Inflation Swap

From Handwiki

An inflation swap is an agreement between two counterparties to swap fixed rate payments on a notional principal amount for floating rate payments linked to an inflation index, such as the consumer price index.[1] An inflation swap is the linear form of an inflation derivative, and used to transfer inflation risk from one counterparty to another.

Example

An investor takes out a 5-year loan that is repaid at LIBOR+1%. He considers this rate as the sum of real LIBOR plus a credit spread (1%) plus a floating inflation component. He would like to pay real LIBOR, the credit spread, and a fixed rate. So he enters into an inflation swap agreement where for the next 5 years he is paying a fixed rate on his loan's principal while receiving year-on-year inflation on the same amount.

See also

  • Year-on-Year Inflation-Indexed Swap
  • Zero-Coupon Inflation-Indexed Swap

References

  1. How Liquid Is the Inflation Swap Market? Michael J. Fleming and John Sporn, 2013




Retrieved from "https://handwiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Finance:Inflation_swap&oldid=3316439"

Categories: [Inflation] [Derivatives (finance)] [Swaps (finance)]


Download as ZWI file | Last modified: 08/17/2025 13:32:09 | 13 views
☰ Source: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Finance:Inflation_swap | License: CC BY-SA 3.0

ZWI is not signed. [what is this?]