AI’s influence on fixed income markets is only just beginning and its eventual effects will become more apparent as time progresses. Even at this point, however, certain things are clear.
The Sovereign bond investor – AI has the potential to have a marked effect on the shape of sovereign yield curves. A long-term productivity boost from AI could help advanced economies address debt sustainability as well as achieve higher growth with lower inflation. In turn, this could drive flatter curves over time and reinforce the safe-haven status of these institutions. However, debt burdens are likely to worsen before productivity benefits from AI manifest, which could lead to higher term premia and steeper yield curves in the short term.
Additionally, high dispersion of outcomes across economies is expected based on their ability to benefit from the AI productivity boost.
The income and credit investor – Implications for credit markets are expected to be highly idiosyncratic and evolving. Developments such as those in the Digital Infrastructure Asset Backed Securities (ABS) space offer interesting opportunities for differentiated sources of yield. However, issuance trends, new debt structures and securitised pools, as well as the effect of AI adoption across industries and regions, need to be monitored.
A sector level insight into AI
Sector | Credit positive | Risk |
Technology | These firms are central to AI infrastructure (chips, cloud, networking), with strong cash flows and investment-grade ratings supporting debt servicing. | Elevated capex and M&A (eg, Microsoft’s AI investments) may pressure free cash flow margins. Regulatory scrutiny and competitive intensity could compress margins. |
Insurance | AI is transforming underwriting, claims, and fraud detection, improving operational efficiency and reserve adequacy. | Rising exposure to AI-related cyber threats and evolving underwriting models may introduce new forms of model risk. |
Pharmaceuticals | AI accelerates drug discovery and clinical development, helping offset pricing pressure and improving time-to-market. | US policy changes (eg, Medicare Drug Price Negotiation) may compress margins, with AI only partially mitigating pricing headwinds. |
Communications | AI enables network optimisation, customer service automation, and capex savings, supporting margin improvement and deleveraging. | High debt levels and legacy infrastructure pose challenges. Regulatory scrutiny (eg, environmental liabilities from wireline assets) adds complexity. |
Electric Utilities | AI enhances grid stability, predictive maintenance, and renewable integration, improving operational efficiency. | Surging AI-related power demand (eg, data centres) strains infrastructure and may increase reliance on natural gas, raising sustainability concerns. |
The active bond manager – While AI has the potential to democratise information and provide a greater number of investors with more power to make decisions, it can also lead to commoditised insights. In our view, the key to taking active risk remains in fundamental and proprietary research, enhanced by the use of AI, to drive differentiated insights. Additionally, trading in fixed income is set to undergo a transformation with AI, meaning dedicated trading capabilities to stay ahead of these trends become vital.
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This insight is part of our broader analysis on how today’s global shifts are impacting investment opportunities – a dynamic we call The Great Global Restructuring.