Stock Traders Ignoring the Message From Junk Bond Traders

Perhaps 2014 will go down in history as the year that junk bonds sent a warning signal as oil plummeted and stocks just kept rallying. Prices on high-yield bonds have declined 2.4 percent this month and 5.7 percent since the end of August, even as U.S. equities have climbed to new highs. The dollar-denominated debt is now yielding the most relative to a comparable measure on the Standard & Poor’s 500 index since 2011. The divergence may signal junk-bond traders are picking up on a fundamental problem of overvalued energy companies in frothy markets fueled by six years of record Federal Reserve stimulus -- and that stock investors should pay attention. While falling oil prices mean consumers have extra cash to deploy elsewhere, boosting the economy, the price plunge may also crimp the capital spending by energy companies that has been a driver of growth in recent years. “The big question is whether oil’s problems are going to stay local or whether they’re going to spread out,” Michael Shaoul, chief executive officer of Marketfield Asset Management said in a Dec. 9 Bloomberg Television interview. The test will be whether “this big decline in oil really provokes some kind of credit problems in either high-yield energy or in one of the emerging markets.” By Lisa Abramowicz

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