Investors flee U.S. corporate junk debt on inflation, Omicron concerns
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[December 02, 2021] By
Karen Pierog
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Worries over surging
inflation and a new variant of the coronavirus are roiling the U.S.
corporate junk bond market, though some believe the tumble could draw
investors seeking higher yields.
November marked the worst month since the start of the pandemic for the
bonds of low-rated companies, with high-yield bonds notching an average
return of minus 1.03%, the lowest since March 2020, according to
Morningstar Direct data.
Spreads, which indicate the yield premium investors demand to hold
junk-rated debt over safer U.S. Treasuries, also widened the most since
the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Among the factors driving the moves were fears that higher inflation
will force the Federal Reserve to normalize monetary policy faster than
expected, as well as a rush away from comparatively risky assets on
worries over the Omicron variant, analysts said.
"With most managers sitting on healthy returns for the year, there's a
bit of de-risking as well," said John McClain, portfolio manager at
Brandywine Global Investment Management.
But McClain said November's poor showing could aid the market in the
coming year, with the higher yields that have resulted from falling
prices potentially drawing investors.
"We're back to yields that look like the beginning of 2021 and spreads
that are reasonably attractive here," he said. "It sets the asset class
up well for investor demand going into 2022."
The option-adjusted yield spread of the ICE BofA U.S. High Yield Index,
a commonly used benchmark for the junk bond market, increased by 51
basis points in November, the biggest monthly jump since March 2020.
Graphic: Junk Bond Spreads Widen,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/
zjpqkykeypx/Pasted%20image%201638376953981.png On Tuesday, the spread
was at its widest since February at 367 basis points.
The funds also saw their biggest weekly net outflow since March in the
week ending Nov. 24, with investors pulling a net $3.3 billion from the
category, Refinitiv Lipper data showed.
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Among the victims of last week’s Omicron-triggered rout was the iShares iBoxx
High-Yield Corporate Bond exchange-traded fund, which sank to its lowest level
since November 2020 in frenzied risk-off trading.
Inflation, which erodes bonds' interest payments over time, was a key worry:
BofA's November survey of U.S. credit investors found 73% citing inflation as
their biggest concern, up from 66% in September and the highest share since
2012.
U.S. consumer prices accelerated in October as Americans paid more for gasoline
and food, leading to the biggest annual gain in 31 years.
Worries over supply chain bottlenecks were another factor that may have weighed
on junk-rated companies, according to Collin Martin, fixed income strategist at
the Schwab Center for Financial Research.
“Anything that can negatively impact your cash flows poses a risk," he said.
Martin added that with three straight months of losses in high-yield bonds, some
investors may have decided to lock in profits after a good year.
Year-to-date total returns on the ICE BofA High-Yield Index, at 3.4%, were
higher than those for other ICE indices tracking investment-grade corporate, as
well as municipal bonds, according to ICE Data Services.
"Some investors said 'let me rush to the exits now and get out of here and find
a better opportunity to go back in' because prior to even the start of November
there was just very little upside in high yield," Martin said.
(Reporting By Karen Pierog; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili; Editing by Sonya
Hepinstall)
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