Terms and Conditions

Please read these conditions carefully before using this site. By using this site, you signify your assent to the following terms and conditions of use without limitation or qualification. In particular, you consent to the use of all cookies on this website for the purposes described in the terms of use. If you do not agree to these terms or to the use of cookies as described below, do not use this site. AllianceBernstein may at any time revise these terms of use. You are bound by any such revisions and should therefore periodically visit this page to review the then current terms of use to which you are bound. This site is for informational purposes and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security which may be referenced herein.

Terms Of Use

This site is solely intended for use by professional/institutional investors and institutional-investment industry consultants.

Do you wish to continue?

Investment-Grade Corporates: A Tale of Two Markets

October 16, 2023
4 min read
Long Corporates Offer Less Yield and Spread Advantage than Usual
Corporates: Difference Between Long Maturities and Intermediate Maturities
Long Corporates Offer Less Yield and Spread Advantage than Usual

Historical and current analyses do not guarantee future results.
Data compares option-adjusted spreads and yield to worst of the Bloomberg US Intermediate Corporate Bond Index and the Bloomberg US Long Corporate Bond Index.
Through September 30, 2023
Source: Bloomberg and AllianceBernstein (AB)

Investors are accustomed to getting a snapshot of the market by looking at the latest index statistics. But today, average spreads and yield for investment-grade corporate bonds are deceptive. A look under the hood reveals that intermediate-maturity corporates are a much more compelling opportunity than long-maturity ones.

Why? The spread between the two has compressed in recent years and is now the narrowest it’s been since the early days of the pandemic. And the yield advantage of long corporates over intermediate bonds is now near zero.

The way we see it, the takeaway for investors is simple: investors with long-bond exposure simply aren’t being compensated for the added risk.

What’s driving tighter spreads on long bonds? Yield-focused investors such as pension funds and insurance companies are locking in today’s higher yield levels by buying long-dated securities to match their long-dated liabilities. The phenomenon is a global one: US, UK and euro area bonds longer than 10 years all look relatively expensive as a result.

Meanwhile, unlike long-dated corporates, intermediate-term credit offers above-average spreads today. That’s why, in a challenging investment environment, it pays to look under the hood.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Views are subject to revision over time.