Category: Insight

26 Sep 2025

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads will finish wider this week for the first time in the past four weeks.  The index has traded within a tight 9bp range since mid-July so any move tighter or wider during that time period has been incremental at best.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 75 on Thursday September 25th after closing the week prior at 72.  Treasury yields moved slightly higher throughout the week.  The 10yr Treasury yield closed last week at 4.13% and was 4.18% as we went to print on Friday afternoon.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +6.53% while the yield to maturity for the index was 4.86%.

 

 

 

News & Economics

The data this week echoed a familiar refrain: never bet against the U.S. consumer.  Second quarter real GDP was revised up to 3.8% from 3.3% on the back of improved consumer spending.  The PCE index rose 2.7% year-over-year through August while core PCE was 2.9%.  While inflation is not running red hot, it remains very stubborn.  The most surprising release of the week was a 20.5% surge in new home sales for the month of August.  It is worth noting that this data can tend to be extremely volatile and is subject to outsize revisions so there is a widely held belief that this initial release is not entirely accurate.  All told, the data this week was rather hawkish.  There is still a month to go until the next FOMC meeting on October 29th, and although interest rate futures are pricing a 90% chance of a cut, we think it is far from a done deal if the data keeps indicating that the economy is holding up just fine.

Next week brings data releases for construction spending, ISM manufacturing and services and then the payroll report for the month of September on Friday morning.

 

Primary Market

It was a much busier week than expected as $56bln of new investment grade debt was priced this week relative to the estimate of $30bln.  Oracle led the way with an $18bln print and other large issuers of note included Broadcom, Dell and Lowe’s.  Next week, syndicate desks are looking for things to cool off a bit into quarter-end with estimates of about $25bln in new supply.

 

Flows

According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended September 17, investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$2.18bln. This marked the 19th straight week of inflows and is the largest such streak since 2021.  Total year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$47.4bln.

 

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.

 

26 Sep 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • New bond sales in the US junk bond market soared past $48b this month to make it the busiest September ever, surpassing September 2020’s $47b. Issuers have priced $17.5b so far this week, the busiest week in five years. The last time the market was more active was the $18.3b notched in the week ended Sept. 18, 2020.
  • The supply boom has persisted from early summer, bolstered by attractive yields, tight spreads and a relatively resilient economy against the backdrop of easier interest-rate policy.
  • Four more borrowers tapped the market on Thursday for $4.5b, while 18 companies sold bonds this week. This has also been the busiest month overall for issuance since April 2021. It’s on track to be among the top five months on record for new issuance.
  • The unrelenting supply tide caused pressure on yields and prices on Thursday, slowing the broad rally that began last week. Gains stalled across ratings amid the huge wave of supply.
  • Yields jumped 10 basis points, the largest one-day increase in more than three weeks, to 6.72%. Spreads widened to 266 basis points, driving the biggest one-day loss in three weeks
  • BB yields climbed eight basis points to 5.73%, a three-week high, prompting a loss of 0.22% on Thursday, the most in three weeks. Spreads closed at 166 basis points. CCC yields advanced 12 basis points to cross the 10% mark and close at 10.09%, a two-week high. That fueled a loss of 0.35%, the largest in eight weeks and the most in the high yield market on Thursday.

 

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.

19 Sep 2025

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads look as though they will finish the week slightly tighter again.  These have not been big moves tighter the last few weeks but more of an incremental grind lower.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 72 on Thursday September 18th after closing the week prior at 74.  Treasury yields drifted higher throughout the week and are now off their lows across the curve.  The 10yr Treasury yield closed last week at 4.06% and was 4.12% as we went to print mid-morning on Friday.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +7.03% while the yield to maturity for the index was 4.76%.

 

 

 

News & Economics

The highlight of the week was the FOMC release and 25bp rate cut, which was essentially baked-in leading up to the meeting.  The updated SEP (dot plot) indicated 50bps of additional easing over the two remaining meetings of the year (no November meeting).  During his press conference, Chairman Powell was neither hawkish nor dovish, in our view, and retained a neutral stance.  He chose his words carefully during the presser, and in our opinion made it clear that the FOMC would not be too aggressive with easier monetary policy with inflation still stubbornly elevated above the Fed’s target and with too many unknowns that have yet to filter their way through the economy with regard to trade policy.

Primary Market

It was a solid week for the primary market as companies priced $34bln of new debt, besting dealer estimates of $30bln.  Next week dealers are looking for another $30bln as the market backdrop remains accommodative for both borrowers and investors.

Flows

According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended September 17, investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$2.18bln. This marked the 19th straight week of inflows and is the largest such streak since 2021.  Total year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$47.4bln.

 

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.

