Risky Is Now Safe in Bond Market Upset by Soaring Inflation

Junior debt issued by banks is normally one of the riskiest types of fixed-income in the US and Europe. It’s typically not backed by collateral and in the event of a crisis it only gets paid back after other bonds.

But in a world of soaring inflation and interest rates, it has a feature that suddenly makes it safer than just about the very safest of corporate bonds: the debt is usually repaid after a few years.

That gives it, in the parlance of Wall Street, short duration, a sure-fire way to avoid the sorts of brutal losses that investors in longer-term bonds are suffering as that surge in rates erodes the value of the future income they’ll receive. (No one wants an old bond paying, say, 3% when all the new bonds are paying 6%.)

Preferred securities issued predominantly by US banks, which are junior to all types of debt, have returned 5.2% so far this year while European banks’ own flavor of deeply junior debt, known as contingent convertibles, is up 2.8%, according to ICE BofA indexes. A broad index of global investment-grade bonds, meanwhile, has almost erased all its gains this year. The trend was much the same last year, with junior debt posting smaller losses than investment-grade.

One crucial factor in the outperformance is that the spike in interest rates hasn’t produced much of an economic slowdown yet and, as a result, banks’ balance sheets remain strong. The junior debt, given its weak credit protections, is hit hardest when banks’ finances start to deteriorate.