BTP Italia... the world behind the initials!
BTP stands for Buono del Tesoro Poliennale in Italian, which means 'multi-year treasury bond'. BTPs are a set of medium- to long-term Government Securities with a time horizon of up to 50 years! Because of this extended time horizon, and the range of BTPs on offer (see below), they tend to be preferred by small investors. They are also the most widespread Government Security: out of approximately 2,200 billion in circulation, around 1,600 billion are BTPs.
Like all other government securities, BTPs are bonds issued by the Italian Treasury which can be purchased, either on the market or through an initial public offering (IPO), by private individuals, companies or institutional investors (such as banks, insurance companies or pension fund managers). BTP holders are then entitled to receive: 1) repayment of the invested amount when the securities mature (and this may be index-linked to inflation), and 2) a series of smaller payments ('coupons') as interest on the amount they invested.
Let's take a look at the different types of BTP that are in circulation.
The most widespread type of BTP is a simple, fixed-rate bond, which yields a fixed annual coupon (at a fixed percentage of the nominal value) paid in instalments every six months., The holder is then repaid the nominal value of the bond at maturity.
Alongside traditional BTPs, which can have different term lengths (the maturity term), the Treasury has issued new types of multi-year bonds over the years, whose characteristics, strengths and drawbacks are listed below:
- The euro-area inflation-indexed BTP (BTP€i) pays coupons in variable amounts that are adjusted to euro-area inflation (click here for more information). This type of bond will protect an investor's savings from price rises, as the amount redeemed at maturity is the nominal value adjusted for inflation. The BTP Italia has similar characteristics, but its yield is linked to Italian inflation instead of euro-area inflation. A new type of BTP Italia has been recently issued, which offers extra returns to investors who don't sell their bonds until maturity (this is the 'double bonus payment', with one bonus paid during the bond's life and the second one only paid to investors who hold their bond until the final deadline). The coupons on bonds like the BTP€i and BTP Italia are paid out every six months, and their value increases as the value of the principal increases, in each semester, because of inflation.
- The BTP Green is designed to fund environmentally-friendly public spending, so we may see it as an instrument of sustainable finance! The first BTP Green was issued by the Italian Treasury on 3 March 2022, and its maturity date is 30 April, 2045.
- The BTP Futura yields returns that increase alongside Italian GDP. As for the BTP Italia, investors who hold it until maturity get extra returns in the form of a 'loyalty bonus', and as for the BTP Green, it is intended to fund specific Italian development initiatives (for more information, click here).
The market value of inflation-linked bonds (i.e. indexed bonds), such as the BTP€i and BTP Italia, is not affected by interest rate adjustments (which in turn are due to inflation rate changes), because the coupons and the principal repaid also vary with inflation. However, the price of indexed bonds can still be affected by fluctuations in the real interest rate (which is the nominal rate minus inflation). For Italian indexed bonds, one element that can affect the real interest rate is the spread against German bonds (that is, the higher return required by the market for buying Italian bonds, compared with German bonds). Therefore, the value of indexed bonds may also change, albeit to a lesser degree than for non-indexed BTPs with the same time horizon.
All BTPs are instruments that suit investors who can plan over a fairly long time horizon (because they don't have any large impending expenses, or have enough extra savings to cover them), or who plan to purchase and then resell them at a profit. Before they mature, BTPs can easily be resold on the regulated market (the electronic bond market, MOT), where there are always large numbers of buyers and sellers trading BTPs. Even so, we still need to be careful, because the price at which we will be able to resell these bonds depends on their future returns, which in turn depend on factors that are very hard to predict, such as inflation rate risk, the level of real interest rates (nominal rates minus inflation), and the risk of insolvency on the part of the Italian Government.
Finally, there is another aspect worth considering. The tax on BTP yields and other Government securities is only 12 per cent, compared with 26 per cent on other bonds and financial assets, which means that, if 'gross yield' is the same, the 'net return' on BTPs is taxed less and is therefore much more appealing.