Category: Insight

23 Jan 2026

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads moved tighter this week.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 71 on Thursday January 22nd after closing the week prior at 74.  The Index was 7 bps tighter YTD and stood at its tightest level since 1998 amid a strong technical backdrop for credit.  The 10yr Treasury closed last week at 4.22% before moving to 4.25% on Thursday evening.  The benchmark rate was 8bps higher YTD.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +0.26% while the yield to maturity for the index was 4.86%.

 

 

Points of Interest

The data this week was supportive of a resilient economy.  GDP and personal consumption were healthy.  Core PCE for the month of November remained above the Fed’s long-term target (2%) but it ticked lower from the month prior with no surprises to the upside.  This is backward looking data but it has led market participants to coalesce around the belief that the economy is poised to perform well in 2026.  The strong economic data has caused prognosticators to carefully consider the Fed’s need to decrease its policy rate in the year ahead.  The median projection derived from the Fed’s December dot plot showed just one cut in 2026 with an additional single cut in 2027.  The market started the year with a hunger for 2+ cuts year but interest rate futures were pricing slightly less than two cuts as of Friday afternoon.  Economic stimulus associated with the recently enacted tax reform as well as the performance of the job market will be the two items that have the biggest impact on the policy rate in 2026 in our view.

There are a handful of economic releases next week but the highlight will be the FOMC on Wednesday.  Fed fund futures are currently predicting almost no chance of a cut/raise and we agree.  The more interesting story could be President Trump revealing his preferred choice for the new Fed Chair.  He has consistently said that the announcement would occur in the month of January.  We would not be surprised if this news were to hit the tape at the conclusion of next Wednesday’s FOMC release.

Primary Market

The primary market was slower this week as earnings season continued to progress with many issuers still prohibited from bringing new deals due to quiet periods.  Through Thursday, $20.4bln in new debt was priced with a regional bank deal pending on Friday that will add $1.75bln to that total.  More than $170bln of new debt has been priced so far in 2026, with much of that total ($90.2bln) coming in the first full week of the year, which ended up as the 4th busiest week of all-time.  The Fed meeting should lead to a front-end loaded calendar in the week ahead.  Dealers are looking for $35bln of new debt next week which would push the monthly total north of $200bln.

Flows

Demand for credit has been strong to start the year.  According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended January 21, short and intermediate investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$3.09bln. This was the 8th consecutive week of inflows dating back to last year.  2026 year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$9.60bln.

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

23 Jan 2026

Comentario del cuarto trimestre y perspectivas para 2026

Comentario del cuarto trimestre y perspectivas para 2026
Enero de 2026

El crédito con grado de inversión registró fuertes rendimientos en 2025 gracias a diferenciales más estrechos, rendimientos decrecientes de los bonos del Tesoro y generación de ingresos. Los ingresos por cupones se impusieron y representaron más de la mitad del rendimiento total del índice. La economía siguió creciendo a lo largo del año, incluso en medio de la volatilidad relacionada con los aranceles y las preocupaciones de los inversores por la desaceleración del mercado laboral.

2025 en retrospectiva

Durante 2025, el diferencial ajustado por opciones (OAS) del índice Bloomberg US Corporate Bond (el Índice) se redujo en 2 puntos básicos hasta situarse en 78, tras comenzar el año en 80. El índice OAS cerró con una amplia diferencia de 119 a principios de abril tras los aranceles del Día de la Liberación, pero el movimiento al alza fue efímero y el Índice volvió a situarse por debajo de 100 a principios de mayo. El crédito de menor calidad superó modestamente al de mayor calidad debido a los cupones cada vez más altos que se ofrecen en el mercado a medida que disminuye la calidad. El crédito a mediano plazo superó al crédito a más largo plazo, ya que los rendimientos de los bonos del Tesoro a corto y mediano plazo disminuyeron a lo largo del año.

Si analizamos las principales industrias, las tres de mejor desempeño en el índice en 2025 desde una perspectiva de rendimiento total fueron la metalúrgica y minera, la aeroespacial y de defensa, y la tabacalera. Las tres industrias con peor desempeño fueron las de medios de comunicación, entretenimiento, ocio y productos químicos. No hubo industrias con un rendimiento total negativo.

Los rendimientos más bajos de los bonos del Tesoro fueron una bendición para el rendimiento de los bonos con grado de inversión intermedio en 2025. Los bonos del Tesoro a 2, 5 y 10 años cerraron el año con una caída de 77, 66 y 40 puntos básicos, respectivamente. No sorprende que los rendimientos de los bonos del Tesoro a corto plazo disminuyeran junto con la decisión del FOMC de reducir su tasa de política en 75 puntos básicos en la segunda mitad del año. Por otro lado, los bonos del Tesoro a 30 años se mantuvieron obstinadamente elevados, y cerraron el año 6 puntos básicos por encima de donde comenzaron. Recordemos que la Estrategia de Grado de Inversión de CAM es un programa de vencimiento intermedio que no invierte en valores con vencimientos a más largo plazo ni realiza anticipaciones de tasas de interés. En nuestra opinión, es simplemente demasiado difícil predecir con precisión las tasas de interés a largo plazo, especialmente en los extremos más lejanos de la curva.

Perspectivas para el 2026

Hay varios temas importantes y preguntas directas que estamos observando a medida que pasamos la página hacia el año que comienza.

¿Quién será el próximo presidente de la Reserva Federal? El mandato de Jerome Powell como presidente expira en mayo y el presidente Trump ha dicho que podría anunciar su sustituto en enero.i Según el creador de mercado de predicciones Polymarket, es una carrera reñida entre Kevin Hassett y Kevin Warsh. Si bien ambas opciones probablemente serían aceptables para los mercados financieros, existen algunas diferencias clave. Warsh tiene más experiencia, ya que se desempeñó como gobernador de la Reserva Federal entre 2006 y 2011, mientras que Hassett es considerado más moderado y menos independiente debido a sus estrechos vínculos con el presidente Trump como asesor económico. Tampoco podemos descartar la posibilidad de que Trump nomine a alguien totalmente inesperado, lo que podría tener repercusiones en los activos de riesgo.

Estímulo monetario: ¿cuántos recortes habrá en 2026? El pronóstico medio del último gráfico de puntos de la Reserva Federal mostró una expectativa de solo un recorte de tasas de 25 puntos básicos el próximo año. Esto contrasta con las expectativas de los inversores, que estiman reducciones de la tasa de política monetaria por un valor de 58 puntos básicos antes de fin de año.ii Aquí en CAM, actualmente nos inclinamos por dos recortes de 25 puntos básicos. Aunque se supone que la Reserva Federal debe mantener su independencia, debemos reconocer la intensa presión que ejerce la Casa Blanca en favor de políticas acomodaticias, así como la capacidad del presidente para nombrar a un presidente que, en su opinión, se ajustará a su objetivo de bajar las tasas. Nos resulta difícil prever más de dos recortes debido a la magnitud del estímulo fiscal que experimentará la economía en 2026, lo que nos lleva a nuestra siguiente preocupación.

