This article describes the evolution of Treasury inflation-indexed debt securities (TIIS) since their introduction in 1997. Over most of this period, TIIS yields have been surprisingly high relative to those on comparable nominal Treasury securities, with the spread between the nominal and indexed yields falling well below survey measures of long-run inflation expectations. The authors argue that the low relative valuation of TIIS may have reflected investor difficulty adjusting to a new asset class, supply trends, and the lower liquidity of indexed debt. In addition, investors may have had a benign outlook for inflation and may not have demanded much, if any, of an inflation risk premium to hold nominal securities. As a result, inflation-i...
In recent years, monetary policymakers have monitored several measures of market expectations of fut...
Within the last five years, Canada, Sweden and New Zealand have joined the ranks of the United Kingd...
I am indebted to Toyoichiro Shirota of the Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies of the Bank o...
This paper reviews the U.S. experience with inflation-indexed debt. To date, Treasury inflation-inde...
In recent years, members of Congress and academia have repeatedly urged the U.S. Treasury to issue s...
In January 1997, the United States Treasury, after years of debate, issued its first inflation-index...
This paper explores the history of inflation-indexed bond markets in the US and the UK. It documents...
After a slow start in the 1980s, inflation-indexed government securities have gradually become more ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.For over ten years, the Treasury has issued index-linked debt....
Differences between yields on comparable-maturity U.S. Treasury nominal and real debt, the so-called...
U.S. Treasury securities are nominal assets that are subject to two sources of risk: inflation risk,...
Inflation indexed securities comprise a new and developing market that provides purchasing power cer...
Enormously diverse real and nominal ex post returns on equity and short and long term debt securitie...
ABSTRACT This paper explores the history of inflation-indexed bond mar-kets in the United States and...
This study focuses to examine nominal and inflation-linked bond behavior in the time period of Febru...
In recent years, monetary policymakers have monitored several measures of market expectations of fut...
Within the last five years, Canada, Sweden and New Zealand have joined the ranks of the United Kingd...
I am indebted to Toyoichiro Shirota of the Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies of the Bank o...
This paper reviews the U.S. experience with inflation-indexed debt. To date, Treasury inflation-inde...
In recent years, members of Congress and academia have repeatedly urged the U.S. Treasury to issue s...
In January 1997, the United States Treasury, after years of debate, issued its first inflation-index...
This paper explores the history of inflation-indexed bond markets in the US and the UK. It documents...
After a slow start in the 1980s, inflation-indexed government securities have gradually become more ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.For over ten years, the Treasury has issued index-linked debt....
Differences between yields on comparable-maturity U.S. Treasury nominal and real debt, the so-called...
U.S. Treasury securities are nominal assets that are subject to two sources of risk: inflation risk,...
Inflation indexed securities comprise a new and developing market that provides purchasing power cer...
Enormously diverse real and nominal ex post returns on equity and short and long term debt securitie...
ABSTRACT This paper explores the history of inflation-indexed bond mar-kets in the United States and...
This study focuses to examine nominal and inflation-linked bond behavior in the time period of Febru...
In recent years, monetary policymakers have monitored several measures of market expectations of fut...
Within the last five years, Canada, Sweden and New Zealand have joined the ranks of the United Kingd...
I am indebted to Toyoichiro Shirota of the Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies of the Bank o...