
US corporate bond spreads hit widest in about 6 months on recession fears
March 12 (Reuters) - The spreads between the yields on corporate bonds and U.S. Treasuries hit their widest since September this week, pointing to mounting investor worries about recession and a global trade war.
U.S. investment-grade bond spreads hit 94 basis points on Tuesday, their widest level since Sept. 18, according to the ICE BofA Corporate Index (.MERC0A0), opens new tab. Junk bond spreads widened to 322 bps, also their widest since Sept. 18, according to Tuesday's late update of the ICE BofA High Yield Bond Index (.MERH0A0), opens new tab.
Investors consider U.S. corporate bond spreads a good gauge of financial market stress, especially the gap between yields on bonds issued by companies with poor credit ratings and ultra-safe U.S. government debt. When the gap widens it shows less willingness to hold riskier "junk" bonds.
The widening in spreads comes as the latest sign of growing anxiety about the economic outlook following a series of import tariffs imposed by the Trump administration that raised the specter of a global trade war.
"This will be inflationary, and the Fed won't likely be able to cut rates in this environment," said Andrzej Skiba, head of BlueBay U.S. fixed income at RBC GAM. "This could put pressure on fixed income assets, and we see more spread widening and risk ahead."
A Reuters poll last week found 95% of economists across Canada, the U.S. and Mexico said the risk of a recession in their respective countries had increased following Trump's chaotic tariff implementation.
"The escalation of tariff hostilities and re-rating in Tech sector valuations is causing contagion from stocks to credit in a way not observed in a while and is stoking fears that the economy could veer off the tracks," Societe Generale analysts wrote in a Wednesday note.
The junk bond spread has opened up by 59 bps since a recent low on Feb. 18, JPMorgan analysts noted on Wednesday. They added that junk spreads are "biased wider" over the coming months, due to "vast macro uncertainty" surrounding trade policy, inflation and recession.
Corporate bond spreads are still tight on a historical basis, the analysts noted. Junk spreads late last year contracted to around 250 basis points, the lowest since 2007, before the Financial Crisis, during which they blew out to more than 2,000 basis points or twenty percentage points. They were well above 350 bps for the majority of 2022 and 2023, according to the ICE BofA High Yield Index.
Nicholas Elfner, co-head of research at asset manager Breckinridge Capital Advisors, said that as the impacts of President Trump's potentially inflationary economic and fiscal policies become clearer, U.S. corporate bond spreads are expected to widen further.
This should bolster the yield allure of corporate debt for investors, including from foreign investors, who overtook insurers and pension funds in 2024 in demand for corporate bonds, Elfner said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
8 minutes ago
- Reuters
Seven partners depart law firm Willkie Farr to join Cooley after Trump deal
June 13 (Reuters) - A group of seven partners is leaving Willkie Farr & Gallagher, which struck a deal with U.S. President Donald Trump in April to avert an executive order targeting its business, to join Cooley, which is representing one of the law firms fighting Trump's orders. Cooley on Friday said Simona Agnolucci, Benedict Hur, Joshua Anderson, Tiffany Lin, Jonathan Patchen, Michael Rome and Eduardo Santacana are joining the firm as litigation partners in San Francisco. The lawyers leaving New York-founded Willkie, which has more than 1,200 lawyers, are among the latest to depart from major U.S. firms that have made deals with Trump. Agnolucci and Hur, who were both leaders of Willkie's San Francisco office, and the other departing partners did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Friday. Agnolucci was also a member of the firm's executive committee. The New York Times, which first reported the departures earlier on Friday, cited an unnamed source who said Agnolucci and Hur had told others they were disappointed that Willkie had capitulated to Trump. Reuters could not independently confirm the report. A Willkie spokesperson said "we wish them well" and had no further comment. Some of the former Willkie lawyers have represented major tech clients on court matters. Agnolucci, Hur and Patchen were on Google's defense team in litigation led by the state of Texas that led to a $1.8 billion settlement. Palo Alto-founded Cooley is representing Jenner & Block in its legal challenge to a Trump executive order that restricted Jenner's access to government officials and threatened its federal contracting work. A federal judge in May overturned Trump's order, calling it an unconstitutional act of retaliation for Jenner's past cases and its employment of a prosecutor who investigated ties between Trump's 2016 campaign and Russia. Cooley CEO Rachel Proffitt in a statement said the firm is "thrilled to welcome this esteemed group of Bay Area leaders and litigators." Willkie Farr in its deal with Trump had agreed to provide free legal services worth $100 million to mutually agreed-upon projects with the administration and had pledged not to engage in illegal diversity-related employment practices. Eight other large firms have reached similar agreements with the White House. Willkie's leadership had said in an internal email seen by Reuters in April that the deal prevented Trump from signing an executive order that could have imperiled the firm and its clients, though it had acknowledged dissent about the decision. The first firm to settle with Trump, Paul Weiss, has seen at least eight partners leave since its agreement in March. Since the end of May, seven partners have left the firm to join a new firm, Dunn Isaacson Rhee, co-founded by former Paul Weiss partner Karen Dunn. The new firm has taken over from Paul Weiss in at least one case – an antitrust lawsuit in Nevada in which some of the former Paul Weiss lawyers are representing the Ultimate Fighting Championship, according to court documents filed this week. A Paul Weiss spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Dunn Isaacson firm is now also representing Google and Qualcomm in antitrust litigation, though Paul Weiss remains involved in those cases.


