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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.

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Infrastructure Developments in the Market for Commonwealth Government Securities

19 Sep 2013 Bulletin – September 2013
Chris Becker, Jonathan Lees and Andrew Zurawski
The market for Commonwealth Government securities (CGS) is a key financial market in Australia because, among other things, it provides a risk-free benchmark for the pricing of a wide range of fixed income securities. This article discusses aspects
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2013/sep/6.html

Bulletin August 2001 – Statement on Monetary Policy

10 Aug 2001 Bulletin
The spread between Argentinian bonds and US Treasuries rose to over 16 percentage points at one stage in July, after averaging around 7 percentage points in the first half of 2001. ... Capital flows can be disaggregated in various ways. Graph A1 breaks
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2001/aug/1.html

Note 1 – Summary of Accounting Policies | Financial Statements

3 Aug 2000 RBA Annual Report – 2000
d) Domestic government securities. The RBA holds Commonwealth Treasury Fixed Coupon Bonds, Treasury Notes, Treasury Capital Indexed Bonds, and Treasury Adjustable Rate Bonds. ... Treasury Capital Indexed Bonds are coupon securities with the nominal value
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/annual-reports/rba/2000/fin-statements/note-1.html

Notes to and Forming Part of the Financial Statements

19 Oct 2023 RBA Annual Report – October 2023
2022). The net liability position reflects:. unrealised valuation losses recorded on the RBAs holding of Australian dollar government bonds, which resulted from the significant rise in bond yields since 2021/22 ... these bonds were purchased as part of
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/annual-reports/rba/2023/financial-statements/notes.html

Note 1 – Summary of accounting policies | Financial Statements

30 Jun 1998 RBA Annual Report – 1998
c) Domestic government securities. The Bank holds Commonwealth Government Bonds, Treasury Notes, Capital Indexed Bonds, and Treasury Adjustable Bonds. ... Capital Indexed Bonds are coupon securities with the nominal value of the security indexed in line
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/annual-reports/rba/1998/fin-statements/note-1.html

Financial Conditions

6 Feb 2024 SMP – February 2024
Financial Conditions | Statement on Monetary Policy – February 2024
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/smp/2024/feb/financial-conditions.html

2.2 Operations in Financial Markets

19 Oct 2023 RBA Annual Report – October 2023
Operations in Financial Markets | Reserve Bank of Australia Annual Report – October 2023
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/annual-reports/rba/2023/operations-in-financial-markets.html

The Repo Market in Australia

10 Dec 2010 Bulletin – December 2010
David Wakeling and Ian Wilson
Commonwealth Government Securities (CGS). – Treasury notes. – Treasury bonds. – Treasury indexed bonds. ... Source: RBA. The convention within the Australian market is to distinguish between those government-related securities which are most liquid
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2010/dec/4.html

Note 1 – Summary of Accounting Policies | Financial Statements

21 Aug 2002 RBA Annual Report – 2002
d) Australian dollar securities. The RBA holds Commonwealth Treasury Fixed Coupon Bonds, Treasury Notes and Treasury Capital Indexed Bonds. ... Treasury Capital Indexed Bonds are coupon securities with the nominal value of the security indexed in line
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/annual-reports/rba/2002/fin-statements/note-1.html

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