Talked based based on https://inspirehep.net/literature/2660573
Recently, it was demonstrated that the discrepancy between the fixed-order (FOPT) and contour-improved (CIPT) perturbative expansions for tau-lepton decay hadronic spectral function moments, which had been affecting the precision of strong coupling determinations for many years, is related to the CIPT expansion being inconsistent with the standard formulation of the operator product expansion (OPE). Even though the problem can be alleviated phenomenologically for the most part by employing a renormalon-free scheme for the gluon-condensate matrix element, the principal inconsistency of CIPT remains. The CIPT expansion is special because it is not a power expansion, but represents an asymptotic expansion in a sequence of functions of the strong coupling. In this article we provide a closer look at the mathematical aspects of the asymptotic sequence of the functions the CIPT method is based on, and we expose the origin of the CIPT inconsistency as well as the reasons for its apparent good convergence at low orders. Our results are of general interest, and may in particular provide a useful tool to check for the consistency of expansion methods that are similar to CIPT.