Estímulo fiscal: ¿repitiendo errores del pasado? La Ley One Big Beautiful Bill se aplica retroactivamente a las declaraciones de impuestos de 2025, por lo que su impacto se sentirá a principios de 2026. Entre las disposiciones incluidas se encuentran la exención fiscal de las propinas, la exención fiscal de las horas extras, la exención fiscal de los intereses de los préstamos para la compra de automóviles y una deducción adicional para las personas mayores. La OBBBA también aumenta el límite máximo de la deducción fiscal estatal y local e incluye un aumento permanente del crédito fiscal por hijo. Muchos otros componentes de esta legislación son demasiado exhaustivos para tratarlos aquí, pero el efecto neto es que la mayoría de los contribuyentes recibirán devoluciones fiscales significativamente mayores a principios de 2026, lo que supondrá un importante estímulo económico. Aunque en principio esto es positivo para los contribuyentes, nos preocupa el impacto que tendrá sobre la inflación, que ya ha demostrado mantenerse por encima del objetivo a largo plazo del 2 % fijado por la Reserva Federal.

¿Seguirá deteriorándose el mercado laboral? El crecimiento mensual de la nómina se desaceleró a lo largo de 2025 y la tasa de desempleo alcanzó un máximo de cuatro años del 4.6 % en noviembre. Posteriormente, la tasa de desempleo descendió hasta el 4.4 % en diciembre, pero estuvo acompañada de un crecimiento anémico de las nóminas. Aunque el desempleo todavía es bajo según los estándares históricos, vemos pocas razones para que se repita la época de auge del mercado laboral. Se espera que el mercado laboral siga estando estancado en 2026, ya que las empresas se muestran cautelosas con sus planes de contratación debido a las presiones sobre los márgenes, la incertidumbre en torno a la política comercial y una continua disminución de trabajadores extranjeros. En nuestra opinión, un mercado laboral poco dinámico podría contribuir a atenuar algunos de los efectos del estímulo económico mencionado anteriormente.

¿Cómo afecta esto al crédito con grado de inversión?

Dado el perfil de riesgo más bajo y el riesgo de incumplimiento relativamente mínimo, no esperamos que los temas mencionados anteriormente tengan un impacto significativo en los diferenciales de crédito de forma aislada. Si el mercado laboral experimentara una caída precipitada que empujara a la economía a una recesión, entonces estarían virtualmente garantizados diferenciales de crédito más amplios, pero esto también desencadenaría una medida por parte de la Reserva Federal para bajar rápidamente las tasas de interés. De manera similar, si el estímulo fiscal y/o monetario da como resultado una economía al rojo vivo y las tasas de interés suben, eso restaría algo de impulso a los rendimientos totales con grado de inversión, pero cabría esperar que los diferenciales se redujeran aún más en un escenario de auge económico, lo que compensaría en parte el impacto negativo del aumento de las tasas. Nos sentimos cómodos con los rendimientos totales disponibles en el mercado, ya que proporcionan un margen de seguridad. Existen múltiples caminos para lograr rendimientos totales sólidos para la clase de activos de grado de inversión en el próximo año, independientemente de la gran cantidad de resultados económicos. Hay varias cuestiones específicas del mercado de grado de inversión que nos gustaría destacar.

Todo es cuestión de la oferta. 2025 fue el segundo año de mayor actividad registrado en términos de volumen del mercado primario (1.58 billones de dólares), solo superado por 2020 (1.75 billones de dólares), el último de los cuales fue impulsado por tasas de interés extraordinariamente bajas y préstamos inducidos por la COVID frente a la incertidumbre económica. Se proyecta que 2026 será el año de mayor actividad hasta el momento, con los sindicatos (los bancos que suscriben nuevas emisiones) proyectando una oferta de nuevos bonos de entre 1.8 y 2.25 billones de dólares.iii De hecho, enero ya ha comenzado con fuerza, con 90 200 millones de dólares de deuda con grado de inversión emitidos en la primera semana completa del año, lo que la convierte en la cuarta semana más activa de todos los tiempos.iv Hay tres factores que impulsan la avalancha de emisiones. En primer lugar, los hiperescaladores (META, GOOGL, AMZN, MSFT, ORCL) han aumentado el gasto de capital en la carrera por situarse a la vanguardia de la inteligencia artificial. Varias de estas empresas recaudaron más de 20 000 millones de dólares en nueva deuda durante 2025, y se prevé que la cifra aumente en 2026 y años posteriores. En segundo lugar, la actividad de fusiones y adquisiciones aumentó a finales de año y el entorno para la realización de acuerdos sigue siendo atractivo en 2026 debido a la financiación accesible y a un entorno regulatorio más relajado. Las fusiones y adquisiciones siempre son muy difíciles de predecir, pero solo se necesitan dos o tres operaciones importantes para que la situación cambie significativamente, y el volumen de las operaciones ha ido creciendo. Por último, los inversores crediticios se han mostrado más que dispuestos a conceder préstamos, ya que la demanda se ha mantenido fuerte y las entradas en esta clase de activos han sido sólidas. Esta es quizás la pieza más importante del rompecabezas. Esperamos que los posibles emisores de deuda “vendan cuando puedan”, siempre y cuando los participantes del mercado estén dispuestos a comprar a un precio razonable. Las empresas de alta escalabilidad y las compañías que participan en fusiones y adquisiciones a gran escala tienen una variedad de opciones para acceder a capital fuera de los mercados públicos de inversión en valores, incluidas la emisión de acciones, el crédito privado, los préstamos respaldados por activos y los préstamos. Es esta opcionalidad la que nos lleva a creer que la oferta no abrumará los mercados de crédito IG en 2026, ya que los prestatarios recurrirán a otras opciones si la emisión de deuda pública se vuelve prohibitivamente cara. Vimos este comportamiento por parte de META cuando emitió un instrumento de crédito privado por valor de 27 000 millones de dólares en octubre para financiar un proyecto de centro de datos a gran escala en Luisiana.

