Bond History: Rhyming, Not Repeating

by Douglas J. Peebles, AllianceBernstein

When the Fed does eventually start raising interest rates, at AllianceBernstein we donā€™t expect to see bonds experiencing the dire scenarios of 1981 or 1994. Instead, the 2003ā€“2006 period of slow and measured rate normalization seems more likely. But itā€™s not a perfect match, and we do see some important investment factors to consider.

The Bad News

Weā€™re later in the credit cycle today than we were in June 2003, when high-yield markets were rebounding from late 2002ā€™s cyclical peaks in high-yield spreads. Today, high yield has already been through several years of strong overall performance. Spreads might narrow further from here, but it would be a more modest compression than we saw in 2003ā€“2006.

Importantly, there is a cautionary tale here about chasing yields. By June 2007, high-yield spreads were at all-time lowsā€”near 240 basis points (bps), with low volatility, high flows and ample issuance, and issuer-friendly structures and lower-quality offerings coming to market easily. Shortly after that, the global financial crisis brought credit carnage: liquidity and issuance dried up, and US high-yield spreads exploded, to nearly 2,000 bps by the fall of 2008.

Today, weā€™re at or near single-year highs in issuance of CCC-rated bonds and other similarly risky offerings and structuresā€”highs we havenā€™t seen sinceā€¦2006ā€“2007. So, while we still see potential opportunities in credit as a whole, itā€™s crucial today to be selective and not chase yield.

The Good News

The US yield curve is extremely steep today, particularly the intermediate-long part of the curve. It was steep (roughly 2%) in June 2003, too, when the 10-year US Treasury yield was above 3% and the two-year was around 1%. But todayā€™s ā€œ2sā€“10s spreadā€ is widerā€”more than 2.5%. And the credit-spread curve is also steep. In other words, weā€™re seeing attractive opportunities, and, importantly, yield-curve position matters.

All in all, we feel the mid-2000s period provides us with a good guide for what may unfold for bonds in the coming months and years. While high-grade and high-yield bond returns should be more muted, they also shouldnā€™t resemble the dismal experience of 1994ā€”let alone the horrendous situation of the early 1980s.

What should investors take away from this? The key message is: Donā€™t panic! But do pay attention to position. Instead of fearing interest-rate exposure, diversify it and focus on yield-curve position. Add value and risk diversification through credit exposure, but be selective and donā€™t overreach for yield.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AllianceBernstein portfolio-management teams.

Douglas J. Peebles is Chief Investment Officer and Head of Fixed Income at AllianceBernstein.

 

Copyright Ā© AllianceBernstein

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