The expectile is a prime candidate for being a standard risk measure in actuarial and financial contexts, for its ability to recover information about probabilities and typical behavior of extreme values, as well as its excellent axiomatic properties. A series of recent papers has focused on expectile estimation at extreme levels, with a view on gathering essential information about low-probability, high-impact events that are of most interest to risk managers. The obtention of accurate confidence intervals for extreme expectiles is paramount in any decision process in which they are involved, but actual inference on these tail risk measures is still a difficult question due to their least squares nature and sensitivity to tail heaviness. T...