Just been digging into some bond market data and honestly the pressure building in corporate credit is getting harder to ignore. JPMorgan dropped their latest analysis and the numbers are pretty eye-opening - we're looking at around $63 billion in bonds that are basically hanging on by a thread. These are technically investment-grade but rated as junk by at least one agency, with negative outlooks plastered all over them. That's nearly double from where we were at the end of last year.



What's wild is that last year saw $55 billion in corporate bonds get downgraded straight to junk status. Meanwhile only $10 billion got upgraded the other way. The pattern's pretty clear when you look at it. Companies are refinancing into higher interest costs and their earnings aren't keeping pace, so the downgrade risk is real. We're also seeing this AI spending wave and M&A activity pushing debt levels up faster than revenues are growing.

The market's still acting calm though - spreads are sitting around 78 basis points this week, nowhere near stressed levels. But here's what caught my attention: BBB- rated bonds are now at just 7.7% of the high-grade index, lowest on record. That's actually a red flag because it means less of a cushion before things slip into junk territory. When those downgrades happen, spreads typically blow out since there's a smaller investor base buying junk bonds.

Some of the bigger asset managers are already getting selective, steering away from companies that are stretching their balance sheets too far. And looking at 2026, JPMorgan expects the upgrade pace to slow down while the downgrade pressure probably continues. Tech companies especially might take on more debt to stay competitive in the AI race, which could mean more junk bond territory ahead.

It's not panic time yet, but this feels like one of those moments where the credit quality deterioration is happening faster than most people realize. Worth keeping an eye on.
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