Investors hoping to "buy the dip" in fixed income may need to wait for a deeper repricing, according to a recent UBS note that calls current credit spreads insufficient to reflect a possible growth shock linked to heightened geopolitical tensions and disruptions to oil flows.
UBS describes credit markets as relatively "complacent," observing that spreads have only widened modestly even as risks tied to the Middle East conflict have increased. The bank estimates that market pricing currently implies only a 10% to 25% probability of a negative growth shock, leaving scope for further spread widening if conditions worsen.
Entry points UBS considers more attractive
To guide investors on when risk-reward in credit may improve, UBS sets out explicit spread thresholds. For U.S. bonds, the bank sees buying opportunities around:
- 115 basis points for investment-grade credit, and
- 415 basis points for high-yield credit.
For European credit, UBS identifies roughly:
- 130 basis points for investment-grade, and
- 420 basis points for high-yield.
Those thresholds imply a notable increase from current levels and would likely coincide with either a sharper deterioration in growth expectations or a prolonged disruption to oil flows.
Historical context within UBS's framework
UBS notes that the targeted spread levels correspond to approximately 0.5 to 0.75 standard deviations above five-year averages. In the bank's view, historically that is a range where credit markets tend to stabilize and then tighten over the following months. That historical relationship underpins UBS's argument for waiting until spreads reach those zones before materially adding credit exposure.
Preference for duration as a hedge
While UBS does not regard a severe growth shock as its base case, the firm warns that risks are skewed to the downside, particularly if energy supply disruptions intensify. In such a scenario, the bank says government bonds could outperform credit. As a result, UBS favors adding duration - notably long positions in benchmark sovereign bonds such as Germany's 10-year Bund - as an effective hedge in both a downturn and the subsequent recovery phase, rather than increasing credit exposure too early.
Positioning and investor guidance
Given the current environment, UBS advocates a neutral stance on credit and advises investors to wait for more attractive entry points. The firm's guidance emphasizes patience: the most favorable buying opportunities, UBS argues, are likely to appear only after markets more fully price in the downside risks that stem from geopolitical tensions and potential disruptions to oil markets.
In sum, UBS's analysis frames a clear tradeoff for bond investors: either accept the risk of adding credit exposure now while spreads remain modestly wider, or prioritize sovereign duration and wait for spread levels around the bank's stated thresholds before materially increasing credit positions.