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INFLATION-INDEXED BONDS IN THE UNITED STATES
Are there bonds that can protect your investments from inflation?
In 1997, the U.S. Department of the Treasury created a new financial instrument called the Treasury Inflation-Protected
Security, or TIPS. The key feature of TIPS is that the payments to investors adjust automatically to compensate for the actual
changes in the Consumer Price Index. Therefore, TIPS provide protection to investors from inflation.
Like other government bonds, TIPS make interest payments every six months and a payment of the original principal when
the bond matures. However, unlike other Treasury bonds, these payments are automatically adjusted for changes in inflation.
Despite their obvious attractions, the market for TIPS is still rather small. As of 2005, there were about $200 billion in TIPS
outstanding, compared to a total volume of about $4 trillion ($4,000 billion) total Treasury obligations. Because TIPS
compensate for actual inflation, the interest rate on these bonds differs from conventional bonds by the expected inflation
rate. By comparing the interest rates on TIPS to other government bonds of similar maturity, economists can estimate the
public’s expectations of inflation.
SOURCE: Simon Kwan, "Inflation Expectations: How the Market Speaks," Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic
Letter, October 7, 2005.
-According to the application, the difference between the interest rates on TIPS and the interest rates on non- inflation indexed securities represents:
Popular Front
A period during the mid-1930s when the Communist Party sought to ally itself with socialists and New Dealers in movements for social change, urging reform of the capitalist system rather than revolution.
Communist Party
A political party that advocates for the principles of communism, aiming to establish a classless society based on common ownership of the means of production and the absence of social classes, money, and the state.
Cultural Movement
A change in the way a number of different disciplines approach their work, reflecting a new societal emphasis or preference.
Court-Packing
A strategy to manipulate the composition and decisions of a judiciary body, especially the Supreme Court, by increasing the number of judges to obtain favorable rulings.
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