6-month T-bill
BS87101E
Auctioned 08 Jun 1987 · Issued 11 Jun 1987 · Matures 10 Dec 1987
Cutoff yield
2.83%
Auction details
- Bid-to-cover:
- 3.21 (S$3.21 in bids for every S$1 of issue size)
- Amount issued:
- S$150M
- Tenor:
- 6-month
6-month cutoff yield history
This auction in context
- Yield change: The 2.83% cutoff is 37 bp lower than the previous 6-month auction (BS87100A, 3.20% on 25 May 1987).
Descriptive observations from MAS auction history — not forecasts or recommendations.
How this auction worked
MAS runs a uniform-price auction: every successful bidder — competitive or non-competitive — pays the cutoff yield. The cutoff is the highest yield accepted to fill the issue size; the median is the middle of all submitted bids, useful as a sanity check on whether the cutoff was pulled up by a few aggressive bids. A bid-to-cover ratio above 2.0 generally signals strong demand.
Frequently asked questions
- When does BS87101E mature?
- BS87101E matures on 10 Dec 1987. T-bills are zero-coupon: you pay below face value at issue and receive the full S$1,000 per bill at maturity.
- What was the bid-to-cover ratio for BS87101E?
- BS87101E had a bid-to-cover ratio of 3.21 — investors submitted S$3.21 in bids for every S$1 of issue size. Ratios above 2.0 typically indicate strong demand.
- How does BS87101E's cutoff yield compare to the current SSB?
- BS87101E cleared at 2.83%, 137 bp higher than the latest SSB year-1 rate of 1.46% (GX26060N). The T-bill locks funds for the full 6-month; the SSB year-1 rate applies for one year then steps up annually toward the 10-year average of 2.11%.
- Can I buy BS87101E with CPF?
- T-bills are CPFIS-OA and CPFIS-SA eligible — you can fund the purchase from your CPF Ordinary Account or Special Account via your bank's CPFIS portal. There are bank-specific fees and a "dead-money" gap to watch. See /learn/how-to-buy-t-bills-with-cpf/ for the full mechanics.
Learn more
- Singapore T-bill auctions explained — competitive vs non-competitive bids, cutoff yield, bid-to-cover.
- How to buy T-bills with CPF — CPFIS-OA flow, bank cutoffs, and the dead-money gotcha.
- SSB vs T-bill — when each one fits, and the 30 bps spread heuristic.