The yield on the U.S. 3-month Treasury bill eased slightly at the latest auction, slipping to 3.620% from the previous level of 3.635%. The updated figure, reported on 30 March 2026, reflects a modest 1.5 basis point decline in short-term U.S. government borrowing costs.
While the move is small, the marginal dip in the 3-month bill yield may indicate a nuanced shift in near-term interest rate expectations or investor demand for short-dated safe-haven assets. Short-term Treasury yields are closely watched as a barometer of market sentiment about Federal Reserve policy and immediate liquidity conditions in the U.S. money markets.
The 3-month bill remains a key benchmark for cash management and short-term funding strategies for institutional and retail investors alike. The latest auction result will feed into pricing across money market instruments and could modestly influence returns in short-duration fixed-income portfolios tied to U.S. Treasury benchmarks.