As corporate debt becomes more important for pension funds and other institutional investors with inflation-sensitive liabilities, the EDHEC-Risk Institute has raised an interesting question: what if corporate market debt programs were designed to look more like the sovereign debt market? It’s the subject of a new study released today entitled “Optimal Design of Corporate Market Debt Programmes in the Presence of Interest-Rate and Inflation Risks.” In it, respondents suggest that the issuance of inflation-linked bonds may benefit both issuers and investors.
For investors, inflation-linked corporate debt could be an ideal instrument for hedging their liabilities at a time when sovereign debt is no longer considered the default asset for pension funds’ asset-liability management.
For corporations, issuing inflation-linked debt would ultimately limit the firm’s risk and increase the value of its shares.
One main conclusion of the study: for many firms, current debt-management practices can be improved through the issuance of inflation-linked debt. Read the full study.