The Case for US investment grade credit
US corporates are showing resilient fundamentals and solid balance sheets despite ongoing monetary tightening and market disruption.
At a macro level, with inflation falling in response to monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve (‘the Fed’), investors can potentially benefit from more attractive entry points as income takes over following the negative returns of the last two years.
1. Credit fundamentals remain robust
The US economy remains likely to enter a mild recession some time in 2023. That said, investment grade (IG) issuers should enter a potential recession in relatively good shape fundamentally.
US IG yield and price evolution since 2009
Source: Bloomberg, AXA IM, date from 1/2/2009 to 5/17/2023
► All-in credit yields for IG bonds are historically attractive after the Fed’s 500bps hike in rates from March 2022 to April 2023, and have not reached these levels since 2009.
► IG credit may also offer attractive compensation for interest rate and credit risks.
2. Making size and liquidity matter
With a value of around US$8 trillion, the US credit universe accounts for roughly two-thirds of the global corporate market, and has several key features:
► Strong liquidity profile
► Diversified with an abundance of selection opportunities
► Positive technicals following a decline in issuance
3. Accessing short-to-intermediate duration strategies
An inverted US government bond curve creates comparable yields for short-to-intermediate vs full duration strategies without incremental interest rate and credit risks.
Key features of shorter duration bonds:
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► Lower volatility in returns compared with the broader market |
Investment Grade
Investment grade bonds offer investors exposure to a region or global universe without taking on a high level of risk.
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