 

 

 

19 Sep 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bond yields tumble to a new multi-year low and risk premium drops to a seven-month low driving gains for the seventh consecutive week, the longest winning streak since last September. Yields closed at 6.57%, also falling for the seventh week in a row.
  • The broad rally extended across ratings in the US junk bond market on renewed bets that easing interest-rate policy by the Federal Reserve will bolster corporate earnings and growth. The gains spanned across all risk assets as equities hit all-time highs. CCC yields, the riskiest tier of the high yield universe, dropped below 10% for the fourth time in three weeks and are near a six-month low at 9.96%. CCCs have risen to the top again with 0.23% returns on Thursday, the best performing asset class in the US high yield market.
  • The market expectations of at least two more 25 basis points cut this year and one 25 basis point cut each in 2026 and 2027 are in line with Federal Reserve’s dot plot projections driving risk assets across the board
  • BB yields also plunged to a multi-year low of 5.59% and spreads fell to a more than 10-week low spurring gains for the seventh successive week
  • Plunging yields, falling risk premium, and a still steady economy against the backdrop of Fed’s easing interest-rate policy, fueled a supply surge as the week is set to close with nearly $12b in new bonds, the busiest since the week ended Aug. 8. Leaving aside the last two weeks of a summer lull, the primary market has seen supply of $9b+ for five straight weeks
  • Credit remains unshaken, bolstered by persistent technical strength, Barclays strategists Brad Rogoff and Dominique Toublan wrote on Friday. With the market seemingly rangebound at tight levels, identifying areas of dispersion and catalyst-driven opportunities remains key, they added

 

(Bloomberg)  Fed Cuts Rates by Quarter-Point; Powell Cites Weakness in Jobs

  • Federal Reserve officials lowered their benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point and penciled in two more reductions this year following months of intense pressure from the White House to slash borrowing costs.
  • Chair Jerome Powell pointed to growing signs of weakness in the labor market to explain why officials decided it was time to cut rates after holding them steady since December amid concerns over tariff-driven inflation.
  • “Labor demand has softened, and the recent pace of job creation appears to be running below the break-even rate needed to hold the unemployment rate constant,” Powell told reporters. He added, “I can no longer say” the labor market is “very solid.”
  • Powell also signaled ongoing concern over inflation pressures resulting from tariffs. “Our obligation is to ensure that a one-time increase in the price level does not become an ongoing inflation problem,” he said.
  • Looking ahead at the outlook for additional rate moves, Powell was cautious, saying the Fed was now in a “meeting-by-meeting situation.”
  • In their post-meeting statement, policymakers acknowledged that inflation has “moved up and remains somewhat elevated,” but also pointed to worries over jobs. Officials said the unemployment rate had “edged up,” and the “downside risks to employment have risen.”
  • The cut was widely expected amid signs the central bank’s concerns are shifting toward employment and away from inflation, following a sharp slowdown in hiring over the last several months.
  • Policymakers also updated their economic projections at this meeting and now see two additional quarter-point cuts this year. That’s one more than projected in June. They foresee one quarter-point cut in 2026 and one in 2027.

 

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.

12 Sep 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bonds are headed for their sixth week of gains, with yields tumbling to a fresh 40-month low of 6.60% and spreads returning to the six-month low of 268 basis points, spurred by expectations of Federal Reserve policy easing. The high yield market notched up gains in three of the last four sessions.
  • The rally spanned the risk spectrum and gained momentum after jobless-claims data on Thursday reinforced signs of weak labor market and fueled bets that the Fed will cut rates next week. BB yields, the best of the junk bond market, plunged to near a 40-month low of 5.61% and are on track for a sixth week of declines, the longest streak since December 2023. BBs have returned 0.42% returns so far this week, the most in more than two months.
  • Risk assets traded with strong bias as macro data broadly supported expectations of a Fed cut next week, Barclays strategists Brad Rogoff and Dominique Toublan wrote in a note published Thursday
  • While technicals remain supportive, valuations are increasingly asymmetric, and the risk of spread widening into 4Q is rising, the wrote
  • CCC yields, the riskiest segment of the high yield market, fell below 10%. Spreads tightened 10 basis points on Thursday, the most in two weeks, to 613 basis points
  • Single B yields also fell to a fresh 40-month low of 6.53% and spreads closed at 261 basis points prompting gains for the sixth straight week
  • Attractive yields, tight spreads, strong demand and expectations of easing interest rates spurred a supply surge in the primary market
  • Twelve borrowers sold nearly $9.5b this week so far and this will be the third consecutive week of more than $9b in supply
  • September volume stands at $19b

 

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.

