Investors overseeing about $1.1 trillion have been cutting exposure to the world's riskiest corporate debt as rates grind too low to compensate for potential risks.
Even after a selloff last week amid rising tensions between the U.S. and North Korea, a Bloomberg Barclays index of global junk bonds still yields 5.3%, 100 basis points below the average for the past five years.
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High-yield corporate debt has been one of the biggest beneficiaries of central stimulus, which has compressed spreads in better-quality bonds, forcing investors to seek returns elsewhere. The danger now is that higher Federal Reserve interest rates and the European Central Bank tapering will reverse the trend.
Here's the list of money managers who have recently cut holdings of junk debt:
JPMorgan Asset Management
AUM: $17 billion (for Absolute Return & Opportunistic Fixed-Income team)
In early July told Bloomberg they have cut holdings of junk debt to about 40% from more than half. "We are more likely to decrease risk rather than increase risk due to valuations," New York-based portfolio manager Daniel Goldberg said.
DoubleLine Capital LP
AUM: about $110 billion
Jeffrey Gundlach, co-founder and chief executive officer, said in an interview published Aug. 8 he's reducing holdings in junk bonds and emerging-market debt and investing more in higher-quality credits with less sensitivity to rising interest rates. European high-yield bonds have hit "wack-o season," Gundlach said in a tweet last week.