Los fundamentos son estables, pero el riesgo idiosincrásico está aumentando. Los indicadores crediticios máximos han quedado claramente atrás, pero la calidad crediticia fundamental del mercado de IG en general sigue siendo muy sólida. El sector bancario está a la vanguardia en términos de salud crediticia. El apalancamiento no financiero es elevado en relación con 2019, pero es significativamente menor que en 2021, mientras que la cobertura de intereses ha tendido a disminuir para la misma cohorte. En el lado positivo, el EBITDA siguió creciendo y los márgenes de EBITDA alcanzaron otro máximo histórico al final del tercer trimestre, liderados por créditos de gran capitalización y alta calificación.v Lo que se pierde en estas cifras son los datos cualitativos que hemos observado recientemente en el mercado. Nuestra experiencia nos dice que el riesgo único en el mercado de IG ha ido aumentando en los últimos trimestres para determinadas industrias y créditos específicos. Los gestores exitosos deberán centrarse en crear carteras bien diversificadas y evitar a los prestatarios problemáticos. Nos sentimos cómodos abordando estos riesgos como gestores que se centran en las métricas crediticias individuales de los emisores que componen nuestra cartera.

La calidad del crédito está aumentando. A pesar de que los indicadores crediticios están por debajo de sus niveles máximos, la calidad del universo de grado de inversión ha aumentado en los últimos años. La composición BAA del índice alcanzó un máximo del 51.21 % a finales de 2018, pero esta cifra había caído al 45.77 % a finales del año pasado.

No solo existe una tendencia hacia emisiones de mayor calidad, con empresas con calificación A o superior que representan el 58 % de las emisiones en los últimos años, sino que también se registró un número récord de mejoras de calificación de BAA a A simple en 2025, mientras que las rebajas de calificación alcanzaron un mínimo histórico.vi Esperamos que la calidad del índice pueda seguir aumentando durante los próximos años si los planes de gasto de capital en inteligencia artificial de alta escalabilidad altamente calificados se concretan. Recordemos que el Programa de Grado de Inversión de CAM tiene una ponderación estructuralmente inferior al crédito con calificación BAA, ya que buscamos limitar la exposición de la cartera a una ponderación del 30 % en las partes más riesgosas del mercado de IG.

El camino por delante

A medida que avanzamos en el calendario, nos volvemos cautelosos, pero no necesariamente temerosos. Los diferenciales de crédito son estrechos, al igual que a principios de 2025, y los rendimientos no son tan elevados como hace 12 meses, pero son lo suficientemente altos como para proporcionar un margen de seguridad. A medida que el ciclo crediticio ha ido madurando, el mercado se ha ido orientando cada vez más hacia un entorno de “selección de créditos”, en el que se premia a los gestores por evitar errores. Seguiremos centrándonos en los aspectos prácticos del trabajo crediticio y posicionaremos la cartera lo mejor posible para generar retornos atractivos ajustados al riesgo.

Esperamos que su año haya comenzado de manera excelente y esperamos continuar conversando con usted a lo largo de 2026.

Esta información solo tiene el propósito de dar a conocer las estrategias de inversión identificadas por Cincinnati Asset Management. Las opiniones y estimaciones ofrecidas están basadas en nuestro criterio y están sujetas a cambios sin previo aviso, al igual que las declaraciones sobre las tendencias del mercado financiero, que dependen de las condiciones actuales del mercado. Este material no tiene como objetivo ser una oferta ni una solicitud para comprar, mantener ni vender instrumentos financieros. El rendimiento pasado no es garantía de resultados futuros. El rendimiento bruto de la tarifa de asesoramiento no refleja la deducción de las tarifas de asesoramiento de inversión. Nuestras tarifas de asesoramiento se comunican en el Formulario ADV Parte 2A. En general, las cuentas administradas mediante programas de firmas de corretaje incluyen tarifas adicionales. Los retornos se calculan mensualmente en dólares estadounidenses e incluyen la reinversión de dividendos e intereses. El Índice no está administrado y no considera las tarifas de la cuenta, los gastos y los costos de transacción. Los rendimientos de los índices y los datos relacionados, como los rendimientos y los diferenciales, se presentan con fines comparativos y se basan en información generalmente disponible al público, proveniente de fuentes que se consideran confiables. No se hace ninguna afirmación sobre su precisión o integridad.

La información suministrada en este informe no debe considerarse una recomendación para comprar o vender ningún valor en particular. Los distintos tipos de inversiones implican distintos grados de riesgo y no puede garantizarse que cualquier inversión específica sea adecuada o rentable para la cartera de un cliente. Las inversiones de renta fija tienen distintos grados de riesgo crediticio, riesgo de tasa de interés, riesgo de incumplimiento y riesgo de prepago y extensión. En general, los precios de los bonos suben cuando las tasas de interés bajan y viceversa. Este efecto suele ser más pronunciado en el caso de los valores a largo plazo. No hay garantía de que los valores que se tratan en este documento hayan permanecido o permanecerán en la cartera de una cuenta en el momento en que reciba este informe o que los valores vendidos no se hayan vuelto a comprar. Los valores analizados no representan la cartera completa de una cuenta y, en conjunto, pueden representar solo un pequeño porcentaje de las tenencias de cartera de una cuenta. No debe suponerse que las transacciones de valores o participaciones analizadas fueron rentables o demostrarán serlo, o que las decisiones de inversión que tomemos en el futuro serán rentables o igualarán el rendimiento de la inversión de los valores examinados en este documento. Si se lo solicita, Cincinnati Asset Management proporcionará una lista de todas las recomendaciones de valores realizadas durante el último año.

En nuestro sitio web se encuentran disponibles las divulgaciones adicionales sobre los riesgos materiales y los posibles beneficios de invertir en bonos corporativos: https://www.cambonds.com/disclosure-statements/

i Bloomberg, 29 de diciembre de 2025, “Trump afirma que aún podría despedir a Powell ante la inminente elección del presidente de la Reserva Federal”
ii Bloomberg, 8 de enero de 2026, “Probabilidad de la tasa de interés mundial”
iii Bloomberg, 2 de enero de 2026, “Se prevé un inicio masivo de ventas de bonos con grado de inversión en enero”
iv Bloomberg, 8 de enero de 2026, “EMISIÓN DE BONOS DEL GOBIERNO DE EE. UU.: la semana supera los 90 000 millones de dólares, ya que tres emisiones recaudarán 1750 millones el jueves”
v Barclays, 15 de diciembre de 2025, “Actualización del tercer trimestre de 2025: sin indicios de preocupación”
vi Barclays, 7 de noviembre de 2025, “Todos a bordo del tren de la mejora de la calificación de BBB”

23 Jan 2026

2025 Q4 Investment Grade Quarterly

Fourth Quarter Commentary & 2026 Outlook
January 2026

Investment grade credit posted strong returns in 2025 thanks to tighter spreads, declining Treasury yields and income generation. Coupon income carried the day, accounting for more than half of the index total return. The economy continued to grow throughout the year even amid tariff-related volatility and investor concerns around a slowing labor market.

