Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Inflation Derivatives
Inflation derivatives (or inflation-indexed derivatives) refer to over-the-counter and exchange-traded derivatives that are used to transfer inflation risk from one counterparty to another. Typically, real rate swaps also come under this bracket, such as asset swaps of inflation-indexed bonds (government-issued inflation-indexed bonds, such as the Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, TIPS, UK Inflation Linked Gilts, ILGs, French OATei's, Italian BTPei's, German Bundei's and Japanese JGBi's are prominent examples). Inflation swaps are the linear form of these derivatives. They can take a similar form to fixed versus floating interest rate swaps (which are the derivative form for fixed rate bonds), but use a real rate coupon versus floating, but also pay a redemption pickup at maturity (i.e., the derivative form of inflation indexed bonds).
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