Search: Treasury indexed bonds
RBA Glossary definition for Treasury indexed bonds
Treasury indexed bonds – Australian Government Securities with a payment stream that increases by an indexation factor reflecting changes in the rate of inflation. Indexing occurs on the principal value of the investment.
Search Results
Discussion on Inflation Targeting and Japan: Why has the Bank of Japan not Adopted Inflation Targeting? | Conference – 2004
9 Aug 2004
Conferences
This presumption covers the purchase of bonds, risky domestic assets and foreign exchange, all of which can affect inflation. ... Purchase of bonds: The supply of duration to any government bond market is fundamentally a treasury responsibility.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2004/ito-disc.html
Inflation: Performance and Policy | Conference – 1990
21 Jun 1990
Conferences
RBA Annual Conference – 1990 Inflation: Performance and Policy Jeffrey Carmichael. By most counts, Australia's overall economic performance in the 1980s was relatively successful. Following a brief recession in 1982/83, growth of output averaged
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1990/carmichael.html
The Global Financial Environment
10 Sep 2007
FSR
– September 2007
In the United States, corporate bond spreads have widened across all credit grades and are now around their highest levels in several years (Graph 10). ... They are, however, still below the peaks reached in 2002, and the level of corporate bond yields
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2007/sep/global-fin-env.html
The Australian Financial System in the 2000s: Dodging the Bullet | Conference – 2011
24 Jul 2000
Conferences
Table 5 summarises the evolution of the Australian bond markets during the 2000s. ... including around half of the Kangaroo bonds on issue. Notably, the growth of the fund management sector in Australia was not associated with growth in corporate bond
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/davis.html
Twenty-five Years of Inflation Targeting in Australia | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
The ‘over the cycle’ language was too ‘fuzzy’. Reflecting such concerns, bond yields had risen quite significantly in 1994 in anticipation of a material increase in inflation. ... By revealed preference, the absence of long-term indexed contracts
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/debelle.html
Inflation Targeting and Japan: Why has the Bank of Japan not Adopted Inflation Targeting? | Conference – 2004
9 Aug 2004
Conferences
The Japanese government has regularly issued long-term government bonds with fixed interest rates. ... Only in 2003 did the Japanese government start to issue inflation-indexed bonds, where the principal is protected from deflation.) Unexpected deflation
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2004/ito.html
Three Perspectives on an Australasian Monetary Union | Conference – 2001
24 Jul 2001
Conferences
Finally, I wish to raise a question asked a century ago by Alfred Marshall (1923): should the state consider adopting new indexed units of account so that consenting parties could contract ... There were sizeable differences in both bill and bond rates
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2001/coleman.html
Introduction | Conference – 2006
23 Jul 2006
Conferences
with the process of decumulating wealth in retirement (such as reverse mortgages and inflation-indexed bonds). ... Long-term and inflation-indexed bond markets are shallow in many countries, and a lack of publicly traded benchmarks, tax disincentives and
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2006/intro-2006.html
Unemployment or Tax Reform? | Conference – 1998
9 Jun 1998
Conferences
The latter are measured (in history) as the difference between the 10-year bond and 10-year indexed bond yields. ... The lower foreign debt also has a minor downward impact on the risk premium charged in long-term bond yields.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1998/richardson-c.html
Central Bank Liquidity Provision and Core Funding Markets | Conference – 2013
19 Aug 2013
Conferences
Sovereign debt (Government of Canada bonds and treasury bills). The sovereign debt market is at the core of the financial system in most countries. ... These flows were only staunched in response to interventions by the US Federal Reserve and US Treasury.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2013/johnson-santor.html