Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Persistently low high-yield credit spreads, despite global turmoil, don't signal corporate health. This is a structural market shift where the riskiest debt has migrated from public markets to the opaque world of private credit, artificially suppressing spreads and hiding true risk.

Related Insights

A flood of capital into private credit has dramatically increased competition, causing the yield spread over public markets to shrink from 3-4% to less than 1%. This compression raises serious questions about whether investors are still being adequately compensated for illiquidity risk.

Unlike in past cycles, the riskiest underwriting has largely occurred in leveraged loans and private credit, not high-yield bonds. This migration has left the public high-yield market with higher-quality issuers and shorter durations, making it more resilient than its reputation suggests.

Default rates are not uniform. High-yield bonds are low due to a 2020 "cleansing." Leveraged loans show elevated defaults due to higher rates. Private credit defaults are masked but may be as high as 6%, indicated by "bad PIK" amendments, suggesting hidden stress.

As private credit funds absorb riskier, smaller deals, the public high-yield market is left with larger, more stable companies. This migration has improved the overall quality and lowered default rates for public high-yield bonds, creating a performance divergence.

Don't wait for public credit spreads to blow out as a warning sign. In a system where sovereign debt is the primary vulnerability and corporates are easily bailed out, credit spreads have become a coincident, not leading, indicator. The real leverage risk is hidden in private credit.

The credit market appears healthy based on tight average spreads, but this is misleading. A strong top 90% of the market pulls the average down, while the bottom 10% faces severe distress, with loans "dropping like a stone." The weight of prolonged high borrowing costs is creating a clear divide between healthy and struggling companies.

A consistent 2-5% of Europe's public high-yield market restructures annually. The conspicuous absence of a parallel event in private markets, which often finance similar companies, suggests that opacity and mark-to-model valuations may be concealing significant, unacknowledged credit risk in private portfolios.

The high-yield bond market is now nearly 60% BB-rated, a significant quality improvement over the last decade. Risk has instead concentrated in the lower-quality, B-rated leveraged loan and direct lending markets, making high-yield spreads an unreliable gauge of overall credit stress.

Credit spreads are becoming an unreliable economic signal. The shift of issuance to private markets reduces the public supply, while the Federal Reserve's 2020 intervention in corporate debt markets permanently altered how investors price default probability.

The gap between high-yield and investment-grade credit is shrinking. The average high-yield rating is now BB, while investment-grade is BBB—the closest they've ever been. This fundamental convergence in quality helps explain why the yield spread between the two asset classes is also at a historical low, reflecting market efficiency rather than just irrational exuberance.