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  • If the US Federal Reserve decides

  • to lower interest rates at its next meeting,

  • what will that mean for corporate debt?

  • So many people think that at the next meeting

  • the Fed is going to lower interest rates because they

  • think that they're going to see signs of economic slowdown.

  • And lowering interest rates gives a boost to the economy

  • by making it easier for consumers and companies

  • to borrow money.

  • But that would also be a really big deal for the debt market.

  • Bond, debt, and fixed income all mean

  • essentially the same thing.

  • And before we talk about this chart,

  • we need to talk about the way that debt is categorised.

  • So there are these rating agencies out there,

  • like S&P and Moody's, which you may have heard of.

  • And they assign ratings to companies.

  • Now, the highest rating that you can get as a borrower is AAA.

  • A AAA rating means it's really, really likely

  • that you are going to pay back all of the debt that you owe.

  • After AAA comes AA, A, and BBB.

  • And these categories are considered

  • investment-grade debt.

  • But once you fall below BBB, then you're

  • in junk bond territory.

  • Junk bonds are just far less likely to pay back

  • what they owe.

  • And why an investor might want to buy a junk bond?

  • Well, it's because they have higher interest rates.

  • So if you're a lender and you lend

  • to a company that's considered more risky,

  • you can charge them a higher interest rate.

  • And if they pay back that money then you

  • get more money in return if you're

  • the lender than if you were to lend to a safer company.

  • The chart we're looking at is total return

  • on junk debt going back one year.

  • And it's re-based to 100.

  • The top line is BB.

  • The middle line is B. And the bottom line

  • is that junkiest of junk debt, CCC.

  • Now, when people started to think that the Federal

  • Reserve was going to lower interest rates,

  • you can see that the total return started

  • going up for BB and B debt.

  • But for CCC, the trend did not quite hold.

  • You can see it didn't go up the same way that BB and B did,

  • even though you might expect it to.

  • The reason for that is that investors think,

  • hey, there might be an economic recession coming up,

  • maybe because of global trade wars or just

  • a general slowdown.

  • Basically, this is an indication that investors

  • think CCC companies, which are companies that are already

  • far less likely to pay back their debt,

  • are actually going to have a worse time doing so,

  • even though the Fed may lower interest rates.

  • So just keep in mind, though, if the Federal Reserve

  • is lowering interest rates, it's because the economy

  • is slowing down.

  • Even though companies can maybe refinance their debt

  • at a lower interest rate, which would make it easier

  • to pay that money back, companies that are CCC, i.e.

  • already struggling to pay back debt,

  • may still not have an easier time doing so if a recession is

  • on the horizon.

If the US Federal Reserve decides

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