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A major shift in market technicals has occurred, with overseas investors becoming the dominant buyers of US corporate debt. Their share of net inflows jumped from a historical average of one-third to 45% in early 2024, providing a powerful tailwind for the asset class.
The decline in the U.S. net foreign asset position is often attributed solely to trade deficits. However, a major driver was the appreciation of foreign investments in the U.S. equity market, which outperformed global markets and thus increased the value of U.S. liabilities to the world.
Despite forecasts of over $2 trillion in corporate bond issuance driven by AI spending, net supply is down 20% year-over-year after accounting for maturities and coupon payments. Record inflows into high-grade funds are effectively absorbing this new debt, keeping the supply/demand dynamic in balance.
Investors have been holding unhedged US dollar assets to capture both high yields and currency appreciation, a speculative strategy traditionally used for emerging market local currency bonds. This parallel indicates a shift in risk perception, where US assets are no longer seen as a pure safe haven.
Given the outlook for increased debt issuance from large US corporations to fund expansion, Morgan Stanley sees better opportunities in assets less exposed to this trend. They favor high yield bonds over investment grade and believe European credit may outperform as it lags the US "animal spirits" theme.
Current market chatter about reduced demand for U.S. assets is not a sign of a sudden de-dollarization crisis. Instead, it reflects a slow, rational diversification by global investors who are finding better relative value in other developed markets as their local interest rates rise.
Promises of foreign investment to build factories in the US are not funded by new money. Foreign entities sell their large holdings of US Treasury bonds to raise the cash for the real investment, creating upward pressure on interest rates.
Concerns over US term premium have receded partly because the Treasury buyer base has stabilized. The declining share of price-insensitive buyers (Fed, foreign investors, banks), which fell from 75% to 50% over a decade, has finally stopped falling, creating a more supportive demand backdrop.
A massive U.S. capital expenditure cycle for AI and hyperscalers is driving heavy issuance in the U.S. high-grade bond market. This increased supply can crowd out investor demand for emerging market investment-grade credit, creating a notable headwind by potentially pushing up DM spreads.
As foreign central banks' demand for U.S. debt wanes, the rapidly growing stablecoin market has emerged as a major buyer. By backing tokens with U.S. Treasuries, issuers like Tether and Circle have created a powerful new demand vector, surpassing countries like Saudi Arabia and Germany.
Barclays forecasts a 40% jump in net investment-grade debt supply in 2026, driven by tech sector CapEx and renewed M&A activity. This massive influx of new bonds will test market demand and could lead to wider credit spreads, even if economic fundamentals remain stable.