US Recession Fear Raises ‘Gray Swan’ Risk for Bond Investors

Investors are fretting that a year-long rally in global credit is papering over the risk that US policy uncertainty tips the world’s largest economy into a recession.

Some are sounding the alarm that this could be a ‘gray swan’ event — a shock that is predictable in theory, but largely ignored until it hits. Unlike black swans, which are truly unforeseen, gray swans lurk in plain sight.

In contrast to the selloff in other asset classes, very little bad news has been priced into credit markets so far, with banks on Monday pulling off a whopping €7.45 billion ($8.1 billion) debt deal. That may look complacent as US President Donald Trump prepares to impose a barrage of trade tariffs this week.

“Credit markets in the US are pricing in a much lower chance of a recession than equity markets are and something has to give,” said Chris Ellis, a London-based high-yield portfolio manager at Axa Investment Managers. “I’ve heard it described as a ‘gray swan’ risk in the market, which seems apt to me. We don’t know exactly what could trigger a selloff, but we have to tread carefully.”

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