Corporate Junk Preparing for the Inevitable

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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There is one issue that the Federal Reserve's protracted period of near-zero interest rates have created that doesn't receive a great deal of coverage in the mainstream media.  This issue could prove to be a significant problem for millions of hapless small investors who have been doing their best to get a reasonable return on their meagre savings.  Please note that I will be using the terms "high yield debt" and "junk bonds" interchangeably throughout this posting.
 
Here is a graph from
As I noted above, bond yields and prices act inversely to each other.  As such, here is a chart showing what has happened to Barclay's High Yield Bond ETF over the past year:
 
JNK is now at its lowest level over the past year.  If we look back further in time, here's what has happened to JNK since December 2007:
 
Not only is JNK at its lowest level over the past twelve months, it is now at its lowest level since July 2009.  This would suggest that many investors have seen the value of their high yield bond holdings decline substantially in value as the market is awakening to the fact that many of these bonds, particularly those issued by the beleaguered commodity sector, (i.e. oil) are starting to reflect their true risk profile.  If you want some idea of how big this problem could be, here is a graphic showing the historical volume (in billions of dollars) of B, BB and CCC-rated debt is in the United States:

Estimates by UBS suggest that 35 to 40 percent of the American high yield debt is "at risk", working out to roughly $1.05 trillion to $1.2 trillion in low quality speculative grade debt that will be difficult to refinance.

 
Thanks to the Federal Reserve and its braintrust, American investors (and others around the world) are likely to feel a great deal of pain over the coming months as the global economy looks set to slow down and the corporate world finds itself unable to service its mounting debt levels.
 
Click HERE to read more of Glen Asher's columns

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