Discover how index-linked bonds protect against inflation by paying interest linked to indices like the CPI, ensuring a real rate of return. Explore their benefits and examples.
For most investors, at least part of their portfolio is allocated to bonds, and for a good reason. Bonds provide income and stability, typically carry less risk than stocks, and add balance and ...
Discover how bond prices and yields interact and what influences these fluctuations. Explore key factors affecting bond values and their implications for investors.
The biggest challenge facing the emerging markets is not the credit crunch; it’s inflation. Surging price rises are evident in all developing regions with buoyant economic activity, high food and ...
Inflation-linked bonds are the biggest losers in this month’s violent Treasury market selloff, and that’s only partly due to inflation expectations. Yields on Treasury inflation-protected securities, ...
The bonds known as Treasury inflation-protected securities are designed to protect investors’ income against rising prices and perhaps even deliver an extra bit of return. But do TIPS, as the bonds ...
The investment seeks to provide inflation protection and income, primarily through investment in inflation-linked bonds. The fund invests at least 80% of its assets in fixed-income securities whose ...
Sticky inflation risk is still a threat for the bond market, but concern that the US economy is slowing has become the main factor driving Treasury yields lower recently. The drop in the 10-year rate ...
If higher tariff-related inflation is a risk, it’s not showing up in the bond market, at least not yet. The US 10-year Treasury yield remains close to its lowest level of the year, trading at 4.03% on ...
The risk is known — but under-appreciated. A growing market consensus sees the Federal Reserve continuing to cut rates next year even as growth picks up. Yet many investors shrug off a key embedded ...
While high inflation hasn’t been the sore spot for US consumers that it was in 2022, inflation has remained sticky into 2025.
U.S. President Donald Trump announced tariffs on America’s global trading partners on April 2, and the news sent interest rates up and bond prices down. While Trump has subsequently scaled back some ...