12 Sep 2025

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads inched tighter again this week as they have remained in a relatively tight 5bp range over the course of the past month.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 75 on Thursday September 11th after closing the week prior at 77.  Treasury yields exhibited little change over the past week through Friday morning.  The 10yr Treasury yield was 4.07% as we went to print.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +7.31% while the yield to maturity for the index was 4.72%.

 

 

 

News & Economics

Economic highlights this week included PPI and CPI, both of which came within the realm of expectations.  Consumer sentiment data released on Friday morning was softer than expected.  The economic releases this week did little to derail the prevailing market narrative that the Fed will look to deliver a cut next Wednesday.  On Friday morning, interest rate futures were pricing a >100% chance of a 25bp move lower in Fed Funds with a high probability of additional cuts at the October and December meetings.  Next week will also bring economic releases for retail sales, industrial production and housing starts.

Primary Market

The primary market was busy again this week as $38bln was priced through Thursday with up to another $1bln looking to price on Friday.  This figure was lighter than dealer forecasts of $45-$50bln.  Next week syndicate desks are looking for around $30bln of new supply shaded toward Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday FOMC releases are almost always a “no-go” for new supply as issuers prefer to stand down in the wake of the potential rate and spread volatility that can accompany the FOMC post-meeting presser.

Flows

According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended September 10, investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$2.7bln. Total year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$45.2bln.

 

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.

05 Sep 2025

CAM Investment Grade Weekly Insights

Credit spreads look poised to finish the week tighter, which is a remarkable feat given the deluge of new issue supply during the period.  The OAS on the Corporate Index closed at 77 on Thursday September 4th after closing the week prior at 79.  Spreads are a smidge tighter on Friday as we go to print in the late afternoon. Treasury yields are set to finish the week meaningfully lower after another weak jobs report to start the Friday trading session.  The 10yr Treasury yield closed last week at 4.23% and it is wrapped around 4.07% on Friday afternoon.  Through Thursday, the Corporate Bond Index year-to-date total return was +5.95%.

 

 

 

News & Economics

The big news this week was on Friday morning with the release of the nonfarm payrolls report for the month of August.  The BLS report showed that employers added just 22,000 jobs in August while the street was looking for a gain of 75,000.  This was the fourth consecutive month of less than 100,000 payroll additions.  June payrolls also saw a downward revision which knocked the number for that month into negative territory, making June 2025 the first month of payroll reductions since 2020.  Treasury yields moved lower on the back of the release and interest rate futures began to price more than a 100% chance of a 25bp cut when the FOMC convenes on September 17th.  There is still one big datapoint ahead of the September Fed meeting next Thursday with the release of CPI.  After several consecutive weak job reports accompanied with lower revisions it feels like inflation would need to come in red-hot in order to derail what is likely to be the first decrease in the Fed’s policy rate since December 2024.  Futures are also pricing a high probability of cuts at both the October and December meetings as well (no meeting in November).

 

Primary Market

It was the busiest week of 2025 for the primary market, which is especially impressive considering Monday was a market holiday.  Companies priced more than $67bln of new debt in just three trading days as there was no activity on Friday to make way for the jobs report.  2025’s pace of issuance now just slightly trails 2024 to the tune of -2%.  Next week is expected to be another busy one with syndicate desks looking for companies to issue up to $50bln in new debt.

 

Flows

According to LSEG Lipper, for the week ended September 3, investment-grade bond funds reported a net inflow of +$2.6bln. Total year-to-date flows into investment grade were +$42.5bln.

 

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.

 

 

05 Sep 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bonds have recovered from a rocky start to be on course to post gains for the fifth consecutive week. Yields remain within sight of a 40-month low after dropping eight basis points on Thursday to close at 6.74%. The risk premium fell five basis points to 275, just seven basis points higher than the six-month low of 268.
  • The rally spanned across ratings, driving a boom in supply after a busy summer. The primary market priced almost $10b in just three sessions this week, including nearly $5b on Wednesday, the busiest day in three months. The wave of new bond sales continued on Thursday, with the market pricing more than $3b in a reflection of strong demand and robust risk appetite amid expectations of Fed interest-rate cuts.
  • The rally gained momentum as equities hit an all-time high. Junk bonds also climbed as the markets fully priced in a rate cut this month after fresh data reinforced the broad consensus that the labor market is cooling. The latest readings show hiring plans fell to the weakest level for any August on record as intended job cuts mounted amid economic uncertainty. Hiring by US companies was less than forecast, in line with other data showing weak labor demand
  • The advance in the US high-yield market was powered by CCCs, the riskiest assets. CCCs are set for a fifth week of positive returns
  • BBs are also poised to record gains for a fifth week as yields linger close to a three-year low.
  • Market bets for a rate cut improved after Fed Governor Christopher Waller said earlier in the week that the central bank should begin lowering rates this month and make “multiple cuts in the coming months.”