2025 in The Rearview

During 2025, the option adjusted spread (OAS) for the Bloomberg US Corporate Bond Index (The Index) tightened by 2 basis points to 78 after opening the year at 80. The Index OAS closed as wide as 119 in early April following Liberation Day tariffs but the move wider was short-lived and The Index was back below 100 by early May. Lower quality credit modestly outperformed higher quality due to the incrementally higher coupons that are available in the market as quality decreases. Intermediate credit outperformed longer dated credit as short and intermediate Treasury yields moved lower throughout the year.

Looking at major industries, the three best Index performers in 2025 from a total return perspective were Metals & Mining, Aerospace/Defense and Tobacco. The three worst performing industries were Media Entertainment, Leisure and Chemicals. There were no industries with a negative total return.

Lower Treasury yields were a boon for intermediate investment grade performance in 2025. The 2yr, 5yr and 10yr Treasuries finished the year 77, 66 and 40 basis points lower, respectively. It is no surprise that shorter-dated Treasury yields decreased in concert with the FOMC lowering its policy rate by 75 basis points in the second half of the year. On the other hand, the 30yr Treasury remained stubbornly elevated, finishing the year 6 basis points higher than where it began. Recall that the CAM Investment Grade Strategy is an intermediate maturity program that does not invest in longer dated securities or engage in interest rate anticipation. In our view, it is simply too difficult to accurately predict rates over long time horizons, especially further out the curve.

2026 Outlook

There are several major themes and outright questions that we are watching as we turn the page to the year ahead.

Who will be the next Fed Chair? Jerome Powell’s term as Chair expires in May and President Trump has said he could announce the replacement as soon as January.i According to prediction market-maker Polymarket, it is a close race between Kevin Hassett and Kevin Warsh. While both of these choices would likely be acceptable to financial markets, there are some key differences. Warsh has more experience, having served as a Fed Governor from 2006-2011 while Hassett is viewed as more dovish and less independent due to his close ties to President Trump as an economic adviser. We also cannot rule out the possibility that Trump’s nomination could be someone entirely unexpected, which could have ramifications for risk assets.

Monetary Stimulus: How many cuts in 2026? The median forecast from the Fed’s most recent Dot Plot showed an expectation of just one 25 basis point rate cut next year. This is in contrast to investor expectations, which are pricing 58 basis points worth of policy rate reductions before year end.ii Here at CAM, we currently lean toward two 25 basis point cuts. Although the Fed is supposed to remain independent, we have to acknowledge the intense dovish pressure from the Oval Office as well as the ability of the President to nominate a Chair that he feels will abide by his goal of lowering rates. We find it difficult to pencil in more than two cuts due to the amount of fiscal stimulus the economy will experience in 2026, which brings us to our next concern.

Fiscal Stimulus: Repeating past mistakes? The One Big Beautiful Bill Act applies retroactively to 2025 tax returns, so its impact will be felt early in 2026. Among the provisions included are no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on car loan interest and an additional deduction for senior citizens. The OBBBA also raises the cap on the state and local tax deduction and includes a permanent increase in the child tax credit. Many other components of this legislation are too exhaustive to cover here but the net effect is that the majority of taxpayers will receive meaningfully larger tax refunds in early 2026 that will function as a significant economic stimulus. While this is good for taxpayers in principle, we are concerned about the impact that this will have on inflation that has already proven to be sticky above the Fed’s 2% long term target.

Will the labor market continue to erode? Monthly payroll growth slowed throughout 2025 and the unemployment rate hit a four-year high of 4.6% in November. The unemployment rate subsequently decreased to 4.4% in December, but it was accompanied by anemic payroll growth. Although unemployment is still low by historical standards, we see little reason for a return to the days of a booming job market. We expect that the labor market will remain sluggish in 2026 as companies remain cautious with their hiring plans due to margin pressures, uncertainty around trade policy and a continuing decline of foreign-born workers. In our view, a lackluster job market could serve to blunt some of the effects of the aforementioned economic stimulus.

How Does This Impact Investment Grade Credit?

Given the lower risk profile and relatively minimal default risk, we would not expect the above themes to have a significant impact on credit spreads in isolation. If the labor market were to experience a precipitous decline that pushes the economy into recession then wider credit spreads are virtually guaranteed but this would also trigger a move by the Federal Reserve to rapidly lower interest rates. Similarly, if fiscal and/or monetary stimulus results in a red-hot economy and interest rates move higher then that would sap some momentum from investment grade total returns but we would expect to see spreads move even tighter in an economic boom scenario, offsetting some of the pain from higher rates. We are comfortable with the all-in yields that are available in the market as they provide a margin of safety. There are multiple paths to solid total returns for the investment grade asset class in the year ahead regardless of the myriad of economic outcomes. There are several issues specific to the investment grade market that we would like to highlight.

It’s all about supply. 2025 was the second busiest year on record for primary market volume ($1.58 trillion), trailing only 2020 ($1.75 trillion), the latter of which was fueled by extraordinarily low interest rates and COVID-induced borrowing in the face of economic uncertainty. 2026 is projected to be the busiest year yet with syndicate desks (the banks that underwrite new issuance) projecting $1.8-$2.25 trillion of new bond supply.iii In fact, January is already off to a strong start with $90.2bln of investment grade debt being issued in the first full week of the year, making it the fourth busiest week of all-time.iv There are three factors driving the deluge of issuance. First, hyper scalers (META, GOOGL, AMZN, MSFT, ORCL) have ramped capital spending in the race to the forefront of artificial intelligence. Several of these companies raised over $20bln in new debt during 2025 with more to come in 2026 and beyond. Second, M&A activity surged into year end and the environment for dealmaking remains attractive in 2026 due to accessible financing and a more relaxed regulatory environment. M&A is always extremely difficult to predict but it only takes two or three large deals to move the needle significantly and deal size has been growing. Finally, credit investors have been more than willing to lend as demand has remained strong and inflows into the asset class have been solid. This is perhaps the most important piece of the puzzle. We expect that potential debt issuers will “sell when they can” as long as market participants are willing to buy at a reasonable price. Gilt-edged hyper scalers and companies that engage in large scale M&A have a variety of options to access capital outside of the public IG markets including equity issuance, private credit, asset backed lending and loans. It is this optionality that leads us to believe that supply will not overwhelm the IG credit markets in 2026 as borrowers will turn to other options if the issuance of public debt becomes prohibitively expensive. We saw this behavior from META when it issued a $27bln private credit instrument in October to fund a massive data center project in Louisiana.

