Lending Slowdown After Banking Crisis Is ‘Concerning,’ UBS Says

UBS Group AG credit strategists say the pace of lending following March’s banking crisis looks “concerning,” unless issuance of commercial and industrial loans, corporate debt and asset-backed securities improves soon.

(Bloomberg) — UBS Group AG credit strategists say the pace of lending following March’s banking crisis looks “concerning,” unless issuance of commercial and industrial loans, corporate debt and asset-backed securities improves soon.

Bank commercial and industrial loan growth looks on track to drop around 5% in the last three months of the year and about 10% in the first quarter of 2024, near levels associated with a recession, strategists led by Matthew Mish wrote in a note Tuesday. Corporate credit issuance also looks poised to drop. 

“The pace of overall US corporate issuance should improve to -3% by end-2023 using our latest forecasts, but still contractionary: risks are skewed to the downside,” the strategists wrote. 

Their models for the US high-yield credit markets signal default rates of around 6% to the low 7% range near the end of the year, and the strategists see junk bond and leveraged loan defaults peaking between 6% and 8.5% in early 2024, according to the note. The Swiss bank’s economists see a US recession in the third quarter. 

Spreads across investment-grade notes, high-yield bonds and leveraged loans are expected to widen further this year, the strategists wrote. They also see total returns of 4% for high-grade, 3% for junk bonds and 2% for loans. The strategists suggest prioritizing the sectors that performed best in March, including non-cyclical investment-grade debt and high-yield utilities.  

UBS is also guiding down its estimates for corporate bond issuance. Last November, it saw issuance of US investment grade bonds and high-yield bonds increasing 5% and 105%, respectively. Now it sees investment grade issuance declining 5%, and junk issuance increasing 55%. 

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