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U.S. Credit Outlook: 10 key themes to position for Q3
U.S. Credit Outlook: 10 key themes to position for Q3

Yahoo

time12-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

U.S. Credit Outlook: 10 key themes to position for Q3

-- UBS expects U.S. corporate credit spreads to widen in the second half of the year, cautioning that markets are underpricing the risks from slowing labor markets, potential trade tariffs, and upcoming Federal Reserve rate cuts. The brokerage laid out 10 themes for positioning in the third quarter, arguing that the sharp tightening in spreads seen in early July likely reflects seasonal trends, performance-chasing by credit managers, and renewed inflows into fixed income, factors that may not be sustainable. "Investment-grade and high-yield spreads are at or near historic tights," UBS wrote, pointing to levels of 77 basis points and 268 basis points, respectively. "A further rally would require a combination of falling tariff rates, accelerating growth, higher oil prices and constrained supply." The bank's base case calls for spreads to drift wider into late Q3 as U.S. payroll data weakens and rate cuts begin in September. UBS expects the unemployment rate to rise to 4.6% by year-end and forecasts four Fed cuts in 2025—more than the market currently anticipates. UBS said corporate bond markets appear complacent on tariff risk ahead of a July 9 deadline for new U.S. trade measures. High-yield sectors that had lagged earlier this year, such as transport and packaging, have largely rebounded, further suggesting 'very little risk is priced in.' While technicals remain supportive, credit fund flows have recovered, and June issuance was largely in line with forecasts, UBS highlighted three key positioning ideas. It favors investment-grade credit default swaps over cash bonds, sees better value in double-B and fallen-angel high yield, and expects leveraged loans to outperform high-yield bonds in the coming months. Even with no major cracks in private credit or corporate defaults, UBS noted that valuations are stretched. 'The upside scenario is possible, but fragile,' it wrote, hinging on a confluence of positive surprises in policy, growth, and commodity prices. Related articles U.S. Credit Outlook: 10 key themes to position for Q3 Where Bernstein sees strength in U.S. retail going forward What to expect from legacy media stocks as Q2 earnings season is set to start Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Czech Defense Firm's $1.33 Billion Junk Sale to Cut Debt Costs
Czech Defense Firm's $1.33 Billion Junk Sale to Cut Debt Costs

Bloomberg

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Czech Defense Firm's $1.33 Billion Junk Sale to Cut Debt Costs

Armaments maker Czechoslovak Group AS is marketing $1.33 billion of junk bonds at a much lower yield than its last debt foray, highlighting the clamor for defense sector investment among credit money managers. The Czech company, a supplier to Ukraine in its war against Russia, set initial price talk of 7% to 7.25% on a $750 million dollar note and 5.75% to 6% on a €500 million ($580 million) euro bond. Both tranches are much larger than originally intended, suggesting that the company received strong indications of demand during investor calls this week.

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