Mounting warnings from Wall Street about the aging business cycle in recent weeks are unanimous: downgrade high-yield bonds.
The shift out of junk bonds by investors this week has been getting under way for weeks on the sell side in the form of allocation calls from Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Morgan Stanley. Their advice? Pare high-yield corporate debt, an asset class that, unlike growth stocks, is more likely to unravel in the winter of bull markets.
Whether it's down to weakening balance sheets or smart-money investors pricing in diminished growth momentum, credit bears tend to come out of hibernation late in the cycle while animal spirits linger in equities for longer, if the past is anything to go by.
At the same stage, growth stocks often show a burst of strength, which explains why strategists are bullish on them, even as a rally that's added $5 trillion to U.S. stocks over past the past year has stretched valuations.
"Equity risk is better rewarded than credit at this stage in the cycle," said Gavin Counsell, multi-asset manager at Aviva Investors in London. "Equities can rally right up to the end of a cycle — in comparison, credit generally performs better earlier in the recovery stage, and much of the good returns are behind us."
To be sure, economic expansion and liquidity are set to prop up bond prices, and the diminished junk appetite this week has been spurred, in part, by technical factors, namely strong supply and weak earnings. But an allocation shift may help investors hedge financial-overheating risks, say analysts.
"High-yield bonds are priced for perfection, especially monetary policy perfection, whereas equities can profit from other return drivers, too, like growth, earnings growth and margins," according to Jeroen Blokland, portfolio manager at Robeco Nederland BV, the Dutch asset manager.
That call is backed by Jan Loeys, chief investment strategist at JPMorgan, who's now neutral on high-yield and remains overweight growth stocks.