Inflation hedge
Inflation hedge is an asset, contract or strategy that aims to preserve purchasing power when the general price level rises. Definitions differ. Research separates expected inflation, which may already be priced, from unexpected inflation which is an unanticipated change. The effectiveness of any hedge depends on horizon and regime. Over twelve-month horizons some assets react to an inflation surprise, while over multi-year horizons those relationships can weaken or reverse as policy and the macroeconomy adjust. No single asset class provides a permanent hedge against unexpected inflation. Instruments that link cash flows to a consumer price index and market-based measures of inflation compensation address specific risks, although realised outcomes depend on index choice, publication lags, liquidity and risk premia, taxation and implementation costs.
Concepts and measurement
An inflation hedge is an asset or strategy that tends to preserve purchasing power when the general price level rises. In finance research a hedge has a non-positive correlation with the relevant risk on average, a safe haven is uncorrelated or negatively correlated during market stress only, and a diversifier is positively but not perfectly correlated in normal times. Studies also separate expected from unexpected inflation. Attié and Roache report that many risky assets respond negatively to the unexpected component at business-cycle horizons, even when long-run premia are positive.Empirical work often summarises sensitivity using an inflation beta estimated from a regression of returns on inflation over a matched horizon. If denotes an asset return and denotes inflation, the inflation beta can be estimated from. A value near implies a close hedge at that horizon, whereas values near or negative indicate weak or inverse co-movement. Estimates are sample-dependent and can vary across regimes. Relationships observed in one era may not hold out of sample.
Market-implied measures of expected inflation, such as breakevens from inflation-linked bonds or zero-coupon inflation swaps, are widely used but reflect more than pure expectations. They embed inflation-risk premia and, at times, a liquidity premium. Breakevens and swaps are informative but imperfect gauges for hedging decisions. Measurement also depends on the index that matters to the holder. A national CPI may not match a specific spending basket, and contractual indexation can lag official data. Both create basis risk.
Time-horizon and regime effects
Horizon matters. Using twelve-month windows, Attié and Roache find that commodities tend to move with inflation after an upside surprise, while equities and nominal bonds weaken and cash adjusts only partly as policy rates change. Over multi-year horizons the picture changes. Vector error-correction models suggest that the initial commodity response fades as supply and demand normalise, nominal bonds recover part of their loss as higher running yields accrue, and equities still fail to hedge unexpected inflation even though they can deliver positive real premia over very long periods.| Asset class | Twelve-month horizon | Multi-year horizon |
| Commodities | Partial hedge after surprises | Relationship weakens over time |
| Equities | Tends to underperform after surprises | Long-run premia do not reliably hedge shocks |
| Nominal bonds | Prices fall when yields rise | Partial recovery as higher yields accrue |
| Cash | Partial adjustment via policy rates | Depends on policy stance and inflation regime |