Such high yields might feel abnormal. But the era of near-zero yields that left investors starving for income was the real anomaly in financial history. Indeed, we believe we have returned to an era of structurally higher interest rates. Investors can now tap into sources of resilient income that have been extremely hard to come by for many years. And while the path to higher yields was painful, we believe it’s now largely behind us.
Credit Metrics Bolster the Case for Corporates
The specter of a recession usually scares investors away from corporate debt. Credit fundamentals tend to have weakened prior to any slowdown, causing issuers to enter a downgrade and default cycle as growth and demand slow further. But today’s situation is different.
Today’s issuers are in better shape financially than issuers entering past recessions—partly because the corporate market went through a default cycle just two years ago when the pandemic hit. The surviving companies were the strong ones, and they’ve managed their balance sheets and liquidity conservatively over the past two years, even as profitability recovered.
Interest coverage ratios for investment-grade and high-yield companies are the strongest they’ve been over the last 15 years. Other measures of fundamental strength—leverage ratios, free-cash-flow-to-debt and EBITDA margins—are also exceptionally strong by historical measures. While we do expect these metrics to weaken, we don’t expect to see the kinds of dramatic declines that would lead to a tsunami of downgrades and defaults.
What’s more, high-yield issuers have been focused on extending their maturity runways since the start of the pandemic. That means there’s no approaching maturity wall, where a large share of bond issues matures and issuers are compelled to procure new debt at prevailing rates. In fact, only 20% of the market will mature by the end of 2025, with the lion’s share of maturities coming between 2026 and 2029. This is akin to opening a pressure valve as yields rise, because gradual and extended maturities slow the impact of higher yields on companies.
Strategies for 2023: Be Patient, Stay Flexible, Seek Balance
Here’s how active investors can thrive in today’s environment:
1. Seek inflation protection. Explicit inflation protection, such as Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and CPI swaps, can play a useful role in portfolios. If central banks succeed in their mission, we believe inflation will ultimately settle into a 2%–4% range—higher than in recent decades, yet much lower than in 2022. In other words, the 2% inflation that was typically seen as a ceiling by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank would become an inflationary floor in the coming years.
2. Lean into credit. Yields across risk assets are much higher today than they’ve been in years, giving investors a long-awaited opportunity to fill their tanks. “Spread sectors” such as investment-grade corporates, high-yield corporates and securitized assets, including commercial mortgage-backed securities and credit–risk transfer securities, can also serve as a buffer against inflation by providing a bigger current income stream.
But not all risk assets are equally compelling. For example, while emerging-market debt valuations look attractive, emerging markets remain particularly challenged by slowing global growth and high inflation. Thus, careful security selection remains critical.
3. Don’t ditch duration. Leaning into credit doesn’t mean ditching duration, or interest-rate risk. As inflation falls and the economy slows, duration tends to benefit portfolios.
4. Choose a balanced approach. Among the most effective active strategies are those that pair government bonds and other interest-rate-sensitive assets with growth-oriented credit assets in a single, dynamically managed portfolio. This approach can help managers get a handle on the interplay between rate and credit risks and make better decisions about which way to lean at a given moment. The ability to rebalance negatively correlated assets helps generate income and potential return while limiting the scope of drawdowns when risk assets sell off.
5. Be nimble. Active managers should prepare to take advantage of quickly shifting valuations and fleeting windows of opportunity as other investors react to headlines. In general, global multi-sector approaches to investing are well suited to a dynamic economic and financial market landscape, as investors can monitor conditions and valuations and shift the portfolio mix as conditions warrant.
The year ahead will bring both challenges and opportunity. By approaching the market with equanimity, bond investors can weather uncertainty with dispassion, embrace the bounty of higher yields and position their portfolios to prosper in the coming year.