What Happens to VIX Index When Credit Spreads Hit Record Tights?
What happens when high yield credit spreads compress to historically tight levels? The risks of complacency in corporate credit, what it means for risk appetite, and how to position.
How VIX Index Responds
Scenario Background
Credit spreads represent the extra yield investors demand for holding corporate bonds over risk-free Treasuries. When high yield spreads compress below 300 basis points, the market is saying that junk-rated companies are almost as safe as the government, a level of optimism that has historically preceded significant spread widening events.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
HY spreads reached cyclical tights of 240 bps in June 2007,six months before the financial crisis erupted and spreads blew out to 2,200 bps. They compressed to 310 bps in early 2014 and 300 bps in early 2018, both preceding modest spread-widening episodes of 200-300 bps. Spreads hit 320 bps in late 2024, reflecting strong corporate fundamentals and abundant liquidity. The 2007 analog is the one that haunts credit investors: tight spreads persisted for months while the subprime crisis was already...
What to Watch For
- •Corporate leverage ratios rising while spreads stay tight, deteriorating fundamentals being ignored
- •New HY issuance surging, companies locking in cheap borrowing while they can
- •Covenant quality declining in new issuance, weaker investor protections in new deals
- •Default rates at cyclical lows with economists flagging rising recession risk, disconnect
- •IG-HY spread differential compressing below 200 bps, complete loss of quality discrimination
Other Assets When Credit Spreads Hit Record Tights
Other Scenarios Affecting VIX Index
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