Series HH Bond

Series HH Bond

The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate. Starting in Nov. 1982, Series HH bonds were only available in exchange for Series EE/E bonds or upon reinvestment of matured Series H bonds. The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate. The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate. In contrast, the Series HH bond paid interest income to bondholders every six months until maturity or redemption, while the principal value of the bond remained the same.

The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate.

What Is a Series HH Bond?

The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate. The coupon was locked in at a fixed rate for the first ten years, after which the U.S. Treasury reset it for the rest of the bond's life. 

Series HH bonds are no longer available for purchase, having been discontinued by the U.S. government on Aug. 31, 2004. Bonds that didn't mature continue to receive interest payments.

The Series HH bond was a 20-year, non-marketable savings bond issued by the U.S. government that paid semi-annual interest based on a coupon rate.
The Series HH bond's coupon was locked in at a fixed rate for the first ten years, after which the U.S. Treasury reset it for the rest of the bond's life.
Series HH bonds were sold at face value and came in denominations of $500, $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000.
The U.S. government stopped selling Series HH bonds after Aug. 31, 2004, and did not replace them with another bond program.

Understanding Series HH Bonds

The Series HH Savings Bond Program was designed with terms that appealed to the long-term investor. Starting in Nov. 1982, Series HH bonds were only available in exchange for Series EE/E bonds or upon reinvestment of matured Series H bonds.

The majority of people who purchased these bonds used them to supplement retirement income since they provided interest until maturity. Series HH bonds were sold at face value, meaning a $500 bond sold for $500, and made available in the following denominations:

Bondholders who invested in this series received paper certificates. There was no capital appreciation potential, meaning interest earned on this bond series was not added to the principal. Instead, it was paid out every six months into the bondholder's account by direct deposit. The bond did allow for early redemption and exchange options after six months.

Series HH bonds paid a fixed interest rate that was set on the day of purchase and locked in for the following ten years. Once the 10-year locked-in rate expired, the coupon rate fell as low as 1.5% for many Series HH bondholders. Calculating the real return would help investors determine whether it was wise to hold onto the bonds, or redeem them and use the capital in higher-yielding securities.

Taxation

Interest on Series HH bonds was exempt from state and local income taxes. However, investors were required to report earnings from these bonds on their federal returns. Bondholders must file Internal Revenue Service (IRS) form 1099-INT to report their interest income on their federal tax return the year the interest is earned.

Series HH Bonds vs. Series EE Bonds

There are some similarities between the Series HH and Series EE savings bonds, as well as several key differences.

Interest earned on Series EE savings bonds is returned to the principal value of the bond. This means the bondholder only benefits from the investment gains at the time the bond is cashed. In contrast, the Series HH bond paid interest income to bondholders every six months until maturity or redemption, while the principal value of the bond remained the same.

Interest payments were made automatically via direct deposit to the bond owner’s account every six months. For this reason, Series HH bonds appealed to risk-averse investors seeking regular income from their investments. Because Series HH bonds had the backing and full faith and credit of the U.S. government, they were considered a safe investment.

Related terms:

30-Year Treasury

The 30-Year Treasury, formerly the bellwether U.S. bond, is a U.S. Treasury debt obligation that has a maturity of 30 years. read more

Capital Appreciation

Capital appreciation is a rise in the value of any asset, such as a stock, bond or piece of real estate.  read more

Coupon Rate

A coupon rate is the yield paid by a fixed income security, which is the annual coupon payments divided by the bond's face or par value. read more

Denomination

A denomination is the stated or face value of financial instruments such as currency, bonds and other fixed-income investments.  read more

Face Value

Face value is the nominal value or dollar value of a security stated by the issuer, also known as "par value" or simply "par." read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more

Fixed Interest Rate

A fixed interest rate remains the same for a loan's entire term, making long-term budgeting easier. Some loans combine fixed and variable rates. read more

Inflation-Indexed Security

An inflation-indexed security is a security that guarantees a return higher than the rate of inflation if it is held to maturity. Inflation-indexed securities link their capital appreciation, or coupon payments, to inflation rates. read more

Interest

Interest is the monetary charge for the privilege of borrowing money, typically expressed as an annual percentage rate. read more

Interest-On-Interest

Interest-on-interest is primarily used in the context of bonds, whose coupon payments are assumed to be re-invested and held until sale or maturity. read more