by Richard Bernstein, Richard Bernstein Advisors
According to Bloomberg, January was a record month for investment grade (IG) corporate bond ETF flows as the credit hype machine went into overdrive. As a result, the amount investors are being compensated for the additional risk relative to US Treasury bonds (known as credit spreads) has declined rapidly. From a credit managerās perspective, we understand the appeal. At 5% yield, IG bond yields are now the highest since the Global Financial Crisis, making them unlikely to result in negative returns outside of a substantial recessionary scenario. With many IG companies having extended debt maturities at low fixed interest rates, overall leverage and interest coverage metrics for the market are arguably among the best theyāve been at this point in a cycle. Most IG managers are limited to investing in corporate debt, and the significant cash flows generated by these bonds create a substantial reinvestment back into the market.
But therein lies the rub: the rest of us are not limited to looking at this narrow market segment on a standalone basis. We can choose to underweight IG because better alternatives exist elsewhere or because we feel the risk/return is not compelling. That choice is what separates a style box manager from a tactical multi-asset manager.
Low quality credit simply does not perform well during earnings recessions and the investment grade marketās weight in BBB-rated bonds (the lowest quality IG rating) is near a record high at 50%. Investors appear to be focused solely on the above-mentioned health of the market and seem to have forgotten about downgrade risk (due to an earnings recession), liquidity risk, and most importantly, volatility. Corporate bond investors hate volatility; they want the certainty of earning their coupon and the ultimate payment of principle. A good gauge of this risk is equity option volatility as proxied by the VIX Index*. Should equity volatility spike, credit spreads will likely widen.
Consider the following: an investor today can buy a 2-year Treasury note with virtually no credit risk and little downgrade risk for just 60bps less yield than what is offered by the investment grade market. On that basis, 2-year Treasuries have rarely been cheaper relative to IG bonds and has historically been a great opportunity to reduce credit risk. The IG market appears to be priced for perfection by this measure.
It is clear that one need not own credit to generate income at the moment. Treasury yields are at post financial crisis highs, after all! But donāt forget the potential for total return. The decision of whether to own IG bonds (credit risk and interest rate risk) or Treasuries (just interest rate risk) comes down to how credit spreads are likely to change. If one owned a 20-year Treasury bond and interest rates across the yield curve fell by 50bps, they should generate a return of nearly 10%. For IG bonds to generate the same return, credit spreads on IG bonds would need to decline to near post crisis lows. This seems like an unlikely outcome given lower Treasury yields tend to cause wider, not tighter, spreads, especially when accompanied by an earnings recession. On the other hand, if interest rates were to rise, it would not be surprising to see credit spreads widen (perhaps in a disorderly way), creating a losing outcome for IG bonds from both interest rates and credit spreads.
If the credit markets start to price in an earnings recession, the case to own them will be more compellingā¦ but it is clearly not today.
*Cboe Global Markets revolutionized investing with the creation of the Cboe Volatility IndexĀ® (VIXĀ® Index), the first benchmark index to measure the marketās expectation of future volatility. The VIX Index is based on options of the S&P 500Ā® Index, considered the leading indicator of the broad U.S. stock market. The VIX Index is recognized as the worldās premier gauge of U.S. equity market volatility.