Fundamentals are stable but idiosyncratic risk is on the rise. Peak credit metrics are clearly in the rearview but the fundamental credit quality of the broad IG market is still very solid. The banking industry is leading the way in terms of credit health. Non-financial leverage is elevated relative to 2019 but it is meaningfully lower than it was in 2021 while interest coverage has trended lower for the same cohort. On the plus side of the ledger, EBITDA has continued to grow and EBITDA margins hit another all-time high at the end of the third quarter, led by large-cap highly rated credits.v What is lost in these numbers is the qualitative data that we have observed in the market recently. Our experience tells us that unique risk in the IG market has been increasing in recent quarters for certain industries and specific credits. Successful managers will need to focus on building well diversified portfolios and avoiding problematic borrowers. We are comfortable navigating these risks as a manger that is focused on the individual credit metrics of the issuers that populate our portfolio.

Credit Quality is Increasing. Despite credit metrics being off the peak, the quality of the investment grade universe has increased over the last few years. The BAA composition of The Index hit a high of 51.21% at the end of 2018 but this figure had fallen to 45.77% by the end of last year.

Not only is there a trend of higher quality issuance, with single-A or better companies accounting for 58% of issuance over the past several years, but there were also a record number of upgrades from BAA to single-A in 2025, while downgrades hit a record low.vi We expect that the quality of the index could continue to increase for the next several years if highly rated hyper scaler AI capital spending plans come to fruition. Recall that the CAM Investment Grade Program is structurally underweight BAA-rated credit as we look to limit portfolio exposure to a 30% weighting in the riskier portions of the IG market.

The Road Ahead

As we turn the calendar we are cautious but not necessarily fearful. Credit spreads are tight, much like they were at the beginning of 2025, and yields are not as elevated as they were 12 months ago but they are high enough to provide a margin of safety. As the credit cycle has aged, the market has increasingly moved towards more of a “credit pickers” environment where managers are rewarded for avoiding mistakes. We will continue to focus on the nuts and bolts of credit-work and we will position the portfolio as best we can to generate attractive risk adjusted returns.

We hope that your year is off to an excellent start and we look forward to continuing the conversation with you throughout 2026.

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Gross of advisory fee performance does not reflect the deduction of investment advisory fees. Our advisory fees are disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A. Accounts managed through brokerage firm programs usually will include additional fees. Returns are calculated monthly in U.S. dollars and include reinvestment of dividends and interest. The Index is unmanaged and does not take into account fees, expenses, and transaction costs. Index returns and related data such as yields and spreads are shown for comparative purposes and is based on information generally available to the public from sources believed to be reliable. No representation is made to its accuracy or completeness.

The information provided in this report should not be considered a recommendation to purchase or sell any particular security. Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk, and there can be no assurance that any specific investment will either be suitable or profitable for a client’s portfolio. Fixed income investments have varying degrees of credit risk, interest rate risk, default risk, and prepayment and extension risk. In general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall and vice versa. This effect is usually more pronounced for longer-term securities. There is no assurance that any securities discussed herein have been held or will be held in an account’s portfolio at the time you receive this report or that securities sold have not been repurchased. The securities discussed do not represent an account’s entire portfolio and, in the aggregate, may represent only a small percentage of an account’s portfolio holdings, if any. It should not be assumed that any of the securities transactions or holdings discussed were or will prove to be profitable, or that the investment decisions we make in the future will be profitable or will equal the investment performance of the securities discussed herein. Upon request, Cincinnati Asset Management will furnish a list of all security recommendations made within the past year.

Additional disclosures on the material risks and potential benefits of investing in corporate bonds are available on our website: https://www.cambonds.com/disclosure-statements/

i Bloomberg, December 29 2025, “Trump Says he Still Might Fire Powell as Fed Chair Pick Looms”
ii Bloomberg, January 8 2026, “World Interest Rate Probability”
iii Bloomberg, January 2 2026, “Investment-Grade Bond Sales Set for Massive January Start”
iv Bloomberg, January 8 2026, “US IG ISSUANCE: Week Crosses $90b as 3 to Raise $1.75b Thursday”
v Barclays, December 15 2025, “Q3 25 Update: No signs of concern”
vi Barclays, November 7 2025, “All aboard the BBB upgrade train”

23 Jan 2026

2025 Q4 High Yield Quarterly

Q4 COMMENTARY
January 2026

In the fourth quarter of 2025, the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Index (“Index”) return was 1.31% bringing the year to date (“YTD”) return to 8.62%. The S&P 500 index return was 2.65% (including dividends reinvested) bringing the YTD return to 17.86%. Over the period, while the 10 year Treasury yield increased 2 basis points, the Index option adjusted spread (“OAS”) tightened 1 basis point moving from 267 basis points to 266 basis points.

With regard to ratings segments of the High Yield Market, BB rated securities tightened 3 basis points, B rated securities widened 5 basis points, and CCC rated securities widened 11 basis points. The chart below from Bloomberg displays the spread move of the Index over the past five years. For reference, the average level over that time period was 348 basis points.

The sector and industry returns in this paragraph are all Index return numbers. The Index is mapped in a manner where the “sector” is broader with the more specific “industry” beneath it. For example, Energy is a “sector” and the “industries” within the Energy sector include independent energy, integrated energy, midstream, oil field services, and refining. The Banking, Finance, and Consumer Non-Cyclical sectors were the best performers during the quarter, posting returns of 2.14%, 2.00%, and 1.86%, respectively. On the other hand, Technology, Transportation, and Capital Goods were the worst performing sectors, posting returns of 0.77%, 0.78%, and 0.92%, respectively. At the industry level, office REIT, metals and mining, and healthcare all posted the best returns. The office REIT industry posted the highest return of 3.29%. The lowest performing industries during the quarter were railroads, packaging, and life insurance. The -2.87% posted by the railroads industry was the lowest return by any industry.

Issuance
Every quarter of 2025 posted strong issuance leading to a very robust yearly total of $386.7 billion. The third quarter had the highest issuance of the year with $139.5 billion. Following that blowout, the fourth quarter totals could have fallen off the proverbial cliff; however, they did not disappoint, reaching $82.4 billion. Of the issuance that did take place during Q4, Communications took 18% of the market share followed by Healthcare and Financials, each at 14%.

