Are we about to see U.S. stocks take a significant tumble? If you are
looking for a “canary in the coal mine” for the U.S. stock market, just
look at high yield bonds. In recent years, almost every single time
junk bonds have declined substantially there has been a notable stock
market correction as well. And right now high yield bonds are steadily
moving lower. The biggest reason for this is falling oil prices. As I
wrote about the other day,
energy companies now account for about 20 percent of the high yield
bond market. As the price of oil falls, investors are understandably
becoming concerned about the future prospects of those companies and are
dumping their bonds. What is happening cannot be described as a
“crash” just yet, but there has been a pretty sizable decline for junk
bonds over the past month. And as I noted above, junk bonds and stocks
usually move in tandem. In fact, junk bonds usually start falling
before stocks do. So does the decline in high yield bonds that we are
witnessing at the moment indicate that we are on the verge of a
significant stock market correction? (more)
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