NBC News
21 minutes ago
- NBC News
Consumer sentiment reading rebounds to much higher level than expected as people get over tariff shock
Consumers in the early part of June took a considerably less pessimistic view about the economy and potential surges in inflation as progress appeared possible in the global trade war, according to a University of Michigan survey Friday. The university's closely watched Surveys of Consumers showed across-the-board rebounds from previously dour readings, while respondents also sharply cut back their outlook for near-term inflation. For the headline index of consumer sentiment, the gauge was at 60.5, well ahead of the Dow Jones estimate for 54 and a 15.9% increase from a month ago. The current conditions index jumped 8.1%, while the future expectations measure soared 21.9%. The moves coincided with a softening in the heated rhetoric that has surrounded President Donald Trump 's tariffs. After releasing his April 2 'liberation day' announcement, Trump has eased off the threats and instituted a 90-day negotiation period that appears to be showing progress, particularly with top trade rival China. 'Consumers appear to have settled somewhat from the shock of the extremely high tariffs announced in April and the policy volatility seen in the weeks that followed,' Joanne Hsu, survey director, said in a statement. 'However, consumers still perceive wide-ranging downside risks to the economy.' To be sure, all of the sentiment indexes were still considerably below their year-ago readings as consumers worry about what impact the tariffs will have on prices, along with a host of other geopolitical concerns. On inflation, the one-year outlook tumbled from levels not seen since 1981. The one-year estimate slid to 5.1%, a 1.5 percentage point drop, while the five-year view edged lower to 4.1%, a 0.1 percentage point decrease. 'Consumers' fears about the potential impact of tariffs on future inflation have softened somewhat in June,' Hsu said. 'Still, inflation expectations remain above readings seen throughout the second half of 2024, reflecting widespread beliefs that trade policy may still contribute to an increase in inflation in the year ahead.' The Michigan survey, which will be updated at the end of the month, had been an outlier on inflation fears, with other sentiment and market indicators showing the outlook was fairly contained despite the tariff tensions. Earlier this week, the Federal Reserve of New York reported that the one-year view had fallen to 3.2% in May, a 0.4 percentage point drop from the prior month. At the same time, the Bureau of Labor Statistics this week reported that both producer and consumer prices increased just 0.1% on a monthly basis, pointing toward little upward pressure from the duties. Economists still largely expect the tariffs to show an impact in the coming months. The soft inflation numbers have led Trump and other White House officials to demand the Fed start lowering interest rates again. The central bank is slated to meet next week, with market expectations strongly pointing to no cuts until September.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Inter Milan set to early repay bond as plans new debt deal
MILAN, June 13 (Reuters) - Champions League finalist Inter Milan is set to repay early a 415 million euro ($479.57 million) high-yield bond this month as the Italian soccer club prepares to secure funds from a new debt deal, it said in a statement on Friday. Inter Milan paid a 6.75% coupon to place a five-year bond in 2022 to refinance Italy's top-flight soccer club's debt. The debt facility was issued by the Serie A club's media company, which manages the broadcast and sponsorship business of Inter Milan. The company plans to redeem the bond on June 26, subject to securing funds from a debt financing transaction by the business day before the redemption date, it said in a statement. Companies typically repay debt early to secure better financial conditions. Controlled by U.S. investment fund Oaktree (OAK_pa.N), opens new tab, Inter Milan was reportedly tapping private debt investors to refinance the debt facility. Oaktree took over the club last year after a missed 395 million euro payment from the then majority shareholder, Chinese conglomerate Suning ( opens new tab. ($1 = 0.8654 euros) (This story has been refiled to fix typos in paragraphs 1 and 5)