So when such bonds start falling — which is to say when their yields start rising — that’s a sign of broad-based trouble ahead. From Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal:
Today’s Big Number: 15.7% of high-yield bonds trading at distressed levels
The commodity -price crunch fueled by China’s economic slow-down is taking a toll on the bond market.Bonds from debt-laden companies in the metals, mining and steel industries are driving up distress ratios, an indicator that a wave of debt defaults could be on the horizon.As of mid-September, nearly 15.7% of the roughly 1,720 bonds rated below investment grade traded at distressed levels, the biggest share since 2011, according to Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services. Such bonds were trading with yields at least 10 percentage points over comparable U.S. Treasurys. Yields on bonds rise when prices fall.Companies with distressed bonds may not be able to refinance or access other forms of capita, said Diane Vazza, an S&P managing director.The numbers suggest that many companies could default in the next seven to nine months. “There’s a very strong correlation” between bonds that fall into the distressed category and defaults, she said.
It’s not surprising that the commodities crash would impact the bonds of coal and oil companies. The big question is whether the carnage spreads to other kinds of junk. And over the last couple of months it has. The chart below shows the price of a junk bond ETF that last week plunged through the lows of the August mini-panic.
Wolf Richter and Zero Hedge just posted long, insightful pieces on this subject. See, respectively, This is When Bonds Go Kaboom! and BofA issues dramatic junk bond meltdown warning..."
at http://dollarcollapse.com/money-bubble/panic-is-spreading-part-1-surge-in-junk-bond-defaults-coming/
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