The Federal Reserve did cut the Target Rate 25 basis points at the October and December meetings. There was no meeting held in November. That marked three consecutive cuts to close out 2025. Of note, three voting members were against the quarter point cut. One member wanted a half point cut and two other members were in favor of no cut. To have three dissents to a policy action is not very common. The last occurrence was back in September of 2019. While the Fed dot plot shows a median cut of 25 basis points for 2026, the voting member opinions of the rate outlook is deeply divided. The debate at the FOMC continues to be inflation above target versus labor market concerns. Currently, market participants are pricing in an implied rate move of 59 basis points in cuts for 2026.i After the December meeting, Fed Chair Jerome Powell recognized the varying opinions at the Fed and acknowledged that, given the backdrop, disagreements should be expected. “A very large number of participants agree that risks are to the upside for unemployment and to the upside for inflation, so what do you do?” Powell said. “You’ve got one tool, you can’t do two things at once. It’s a very challenging situation.”ii

Intermediate Treasuries increased 2 basis points over the quarter, as the 10-year Treasury yield was at 4.15% on September 30th, and 4.17% at the end of the fourth quarter. The 5-year Treasury decreased 1 basis point over the quarter, moving from 3.74% on September 30th, to 3.73% at the end of the fourth quarter. Intermediate term yields more often reflect GDP and expectations for future economic growth and inflation rather than actions taken by the FOMC to adjust the target rate. The revised third quarter GDP print was 4.3% (quarter over quarter annualized rate). Looking forward, the current consensus view of economists suggests a GDP for 2026 around 2.0% with inflation expectations around 2.6%.iii

Being a more conservative asset manager, Cincinnati Asset Management does not buy CCC and lower rated securities. Additionally, our interest rate agnostic philosophy keeps us generally positioned in the five to ten year maturity timeframe. During Q4, our higher quality positioning was a benefit to performance as lower rated securities underperformed. Some performance detractors included our credit selections within the consumer non-cyclicals sector, selections within the communications sector, and our underweight in the finance sector. Benefiting our performance this quarter were our credit selections in the consumer cyclicals sector and selections within the technology sector. Another benefit was added due to our overweight in the banking sector.

The Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Index ended the fourth quarter with a yield of 6.53%. Treasury volatility, as measured by the Merrill Lynch Option Volatility Estimate (“MOVE” Index), has continued its move below the 80 index average over the past 10 years. The current rate of 64 is well below the spike near 200 back during the March 2023 banking scare. The most recent spike reached a high of 140 in April of 2025 as the market grappled with numerous tariff changes. The MOVE Index has maintained a downward trend since the April spike. Data available through November shows 26 bond defaults during 2025 which is relative to 16 defaults in all of 2022, 41 defaults in all of 2023, and 34 defaults in all of 2024. The trailing twelve month dollar-weighted bond default rate is 1.43%.iv The current default rate is relative to the 2.13%, 1.78%, 2.06%, 1.80% default rates from the previous four quarter end data points listed oldest to most recent. Defaults are generally stable and the fundamentals of high yield companies are in decent shape. From a technical view, fund flows were positive this year through November data at $18.3 billion.v No doubt there are risks, but we are of the belief that for clients that have an investment horizon over a complete market cycle, high yield deserves to be considered as part of the portfolio allocation.

The high yield market performed well throughout Q4 and 2025. The market has been characterized by declining spreads, positive returns each quarter, strong issuance, steady defaults, sturdy fundamentals, and positive flows. Of course, there is another side of the coin. The government shutdown for 43 days marking the longest on record. The previous record being 35 days. The shutdown completely impacted timely economic surveys and report dissemination. GDP in 4Q is forecast to be meaningfully lower than the 3Q print. Consumers, particularly those in the lower income brackets, are beginning to experience more affordability challenges. The labor market continues to slow and inflation remains elevated above the Fed target. This is the side of the coin that is showing up in sentiment indicators like US Consumer Confidence, which recently declined for the fifth consecutive month. There will certainly be plenty to evaluate as we move through 2026. Our exercise of discipline and credit selectivity is important as we continue to evaluate that the given compensation for the perceived level of risk remains appropriate. As always, we will continue our search for value and adjust positions as we uncover compelling situations. Finally, we are very grateful for the trust placed in our team to manage your capital.

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Gross of advisory fee performance does not reflect the deduction of investment advisory fees. Our advisory fees are disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A. Accounts managed through brokerage firm programs usually will include additional fees. Returns are calculated monthly in U.S. dollars and include reinvestment of dividends and interest. The index is unmanaged and does not take into account fees, expenses, and transaction costs. It is shown for comparative purposes and is based on information generally available to the public from sources believed to be reliable. No representation is made to its accuracy or completeness. Additional disclosures on the material risks and potential benefits of investing in corporate bonds are available on our website: https://www.cambonds.com/disclosure-statements/.

i Bloomberg January 1, 2026: World Interest Rate Probability
ii Bloomberg December 11, 2025: ‘Silent Dissents’ Reveal Growing Fed Resistance to Powell’s Cuts
iii Bloomberg January 1, 2026: Economic Forecasts (ECFC)
iv Moody’s December 16, 2025: November 2025 Default Report and data file
v Bloomberg January 1, 2026: Fund Flows

05 Dec 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bonds stalled after a two-day rally as jobless claims dropped to a three-year low, suggesting employers are largely holding onto workers. Still, the market is on track for its fourth straight week of gains amid growing expectations of a Fed rate cut next week.
  • Yields were unchanged on Thursday, and are now just two basis points above the multi-year low of 6.57%. Spreads closed at a five-week low of 267 basis points and just 11 basis points above the year-to-date low.
  • Steadily falling yields and tighter spreads crowded the primary market, with 12 borrowers pricing more than $12b in four sessions this week, the busiest in more than two months.
  • Two more borrowers entered the market on Thursday and priced $4b. Both were BB-rated bonds and priced at the tight end of talk. Nine of the 12 deals were BB rated
  • The market wobbled across ratings in reaction to the jobless claims data, though CCCs shrugged off the weakness and notched gains for the third straight session. Yields dropped to a five-week low of 9.91% and are poised for a third week of declines
  • BB yields jumped nine basis in the past four sessions to 5.60%. Returns are expected to stay flat for the week

 

(Bloomberg)  Payrolls at US Companies Fall by Most Since 2023, ADP Says

  • US companies shed payrolls in November by the most since early 2023, adding to concerns about a more pronounced weakening in the labor market.
  • Private-sector payrolls decreased by 32,000, according to ADP Research data released Wednesday. Payrolls have now fallen four times in the last six months. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 10,000 gain.
  • Wednesday’s weak ADP report risks heightening concerns of a more rapid deterioration in the labor market ahead of the Federal Reserve’s final policy meeting of the year next week. It could hold more sway than usual as one of the few up-to-date reports officials will have by then, as the shutdown delayed the government’s November jobs report.
  • Policymakers have been torn as to whether they’ll cut interest rates for a third straight meeting as they attempt to balance the slowdown in the job market with still-elevated inflation. Investors, however, widely expect the Fed to lower borrowing costs next week.
  • “I think it’s still probably going to be a pretty divided decision,” said Veronica Clark, an economist at Citigroup Inc. The expectation is there will be a rate cut, but the guidance will be more hawkish, she said, as the Fed will also provide fresh quarterly economic projections at the meeting.
  • “Hiring has been choppy of late as employers weather cautious consumers and an uncertain macroeconomic environment,” Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP and a contributor to Bloomberg Television, said in a statement.
  • Professional and business services led the decline in payrolls, followed by information and manufacturing. Hiring in education and health services increased.
  • Until recently, economists have largely said the labor market is in a state of low hiring and low firing. But a number of large companies like Apple Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. have recently cut workers or announced plans to do so, which risks driving unemployment higher.
  • The November jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, originally due Dec. 5, will now come out Dec. 16 as data collection was halted during the record-long shutdown. That report will also include nonfarm payrolls for October since BLS is skipping a full release for that month, as it couldn’t collect certain data retroactively.

