Bond Risk Soars by Record in Europe, Credit-Default Swaps ShowAs the following chart shows, investors have been willing to accept an increasingly small risk premium (which I've measured here as the difference between the interest rate on US corporate bonds of varying quality compared to the interest rate on US government bonds) over the past few years. But those risk premia have now reached a level that is historically about as small as we've seen, at least in recent history.
Feb. 28 (Bloomberg) -- The risk of European corporate bonds from carmaker Fiat SpA to music producer EMI Group Plc surged by a record, fanning a global market rout, according to traders of credit-default swaps.
...Investors are concerned rising delinquencies on the riskiest mortgages in the U.S. may spread to other parts of the home-loan market, hurting consumer confidence. Bank of America Corp. yesterday recommended investors sell corporate bonds as "housing-led weakness" spreads to the broader debt market.
(Click on image for better view. Btw - I'm pretty grumpy that blogger has started messing with my images...)
The risk premium generally follows the business cycle (as Spencer pointed out in the comments yesterday). It may be the case that we've now hit bottom, and we may eventually remember this week as the week that risk premia started rising again.
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