Investment grade (BBB/Baa-rated and above) corporates remain supported by strong corporate balance sheets and disciplined capital allocation. Net leverage levels have held relatively steady, reflecting a measured approach to financing, including around merger and acquisitions activity.
One key area of interest is debt tied to AI and data centre investment, where large issuers with well capitalised balance sheets, resilient cash flows and high credit ratings are helping drive what may be a record year for investment-grade issuance.
“Most of the AI financing has come from the hyperscalers,” McCann says. “The resulting supply has widened spreads just enough to create opportunity in very high quality credit.” Areas such as pharmaceuticals, utilities and managed care also stand out, where factors ranging from new product launches to wildfire mitigation efforts and stronger underwriting may support further spread compression.
We have high conviction in the securitised debt universe, where valuations remain attractive relative to corporates and fundamentals remain positive. Although our outlook on mortgage-backed securities has faded somewhat in recent quarters as valuations look less attractive, other parts of the sector have our attention. A slow-motion recovery in commercial real estate is creating opportunities in commercial mortgage-backed securities as refinancing conditions improve and help drive sales transactions and price discovery. Asset backed securities are benefiting from robust structural protections that are helping insulate investors from mixed consumer balance sheets.
Within the high-yield universe, fundamentals also appear relatively solid. Leverage has risen only modestly from recent lows while cash balances and interest coverage ratios remain healthy. The impact from tariffs has been manageable, and elevated operating costs have largely flowed through to consumers. High-yield spreads may look a little tight relative to other sectors, making security selection key in industries such as media and commercial real estate. Across the sector, an improvement in credit quality and a short duration help explain why spreads are tight relative to history.
Private credit has seen notable withdrawals, rising defaults and AI-related disruptions, but the headlines often overlook the sector’s diversity across lending structures and risk profiles. Selectivity and an up-in-quality bias may aid investors in capturing better risk-adjusted income while the broader market faces late-cycle pressure. Opportunities can be found in direct lending to upper middle market companies, where larger companies may be better able to absorb relatively elevated financing costs, and asset-based finance, where loans are secured by hard collateral such as equipment and may offer higher recovery rates in a downturn.
In emerging market debt, robust yields paired with healthy fundamentals are creating compelling opportunities. A number of sovereign issuers offer higher real yields and relatively lower debt levels than many developed markets, including the United States. Positioning is highly differentiated by region, with greater conviction in parts of Latin America and a more cautious stance towards areas that are more sensitive to energy prices or geopolitical risk. Local currency bond markets also stand out, offering both income potential and a possible hedge against a weaker US dollar.