Measuring Expected Inflation with Breakevens
Central banks in recent years have paid a lot of attention to “inflation expectations” when setting monetary policy. But measuring these expectations isn't always easy. Expectations can vary widely depending on whether you're asking businesses, households, or professional forecasters. One of the more straightforward methods for gauging inflation expectations is by analysing bond market data. This post provides a quick rundown of how this works.
Bond market-based measures of inflation expectations are known as “breakevens”. These breakeven rates provide a snapshot of what investors anticipate inflation will be over a specific timeframe. To calculate a breakeven rate, we compare the yield of an inflation-protected government bond (such as US TIPS) with a nominal government bond of the same maturity. The difference between these two yields represents the breakeven inflation rate, or the rate at which an investor would earn the same return whether they bought an inflation-protected bond or a nominal bond.
Examples
Using data from the U.S. 5-year Treasuries available on the St. Louis Fed's FRED database, we calculate the breakeven rate as follows:
5-Year Breakeven Inflation Rate (T5YIE) = Yield on 5-year US Treasury (DGS5) – Yield on 5-year US Treasury Inflation-Indexed (DFII5)
As of 8 August 2024, the yield on a 5-year US Treasury is 3.83%, while the yield on an inflation-indexed 5-year US Treasury stands at 1.85%. This translates to a breakeven rate of 1.98% (3.83% – 1.85%).
Let's repeat this for 10-year US Treasuries:
10-Year Breakeven Inflation Rate (T10YIE) = Yield on 10-year US Treasury (DGS10) – Yield on 10-year US Treasury Inflation-Indexed (DFII10)
As of 8 August 2024, the yield on a 10-year US Treasury is 3.99%, while the yield on an inflation-indexed 10-year US Treasury is 1.87%. This yields a breakeven rate of 2.12% (3.99% – 1.87%).
Links
- FRED data for US breakeven inflation rates: 5-year breakeven, 7-year breakeven, 10-year breakeven, 20-year breakeven, and 30-year breakeven
- FRED blog post on Measuring expected inflation with breakevens
- Brad DeLong blog post on The Bond Market Thinks a Possible Return to Secular Stagnation Has Just Entered the Chat