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

21 Nov 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

 

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

  • US junk bonds posted modest gains on Thursday but still leave slight losses for the week across the rating spectrum.
  • The broad gains spanned ratings, with even CCCs, the riskiest part of the credit market, rebounding from a six-day losing streak as junk bonds shrugged off a selloff in equities. CCCs notched up gains of 0.15% on Thursday, the first in seven sessions. CCC yields, however, climbed three basis points to 10.45%.
  • BB yields dropped for a second day to close at 5.83% and spreads held steady to drive small gains for a second session
  • Single B yields also declined to close at 7.07%, while risk premium remained unchanged. Single Bs also posted small gains for a second session

(Bloomberg)  US Payrolls Grew in September, But Jobless Rate Shows Fragility

  • The latest jobs report, long delayed due to the government shutdown, showed nonfarm payrolls rose 119,000 in the month after declining in August. The unemployment rate, meanwhile, rose to its highest level in nearly four years — reflecting both the positive dynamic of more Americans participating in the workforce and the gloomier reality of more people losing their jobs.
  • The dated snapshot likely doesn’t change much for Federal Reserve officials, many of whom were already leaning away from cutting interest rates again next month. But it does illuminate the variety of cross-currents at play heading into the final months of the year.
  • Job gains were narrow, fueled primarily by hiring in health care and leisure and hospitality. Other sectors, like manufacturing, transportation and warehousing, and business services, shed jobs. For many firms, the low-hire, low-fire environment has given way to a rash of layoff announcements, exacerbating Americans’ concerns about their job security.
  • “At first glance, September’s headline payroll gain appears reassuring, but a closer look reveals that job growth remained fragile and narrowly concentrated heading into the longest government shutdown on record,” EY-Parthenon Senior Economist Lydia Boussour said in a note.
  • Separate data Thursday showed applications for US unemployment benefits fell to a three-week low in the period ended Nov. 15, the Labor Department said. Continuing claims, a proxy for those receiving benefits, climbed in the prior week to the highest since late 2021.
  • “I expect that’s going to mean October payrolls are a lot weaker,” said Veronica Clark, an economist at Citigroup Inc.
  • The September jobs report, originally due Oct. 3, was the first major missed data point in the government shutdown. But because BLS had already completed data collection by the time the shutdown began Oct. 1, the report is among the first to be published following the reopening.
  • BLS said Wednesday that the October jobs report, which was due Nov. 7, won’t be published. Instead, those payrolls figures will be incorporated into the November report. That’s due Dec. 16, after the Fed’s next meeting. Key statistics like the unemployment rate, however, won’t be included.
  • The survey of households that informs those figures couldn’t be collected due to the shutdown, and BLS said it can’t gather the data retroactively.
  • Given the sharp slowdown in immigration seen this year, the household survey can offer a clearer picture of US labor market dynamics. The participation rate — the share of the population that is working or looking for work — increased to a four-month high in September, due to women. The rate for workers age 25-54, also known as prime-age workers, held at a one-year high.
  • Meanwhile, the number of people working part time for economic reasons declined by the most in a year, while the share of long-term unemployed fell. Private payrolls increased in September by the most in five months. Even so, permanent job losers rose to the highest since late 2021.
  • At the same time, the report showed the monthly gain in average hourly earnings was the smallest since June after an upwardly revised August increase. Economists pay close attention to this metric as a driver of household spending, which has become even more bifurcated with the wealthiest Americans propelling nearly half of total spending.
  • Looking ahead, while the October payrolls figures will be published, they won’t necessarily offer a clear picture either. Economists expect a sharp decline in government employment as the federal workers who took the administration’s deferred resignation offers formally roll off payrolls.
14 Nov 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

 

  • US junk bonds tumbled Thursday, posting their worst one-day loss in nearly five weeks after a chorus of Fed officials warned against premature rate cuts. The slide came just as investors braced for a deluge of economic data, with the government reopening after the longest shutdown in US history.
  • Yields jumped the most in five weeks to 6.89% and risk premium climbed to 291 basis points. Losses swept across ratings tier, with CCC yields rising 18 basis points to a near three-month high of 10.29%. Spreads widened 15 basis points, the most in five weeks, to 652.
  • As Fed officials signaled caution about future rate cuts, the probability of a rate reduction in December dropped below 50%
  • Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said it’s critical for the US central bank to reach its 2% inflation target even as the labor marker softens. “We’ve got this persistent high inflation that is sticking around,” she warned
  • Louis President Alberto Musalem reiterated that officials should move cautiously over further interest rate reductions with inflation running above the central bank’s 2% target
  • Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said anecdotal evidence and the data showed there is an underlying resilience in economic activity
  • The selloff snapped a three-day rally and slowed down the primary market. No new borrower launched a debt sale amid the sudden eruption of volatility
  • Before the eruption of volatility on Thursday, the market priced nearly $4b in the two sessions of this holiday-shortened week

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

31 Oct 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bonds tumbled, posting their steepest one-day loss in three weeks, as the risk premium climbed to 278 basis points after Chair Powell cautioned that a December rate cut is not a foregone conclusion. Yields rose 11 basis points to 6.76%, the biggest one-day jump in three weeks.
  • The losses spanned across ratings. CCC yields, the riskiest tier of the high yield market, climbed 14 basis points to 9.84%. Spreads rose 14 basis points to 607 — the biggest one-day widening in three weeks.
  • BB yields rose to 5.68% and spreads widened to 168
  • The primary market ground to a halt after pricing a modest $4b this week and driving the October tally to about $18b, the slowest month for supply since April

 

(Bloomberg)  Logan Joins Schmid in Opposing Fed Rate Cut, Citing Inflation

  • Two Federal Reserve officials said they did not support the US central bank’s decision to cut interest rates this week, citing inflation that remains too high.
  • Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan said she “did not see a need to cut rates this week” in remarks Friday prepared for an event in Dallas. Her comments followed a statement earlier in the day from her Kansas City counterpart, Jeff Schmid, outlining the reasons for his dissent against Wednesday’s rate cut.
  • The remarks from Logan and Schmid were the first salvo in what is likely to be an intense debate over the next six weeks before the central bank’s next policy meeting in December, between officials who see a need for more easing to support the labor market and those who are more concerned about inflation.
  • “I’d find it difficult to cut rates again in December unless there is clear evidence that inflation will fall faster than expected or that the labor market will cool more rapidly,” Logan said.
  • Fed officials cut their benchmark rate this week by a quarter percentage point for a second month in a row after a sharp slowdown in hiring over the summer raised concerns about the labor market. Chair Jerome Powell, speaking to reporters Wednesday after the decision, said another cut in December was not a forgone conclusion, noting that some of his colleagues were concerned about inflation.
  • That led to a sharp adjustment in the bond market, where investors had been pricing in near certainty of another quarter-point cut in December.
  • While Logan doesn’t vote on monetary policy this year, she participates in Federal Open Market Committee discussions and will rotate onto the voting panel in 2026. Two Fed officials voted against the decision at this month’s meeting, with Schmid preferring to hold rates steady and Governor Stephen Miran dissenting for a second straight meeting in favor of a larger, half-point cut.
  • “By my assessment, the labor market is largely in balance, the economy shows continued momentum, and inflation remains too high,” Schmid said in his statement.

