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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

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

The Separation of Debt Management and Monetary Policy

10 Nov 1993 Bulletin – November 1993
The main decisions are:. the proportions of the issue to be in Treasury bonds, Treasury indexed bonds, and Treasury notes. ... In 1993, the Government recommenced issuing Treasury indexed bonds through a dealer panel which then distributes the securities
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/1993/nov/1.html

Recent Developments in the Semi-government Bond Market

25 Jan 2024 Bulletin – January 2024
Sam Batchelor and Maddie Roberts
The market for Australian state and territory government bonds is often referred to as the market for ‘semis’.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2024/jan/recent-developments-in-the-semi-government-bond-market.html

Extracting Information from Financial Market Instruments

10 Mar 2012 Bulletin – March 2012
Richard Finlay and David Olivan
Inflation swaps are also used in conjunction with nominal bonds to replicate an inflation-indexed bond. ... This allows investors to overcome bond maturity mismatches as well as any potential shortage of inflation-indexed bonds.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2012/mar/6.html

Statement on Monetary Policy

10 May 2003 Bulletin – May 2003
Once it became clear that the war was likely to be over quickly, bond yields rose again. ... Graph 11. While most countries experienced this cycle in bond yields, its severity varied.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2003/may/1.html

GDP-linked Bonds

15 Sep 2016 Bulletin – September 2016
Joel Bowman and Philip Naylor
A GDP-linked bond is a debt security with repayments that are linked to the issuing country's GDP. These securities have recently attracted some attention, including within the Group of Twenty (G20), in the context of discussions about possible ways
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2016/sep/8.html

Measuring Government Bond Turnover in Australia Using Austraclear Data

21 Sep 2023 Bulletin – September 2023
Cameron Armour, Leon Berkelmans and Laurence Bristow
This article provides new estimates using Austraclear data for monthly turnover ratios for Australian Government Securities (AGS) and semi-government bonds (semis).
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2023/sep/measuring-government-bond-turnover-in-australia-using-austraclear-data.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