In a tight-spread environment, CIO Dave Albrecht favors high-quality asset-backed securities (ABS). For instance, AA-rated ABS backed by franchise lease receivables from brands like Dunkin' Donuts offer upper-4% yields for two-year paper, providing better relative value than similarly rated corporate bonds.

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Post-crisis stigma has faded, making Collateralized Loan Obligation (CLO) tranches a top relative value pick in credit markets. The structure allows investors to precisely select risk exposure, from safe AAA tranches with attractive spreads to high-return equity positions, outperforming other credit assets.

The private Investment Grade (IG) market is widely misunderstood. It primarily consists of asset-backed or project finance deals for specific CapEx projects, often structured in separate SPVs. This makes it more akin to secured financing than a direct private alternative to public corporate bonds.

Oaktree sees superior relative value in non-qualified residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). The US housing market is under-supplied with tight lending standards. This contrasts sharply with commercial real estate, particularly the office sector. Investors can acquire these non-government backed loans at a discount, offering high-yield-like returns with diversification.

Judging the credit market by its overall index spread is misleading. The significant gap between the tightest and widest spreads (high dispersion) reveals that the market is rewarding quality and punishing uncertainty. This makes individual credit selection far more important than a top-down market view.

The sheer volume of debt needed to fund AI infrastructure will likely widen spreads in investment-grade bonds and related ABS. This supply pressure creates an opportunity for outperformance in insulated sectors like US high-yield and agency mortgage-backed securities.

Despite forecasting a massive surge in bond issuance to fund AI and M&A, Morgan Stanley expects credit spreads to widen only modestly. This is because high-quality, highly-rated companies will lead the issuance, and continued demand from yield-focused buyers should help anchor spreads.

The modern high-yield market is structurally different from its past. It's now composed of higher-quality issuers and has a shorter duration profile. While this limits potential upside returns compared to historical cycles, it also provides a cushion, capping the potential downside risk for investors.

Sectors that have experienced severe distress, like Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS), often present compelling opportunities. The crisis forces tighter lending standards and realistic asset repricing. This creates a safer investment environment for new capital, precisely because other investors remain fearful and avoid the sector.

A surge in investment-grade bond issuance to fund AI capital expenditures will insulate the high-yield market. This technical factor is expected to drive high-yield bond outperformance versus higher-quality corporate bonds, which will face supply pressure.

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.