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

31 Oct 2025

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads will finish wider this week.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 76 on Thursday October 30th after closing the week prior at 75.  Although this was a very modest move wider the market “feels” a bit heavier as we go to print on Friday.  Investors are busy processing earnings releases as well as a large amount of new issue supply so we would expect the spread on the index to finish the week 1-2 basis points wider than 76.  Spreads are still very much rangebound over the past few months as the OAS on the index has not traded wide of 80 since early August.  Treasury yields moved slightly higher throughout this week.  The 10yr Treasury closed last week at 4.00% and the benchmark rate closed at 4.10% on Thursday evening.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +7.54% while the yield to maturity for the index was 4.80%.

 

 

 

News & Economics

It was another week of light economic data as US government data remains impacted by the shutdown.  There were still a few private party releases that occurred this week particularly as it pertains to the housing market.  Mortgage applications rose +7.1% last week indicating that perhaps some buyers/refinancers are starting to come off the sidelines as mortgage rates are closing in on three-year lows.  However, later that morning data showed that pending sales of existing US homes stalled in September after a strong showing in the month of August.

The highlight of the week was Wednesday’s FOMC release.  The Fed cut by 25bps, in line with expectations.  The committee was largely in agreement with just two of the twelve voting members having differing views.  One voting member wanted no cut and one wanted a 50bp cut.  In our view the biggest takeaway from this meeting was Chairman Powell’s press conference as he sought to push back against the idea that a December cut is a forgone conclusion.  Interest rate futures responded in kind as they were pricing a 92.3% chance of a cut on Tuesday evening with that number having been whittled down to a 68.9% chance by Wednesday’s close.

Next week will be another quiet one for government sponsored releases absent a reopening but there will be some datapoints from private providers including MNI Chicago PMI, S&P Manufacturing PMI and ISM data.

 

Primary Market

It was shock and awe this week in the primary market as it was the busiest week of 2025 and the sixth highest volume week of all time.  It also capped off the busiest October on record.  $78.9bln of new debt priced this week relative to dealer estimates of just $20bln.  Meta Platforms led the way with a $30bln jumbo deal on Thursday.  Other larger issuers of note were HSBC, Lloyds and Santander.  Dealers are looking for $55bln next week to start the month of November.

 

Flows

According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended October 29, investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$1.8bln. Total year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$61.4bln.

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

24 Oct 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

 

  • US junk bonds are headed for modest weekly gains after yields fell by a mere two basis points in the last four sessions and risk premium by just five basis points. A resurgence of trade tensions with China and a lack of macro data to assess the state of the economy because of the government shutdown have weighed on sentiment.
  • The US junk bond rally also lost some momentum as jittery investors pulled $970m from high-yield mutual funds, excluding exchange-traded funds, for the week ended Wednesday, according to Lipper. This is the second straight week of cash outflows from US junk bond mutual funds, excluding ETFs. The two weeks combined resulted in an outflow of $1.73b.
  • While the rally lost steam, participants drew comfort from robust corporate earnings and the potential that the Federal Reserve will reduce interest rates at its meeting next week
  • After a sudden burst of issuance this summer and a supply boom that made it the busiest September on record, the primary market has slowed, with issuance almost grinding to a halt
  • Just three deals for $2.8b were priced so far this week, taking the month’s volume to about $14b, the lightest since April

 

(Bloomberg)  US CPI Rises Less Than Expected, Keeping Fed on Track to Cut

  • Underlying US inflation rose in September at the slowest pace in three months, keeping the Federal Reserve on course to lower interest rates next week.
  • The core consumer price index, excluding the often volatile food and energy categories, increased 0.2% from August, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data out Friday. That was restrained by the smallest increase in a key measure of housing costs since early 2021.
  • The September CPI report was initially scheduled to come out on Oct. 15 but was delayed because of the ongoing federal government shutdown. While most BLS operations have ceased since the Oct. 1 closure, the agency recalled staff to prepare this release so the Social Security Administration could tally its annual cost-of-living adjustment.
  • The lower-than-expected reading is a welcome surprise, especially for several Fed officials who are leery of cutting rates further. While the central bank was already widely expected to lower borrowing costs at its meeting next week, the report may help convince policymakers that they can do so again in December — especially in the absence of other official reports should the shutdown continue.
  • Goods prices, excluding food and energy commodities, rose at a slower pace, dragged down by cheaper prices for used cars. Categories that are more exposed to tariffs, including household furnishings and recreational goods, advanced. Apparel prices climbed at the fastest rate in a year.
  • Services prices excluding energy climbed 0.2%, in part reflecting a slower advance in airfares. Shelter prices were tame after rising by the most since the start of the year in the prior month. That included just a 0.1% increase in owners’ equivalent rent — which accounts for roughly a quarter of the overall CPI.
  • While the inflationary impact of tariffs has been much less than many economists feared, several forecasters and policymakers are still wary that the duties will continue to put upward pressure on prices — which was evident in some private-sector gauges of inflation in September. President Donald Trump’s latest tariffs, aimed at household goods like kitchen cabinets and upholstered furniture, took effect earlier this month, and retailers like RH have warned of price increases to come.
  • Companies across the country have largely reported higher input costs due to tariffs in recent weeks, but the hit to consumers has been uneven, the Fed said in its latest Beige Book survey of regional business contacts. Procter & Gamble Co. is now expecting a more muted impact from tariffs and commodity prices, while O’Reilly Automotive Inc. said they adjusted selling prices to account for the increase in tariff-related costs.

 

This information is intended solely to report on investment strategies identified by Cincinnati Asset Management. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice, as are statements of financial market trends, which are based on current market conditions. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation to buy, hold or sell any financial instrument. Fixed income securities may be sensitive to prevailing interest rates. When rates rise the value generally declines. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.