Posted by Lawrence Gillum, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Rating agencies have been busy lately. While one of the big three (Fitch) made headlines recently when it downgraded U.S. government debt, the other two (Moody’s and S&P) have been busy quietly downgrading U.S. corporate debt at an elevated pace. With the increase in Treasury yields over the past few years, corporate interest payments are set to increase as well. And while the health of the corporate landscape is generally positive, rating agencies are starting to adjust their outlooks based upon, among other things, the expected increase in debt payments.

The ratings environment remains relatively calm for companies across investment grade as the asset class has enjoyed an upgrade-to-downgrade ratio well above lower-rated peers. High yield has taken the brunt of downgrades and will likely continue to in the coming quarters. September marked the 15th straight month with a negative combined upgrade-to-downgrade ratio, as the measure between S&P and Moody’s finished the month at -1.2x (meaning there were 20% more downgrades than upgrades). Moody’s remained more pessimistic, with the ratio at -1.4x. S&P had an upgrade-to-downgrade ratio of -1.1x. Year to date, S&P has downgraded its outlook and the outright rating on 787 companies versus only 492 upgrades, which makes 2023 already the worst year for downgrades since 2020 (Moody’s has downgraded 568 companies this year vs. 427 upgrades).

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With the higher for longer narrative coming from the Federal Reserve (Fed), it’s likely corporate debt payments will continue to increase as well. And while many corporate borrowers took advantage of low interest rates and issued a lot of debt, debt refinancings are set to pick up with nearly 30% of debt issued by CCC-rated companies coming due over the next few years (as outlined in this blog post). As such, we remain cautious on corporate credit broadly but think the short-to-intermediate part of the investment grade corporate credit curve offers compelling risk/reward. However, despite the recent sell-off in high yield, we still don’t think the risk/reward is very attractive for that asset class given the broader macro and refinancing risks, which will likely keep rating downgrades and defaults at an elevated pace.

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