Junk Bond Correction

 | Jun 05, 2013 10:47AM ET

We put two weekly charts up this morning: the two corporate high-yield ETF’s, which show the junk bond market is in correction mode.

Both ETF’s are sitting right on top their respective 50-week moving averages. For both ETF’s to drop to their 200-week moving averages would require another 2% decline.

The corporate high yield (i.e. junk bond market) is considered an early warning canary for the stock market, so it pays to watch what is happening with high yield spreads.

Cheap Risk
Despite the very low level of nominal yields and interest rates, “credit risk” is still thought to be cheap to Treasuries, which means (in English) that the spreads at which corporate credits still trade relative to the equivalent-maturity Treasury security, is still wider than what is considered “normal” or average spreads over time.

The point is that it still pays to be overweight credit risk in terms of portfolio management.

The “average weighting” for corporate high-yield bonds in benchmarks like the AGG and other widely-held, fixed-income benchmarks, is 10% – 15%.

The HYG ETF has a 12-month yield of 6.5% and an SEC yield (according to Morningstar) of 4.6%.