The Government's debt management unit isn't seeing increased interest in its inflation-indexed bonds despite high inflation
New Zealand Debt Management, the Treasury unit responsible for managing the Government's debt, isn't seeing any notable increase in demand for its inflation-indexed bonds despite high inflation both in New Zealand and overseas.
Speaking in interest.co.nz's Of Interest podcast, Kim Martin, Director of New Zealand Debt Management (NZDM), says you might expect more interest in inflation-indexed bonds when inflation is high. Statistics NZ releases its Consumers Price Index for the March quarter on Thursday, which is expected to show inflation above 7% for the fourth consecutive quarter, at a time when there has also been high inflation overseas.
"Inflation indexed bonds have a coupon that is indexed to inflation so the value of your regular coupon is protected against that high inflation period...We have seen our inflation indexed bonds outperform their generic equivalents over the past couple of years, but we haven't seen any significant change in demand," Martin says.
"We've heard a few rumours about retail demand for inflation protection products, but we really haven't seen anything that's of particular note, which is quite interesting when you think about how topical inflation has become in recent times."
In the podcast Martin also talks about the impact of the Reserve Bank's quantitative easing, through which it bought around $50 billion worth of NZ government bonds, on the bond market and what might've happened without it.
She also talks about how NZDM borrows and repays money, what options it offers for retail investors, how borrowing decisions are made, whether you can trace proceeds from individual bond issues to government expenditure, what currencies NZDM borrows in, who it competes with for investor interest, the importance of registered tender counterparties, the value of strong sovereign credit ratings, and the key risks for NZDM.