar amounts each period.
* Effective interest method — allocates discount based on an effective yield formula.
Discount yield is a market convention for reporting expected return on discount instruments; accretion governs how the discount is recognized as income over time.
Explore More Resources
Summary
Discount yield is a quick, standardized measure of return for discount-issued short-term securities using a 360-day year. It’s useful for comparisons but differs from more precise measures of investor return that use the purchase price or account for interim sale.