Global credit markets are entering a more complex and uncertain phase, despite broadly resilient headline fundamentals. While growth remains positive, it is increasingly narrow and uneven, and investors should prepare for higher volatility and greater dispersion in returns across issuers and sectors.
We have identified four key forces shaping credit markets in the near term: energy and geopolitics, fragile global growth, artificial intelligence (AI), and rate volatility driven by central bank divergence.
The most immediate driver is energy and geopolitics, particularly developments in the Middle East. Although recent progress in US–Iran relations has reduced immediate tensions, risks remain elevated and supply disruptions could persist. Markets are likely to embed a continued risk premium in oil prices, with outcomes highly sensitive to geopolitical developments.
A sustained resolution could ease inflation pressures and support spreads, while renewed escalation could widen spreads and create regional divergences, with Europe more exposed than the US or China.