Junk Bonds

Junk bonds, officially known as high-yield bonds, are corporate debt securities that carry a credit rating below “investment grade.” These bonds are issued by companies with a higher risk of default—either because they are startups, are in a volatile industry, or are currently undergoing financial restructuring.

To compensate investors for taking on this extra risk, junk bonds offer significantly higher interest rates (coupons) than government or blue-chip corporate bonds.


The Credit Rating Threshold

Credit rating agencies—primarily Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, and Fitch—use a letter-grade system to rank the safety of bonds. The “Junk” category begins the moment a bond drops below the BBB- (S&P) or Baa3 (Moody’s) level.

Rating TierS&P / FitchMoody’sCategory Description
Investment GradeAAA to BBB-Aaa to Baa3High safety; reliable issuers.
Non-Investment Grade (Junk)BB+ to B-Ba1 to B3Speculative; higher default risk.
Highly SpeculativeCCC+ to DCaa1 to CIn danger of default or already in default.

The 2026 Market Context

In early 2026, the high-yield market is navigating a “selective” phase as central banks begin a rate-cutting cycle:

  • Attractive Absolute Yields: With central bank rates trending lower, junk bonds in 2026 are currently offering absolute yields between 5% and 8% in the US and Europe, and as high as 9% to 12% in emerging markets like India.
  • Tight Spreads: The “spread”—the extra interest junk bonds pay over safe Treasury bonds—is currently at historical lows. This means investors aren’t getting a massive “bonus” for the extra risk right now, making careful credit selection essential.
  • Fallen Angels: This term refers to companies that were once “Investment Grade” but were recently downgraded to “Junk.” In 2026, many fallen angels are found in the retail and traditional manufacturing sectors as they struggle to adapt to AI-driven competition.
  • Default Rates: As of early 2026, the global junk bond default rate has stabilized around 4.4%. While not a crisis level, it is high enough that “blindly” buying a high-yield index can be risky.

Balance High Risk with Stable Income

Successful high-yield investing requires a “Barbell Strategy”—balancing high-risk debt with rock-solid assets. These platform pairings provide the 2026 standard for managing a speculative income portfolio:

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