
Why Inflation-Linked Bonds Are Surging
Investors worldwide are increasingly turning to inflation-linked bonds as protective securities during volatile market conditions. These bonds, whose principal value adjusts with inflation, offer a hedge against rising prices. The trend intensified in April 2025 after US tariff announcements sparked inflation fears, with Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) seeing record inflows.
How Inflation Bonds Work
Inflation-indexed bonds like US TIPS and UK Index-linked Gilts adjust their principal daily based on inflation metrics. For example:
- If a bond has a $100 principal and 5% coupon rate
- After 10% inflation, principal becomes $110
- Interest payment rises to $5.50 (5% of $110)
Market Impact of Recent Tariffs
The US tariff rollout in April 2025 triggered significant market shifts:
- Short-term inflation expectations jumped 2%
- Breakeven rates (inflation expectations) surged before OPEC+ oil announcements caused temporary corrections
- Real yields declined as investors sought safety
Global Linker Markets
Key inflation bond markets include:
- US TIPS: $500 billion outstanding
- UK Index-linked Gilts: $300+ billion
- French OATi/OAT€i: $200 billion
- Germany, Australia, Italy, Japan and Brazil also have active markets
Investment Outlook
Despite April's volatility, analysts see opportunity:
- AXA IM considers current breakeven levels "attractive"
- Inflation expected to outpace market predictions
- Real yields offer asymmetric upside potential