
Back on January 19 I noted that High Yield bonds were a rather poor investment historically: on average they generated returns like Treasury bonds, but with twice the risk. I also noted that at that time the spread to Treasuries was below expected loss rates, meaning that a buy-and-hold investor should expect to make a lower return than Treasuries because the expected loss rate (default rate x loss in event of default) was greater than the extra spread.
The graph shows what happened subsequently: the spread wandered a little bit, then jumped smartly around the middle of March. In my opinion this merely takes corporate bonds from being a good short/bad buy, to being a bad buy and a bad short.

Of course, economists are very adept at noting what stocks were good to buy last year, and I'm no exception, but there's more to this story than hindsight. BlogPulse measures the frequency that certain word combinations are in the blog universe, and there is a high correlation between the blog mentions of “hedge funds” and the Corporate spread (see graph above or hit link here). Most of these blog mentions are in the context of discussions of potential disasters, positive feedback loops, and other financial debacles. This is evidence that hedge funds are generally long credit risk, as hedge funds begin to feel pain when spreads rise, especially when the stock market (the hedge) does not plummet in concert.
HedgeFundGuy - am 2005-05-26 21:51 - Rubrik: friends
stxx meinte am 26. May, 22:27:
Bertrand Roehner has written about the phenomenon that "news" follow prices in his book "Hidden Collective Factors in Speculative Trading : A Study in Analytical Economics". AFAIK he has shown that literature around a subject rises if it appears in the news. For example, high oil prices are at first time recognized as a problem in the media and as time goes by the increase of literature on this subject is tremendous. Unfortunately, the published literature time series is a lagging one and therefore cannot be used as an indicator for future price movements. It also seems, that we like to think of what our attention is pushed towards.
I have quoted a paper in my master's thesis which presented a return time series that has shown excess returns of high yield (especially B-bonds) to the government bonds. However, this paper has been published before the time series started which you have presented on the blog.
HedgeFundGuy antwortete am 27. May, 02:12:
It sure seems a lagging indicator. The world is full of great contemporaneous and lagging indicators.
Mahalanobis meinte am 27. May, 14:26:
yield spreads / paper recommendation
Mishkin/White: U.S. STOCK MARKET CRASHES AND THEIR AFTERMATH: IMPLICATIONS FOR MONETARY POLICY... "To examine whether stock market crashes are associated with financial instability, we look at all stock market crashes in the twentieth century, examining what happens to interest-rate spreads and real economic activity."