 

(Bloomberg)  Weak US Payroll Gain of 22,000 Cements Case for Fed Rate Cut

  • US job growth cooled notably last month while the unemployment rate rose to the highest since 2021, fanning concerns the labor market may be on the cusp of a more significant deterioration.
  • Nonfarm payrolls increased 22,000 in August, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report out Friday. Revisions showed employment shrank in June — the first payrolls decline since 2020. The jobless rate ticked up to 4.3%.
  • Traders solidified bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its Sept. 16-17 meeting, which Chair Jerome Powell signaled in a speech last month during the central bank’s annual Jackson Hole symposium. Stock futures and Treasuries rallied following the report.
  • The figures will likely heighten concerns about the durability of the labor market after the prior month’s report showed a shockingly cooler hiring picture than previously thought. Job gains have moderated materially in recent months, openings have declined and wage gains have eased, all of which are weighing on broader economic activity.
  • Several sectors, including information, financial activities, manufacturing, federal government and business services, posted outright declines in August. Job growth was concentrated in health care and leisure and hospitality.
  • While July payrolls were revised slightly higher, the jobs picture looked even worse in June. The adjustments follow the sizable downward revisions seen in the last jobs report, which were the largest since 2020.
  • Accounting for the revisions in this report, employment growth in the last three months has averaged just 29,000. Payrolls have come in under 100,000 for four straight months, extending the weakest stretch of job growth since the pandemic.

 

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.

 

 

22 Aug 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

  • The US junk bond rally hit a pause as yields crossed the 7% mark to close at a three-week high of 7.04%, after rising for four sessions, the longest streak since early April. Spreads closed at a two-week high of 287 basis points after climbing eight basis points in the last four sessions. Rising yields and steadily widening spreads drove losses for the third consecutive session and the biggest one-day loss in three weeks.
  • The rally lost steam after the minutes of the last Fed meeting showed that most policy makers were concerned about inflation risks in the coming months. Momentum faded further ahead of Chair Powell’s speech at the gathering of central bank officials in Jackson Hole later Friday.
  • Bloomberg economists Anna Wong and Chris G Collins expect Powell to acknowledge labor market weakness, while also maintaining that demand and supply have offset each other as reflected in the low unemployment rate
  • While data showed the labor market weakening, the solid factory purchasing managers index dampened hopes of a rate cut in September. Traders trimmed their bets for a rate cut in September. The probability of a rate cut in the next meeting dropped to about 71% from 100% a few days ago.
  • A bevy of Fed officials continue to say inflation risks outweigh their concerns about weaker employment
  • Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said while some recent inflation readings have come in better than expected, he hopes one “dangerous” data point is just a blip, referring to the data showing services inflation shooting up
  • The decline extended across the market. BB yields are up six basis points for the week and closed at a two-week high.
  • CCCs extended their modest loss for the fourth session in a row. Yields rose 27 basis points in four sessions to a nearly five-week high of 10.78%, and spreads to a three-week high of 670 basis points. Spreads widened for the sixth consecutive session, the longest streak since April

 

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.

15 Aug 2025

CAM High Yield Weekly Insights

(Bloomberg)  High Yield Market Highlights

 

 

  • US junk bond rally momentum faded, halting a three-day winning streak, after inflation data made a September rate cut slightly less of a sure thing. US wholesale inflation rose the most in three years, suggesting that higher input costs, as reflected in the producer price index, could show up in corporate earnings later this year.
  • The US high yield market broke the run of gains across ratings. Yields climbed five basis points from a more than three-year low to 6.95%, driving the biggest one-day loss in nearly two weeks. The rally stalled across risk assets as equities hit a wall and traders scaled bets on rate cuts at the next Federal Reserve meeting.
  • BB yields rose four basis points to 5.88% on Thursday driving a modest loss of 0.09% ending the three-day gaining streak
  • CCC yields rose eight basis points from the more than four-month low of 10.39% to close at 10.47%
  • While the markets paused after driving yields down to a more than three-year low, the sentiment overall appeared resilient as traders overlooked higher-than-expected inflation prints, Barclays strategists Brad Rogoff and Dominique Toublan wrote on Friday
  • With spreads not far from multi-decade tights, credit selection is critical, Barclays wrote
  • The primary market paused for a breather after a flurry of issuance in the first three sessions of the week, pricing $650m on Thursday
  • The torrid pace of bond sales drove the week’s supply to over $9b taking the August tally to a little more than $25b, the busiest since August 2021
  • US junk bond supply is expected to enter the summer lull phase as the week winds down

 

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.