What Happens to High Yield Credit (HYG) When Oil Drops Below $50?
What happens when crude oil crashes below $50? Deflationary signals, energy sector carnage, consumer benefits, and geopolitical implications.
How High Yield Credit (HYG) Responds
Scenario Background
Oil below $50 per barrel is a seismic event for the global economy because oil is the master commodity, its price feeds into everything from transportation costs to plastics to food production. Below $50, US shale production becomes unprofitable for many producers, OPEC revenue shortfalls create geopolitical instability, and the energy sector faces a credit crunch. At the same time, consumers and energy-importing nations enjoy a massive windfall.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
Oil crashed from $107 to $26 between June 2014 and February 2016, driven by the US shale boom flooding the market while OPEC refused to cut production. Energy HY spreads blew out to 1,600+ bps, and dozens of shale producers went bankrupt. The S&P 500 initially shrugged it off but eventually fell 15% in early 2016 as credit contagion fears spread. Oil went negative (-$37) in April 2020 as COVID destroyed demand and storage filled to capacity, a once-in-history event. In 2008, oil crashed from $14...
What to Watch For
- •US rig count declining, producers responding to unprofitable prices
- •OPEC announcing emergency production cuts, supply response to stabilize prices
- •Energy HY spreads exceeding 1,000 bps, credit stress becoming systemic
- •Consumer confidence improving despite equity weakness, the "tax cut" effect is working
- •Gasoline prices falling below $2.50/gallon nationally, political and economic tailwind
Other Assets When Oil Drops Below $50
Other Scenarios Affecting High Yield Credit (HYG)
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