A Recession Is Coming

Drew O’Neil discusses fixed income market conditions and offers insight for bond investors.

It’s inevitable. A recession is coming. Whether it gets here next month, next quarter, next year, or next decade will be continuously debated until it arrives. Yet, one thing that everyone will agree on is that we will have another recession eventually. Recessions are a natural part of the economic cycle. While they can’t be avoided, knowing what a recession might look like can help prepare investors and hopefully limit surprises during an economic downturn. When it comes to the corporate bond market, being prepared for how spreads might react will hopefully help keep you calm, remain focused on your long-term plan, and not get caught up in the hype and volatility that generally surrounds recessions.

The spread for a corporate bond is the difference in the bond’s yield and its benchmark’s yield (US Treasury with similar/same maturity). This spread represents the additional “reward” (yield) an investor receives in return for taking on additional credit risk. Investment-grade spreads are currently near their lowest levels of the past 20 years with the spread of the Bloomberg US Corporate Bond Index at ~91 basis points (average over the past 20 years is ~153 basis points). When the economy goes through a recession, spreads tend to widen as more credit risk is priced into the corporate bond market. The chart below shows this trend. The red line represents investment-grade corporate bond spreads over the past 20 years and the shaded regions show recessionary periods.

Economy going through a recession