Corporate bonds are supposed to pay you extra for taking on more risk than a Treasury. Right now, that extra payout is almost nothing.
Investors are basically lending to companies at the same rate they'd lend to the U.S. government - which leaves almost no cushion if anything goes wrong.
The Fed could be that something, especially with an economy that may not give it room to cut as fast as the market expects.
Credit Spreads Sit Near Multi-Decade Lows
Credit spreads are the extra yield investors get for holding corporate bonds instead of Treasuries - it's the price of taking on company risk.
Right now those spreads are sitting near multi-decade lows across investment grade and high yield alike.
That pricing reflects a market betting on almost no corporate defaults, no recession trouble, and no refinancing surprises - all at the same time.
Credit cycles have historically turned when investor confidence is highest. Market Briefs breaks down what's actually moving in credit and rates every morning in five minutes - plus you get a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Why The Fed Is The Pressure Point
A hawkish Fed means rates stay higher for longer, which puts pressure on every company that borrowed cheaply during the zero-rate years and now has to refinance at much higher costs.
Think of it like a homeowner who locked in a 3% mortgage in 2021 and now has to refinance at 7% - same loan, much bigger monthly bill.
For companies, that bigger bill comes straight out of earnings, and weaker borrowers may not have the cash flow to absorb it.
Multiply that math across thousands of corporate borrowers, and the strain shows up in profit margins across the index.
The pain usually shows up in stages, starting with more expensive refinancings, moving into slipping earnings, and finishing with downgrades from ratings agencies - which is when spreads finally react.
So far, spreads haven't budged much, with the market betting the Fed cuts before the damage shows up.
What To Watch
Watch the high yield market first, because that's where the weakest borrowers live - smaller companies, more leverage, less room for error.
Energy, real estate, and consumer cyclicals tend to be the first to feel the pressure when financing gets tight.
Watch refinancing activity too, because a growing chunk of corporate debt comes due over the next few years, and every deal that closes at a higher rate eats into earnings.
High yield refinancing activity is peaking in 2025 and 2026, with the bulk of the maturity wall now sitting in 2027 and 2028 - meaning the test is already on the calendar.
Bank lending standards are another early signal, since tighter credit at the bank level usually shows up in bond spreads a few months later.
And watch what the Fed actually says next, not just what it does, since tone shifts move credit before rate moves do.
Credit spreads are priced for stability, and the Fed is the variable most likely to disrupt that pricing.
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