This paper investigates the predictive accuracy of Eurozone inflation-linked swaps (ILS) across volatility regimes using a Markov-switching framework and regime-specific Mincer–Zarnowitz regressions. Results show a sharp divergence by maturity. While 12-month ILS remain approximately unbiased, their forecast precision (RMSE) deteriorates sharply in high-volatility states. In contrast, longer maturities (24–36 months) develop statistically significant, large positive biases (up to 378 basis points) and calibration losses evident across both volatility periods — a finding masked by standard asymptotic inference. These findings highlight the structural, persistent nature of the mispricing at medium horizons and the risk of policy misinterpretation. • Euro area inflation swap accuracy is highly dependent on maturity and volatility. • Short-term 12-month swaps remain unbiased but lose precision during market stress. • Longer maturities (24–36 months) exhibit large, statistically significant biases. • Moving block bootstrap reveals structural failure in longer tenors across regimes. • Findings suggest policy adjustment is needed when using market-based indicators.
Rafael Kothe (Thu,) studied this question.