Could High Yield Distress Be An Equity Market Red Herring?

 | Oct 14, 2015 12:15AM ET

I received a lot of skeptical feedback to my last post, probably because of the provocative title (see A "What's the credit limit on my VISA card" buy signal). The pushback can be categorized two ways. A number of chartists were still bearish. As well, there were worrisome signs from the credit market. I want to address the latter issue, as cross-asset, or inter-market analysis signals are something that I pay special attention to.h3 HY spreads are blowing out/h3

A number of readers point to articles like this one from Business Insider , in which UBS and Morgan Stanley highlighted recession risk because of widening credit spreads:

Market-watchers have pointed to the recent spike in high-yield bond spreads and noted that this is the kind of move that happens as an economy goes into recession.

The high-yield bond market is particularly sensitive to economic cycles. Commonly referred to as junk bonds, these debt securities are issued by companies with low credit quality. Because of the higher risks that come with lending to such companies, they have to offer higher yields than those of their investment-grade peers. When spreads increase, it's costing more for these junk corporates to borrow.

"US high yield credit has faced one headwind after the next — from significant distress in Energy, to risks of weakening global growth, to significant uncertainty around Fed rate hikes," Morgan Stanley's Adam Richmond said on Friday. "As a result, HY just posted the weakest four-month stretch (Jun-Sep) since the end of 2008, -7.03% in total return. This selloff has driven very negative sentiment, as nothing brings the bears out of hiding more so than low prices, feeding into panicky price action in markets."

"The simple point — it doesn’t happen often — only shortly before recessions or during major growth scares," Richmond said.