Investors ask Ottawa to reverse inflation-linked bonds freeze

investors-ask-ottawa-to-reverse-inflation-linked-bonds-freeze

The decision is coming at the ‘worst possible timing for investors’ due to historic levels of inflation

Author of the article:

Bloomberg News

Esteban Duarte

Publishing date:

Nov 15, 2022  •  1 day ago  •  2 minute read

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Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland delivers the fall economic statement in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Photo by Blair Gable/Reuters The Canadian Bond Investors’ Association, which represents managers of over $1.2 trillion of assets, is asking Canada’s finance department to reverse its decision to cease the issuance of inflation-linked bonds.

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The government decided to stop the issuance of new real-return bonds after consulting market participants, citing weak demand, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a budget update released early this month. The decision is coming at the “worst possible timing for investors” due to historic levels of inflation and after the consultation “failed to identify the fundamental sources of demand” for such securities, the industry group said in a Nov. 14 memorandum.

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“The CBIA calls on the Department of Finance to reconsider this hasty decision and take time to evaluate this complex situation,” the association said. “Consideration should not only be given to the reinstatement of the original program but also to taking steps to improve the market structure.”

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A representative for the Department of Finance didn’t immediately provide comment. The market for Canadian real-return bonds is small — just $48.6 billion outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The longest-dated issue matures in 2054.

Insurance companies and pension plans are natural investors of real-return bonds due to the nature of their liabilities as some of their contractual promises have frequently been tied to the consumer price index, the CBIA said. While some of the larger institutions may find alternatives, smaller investors offering products such as indexed annuities may face “higher volatility and risk for participant members,” it said.

Recommended from Editorial Noah Solomon: Dividends prove their value in good times and bad Three hall-of-fame investors share the lessons they learned along the way Cryptocurrency blowout shows disruption fuelled by easy money often only disrupts your portfolio Also, the real-return market is used to value pension plan liabilities, so without available long-dated inflation-linked bonds corresponding to the liabilities, valuation methods would be put into question.

“Eliminating RRBs not only reduces the diversity of funding by excluding certain market participants,” the memo said, it “also alters the perception of all market participants that the Government of Canada is not confident that it can deal with the inflation problem.”


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