Announcement — Federal Treasury Discount Paper (Bubills)
The Deutsche Bundesbank published an auction announcement for Federal Treasury discount paper (Bubills) on June 30 via its federal-securities press release page.
At a glance
- The Bundesbank announced a Bubill auction on June 30, 2026
VERDICT — CONFIRMED

The Deutsche Bundesbank published an auction announcement for Federal Treasury discount paper — Bubills — on June 30, via its federal-securities press release page. The page confirms a release dated 30.06.2026, with the terms issued as an accompanying PDF notice, per the Bundesbank.
The feed carried no volume or maturity detail, per the release page. The maturities on offer, target volumes, auction date and settlement particulars were set out only in the PDF notice and remain unverified in the material available to this wire.
What stands confirmed is the announcement itself: a scheduled step in the routine machinery of German government funding, published through the Bundesbank's standing channel for federal-securities operations, per the release page.
Background
Bubills — Unverzinsliche Schatzanweisungen — are the German federal government's short-dated money-market instruments, typically issued with maturities of around six and twelve months. They carry no coupon; investors buy them at a discount to face value and receive par at maturity, with the difference constituting the return. Together with the Schatz, Bobl and Bund lines further out the curve, they form the short end of the Federal Republic's debt programme.
Issuance is planned by the German Finance Agency, which manages the federal debt on behalf of the Ministry of Finance, while the Bundesbank conducts the auctions as the government's fiscal agent. Operations follow a published annual calendar and are executed through the Bund Issues Auction Group, the panel of banks entitled to bid. Announcements of the kind published June 30 conventionally precede the auction by a few days, restating the size and maturities on offer.
German paper occupies a particular place in European markets: Bunds and their short-dated siblings serve as the euro area's benchmark safe asset, and Bubill yields track closely with expectations for European Central Bank policy rates, making the auctions a routine but watched gauge of front-end demand.
What comes next
The auction would proceed on the date specified in the PDF notice, followed by a results release through the same Bundesbank federal-securities channel setting out bids received, the allotted volume and the average yield. Those results, once published, would show how demand at the front of the German curve compares with recent operations; until then, the terms of the offering rest on the accompanying notice.
Key facts on file
- The Bundesbank announced a Bubill auction on June 30, 2026

