What Changed?

Equities get most of the attention heading into 2026, but the cleaner read on risk appetite sits in credit. High-yield spreads remain unusually tight even as growth data cools and policy stays restrictive—an odd combination that deserves more scrutiny.

The market’s narrative is that the economy slows without breaking: inflation moderates, the Fed has room to ease, and earnings absorb higher funding costs. Yet the metric that typically flinches first when the cycle turns—high-yield spreads—has barely moved.

That isn’t a forecast of trouble. It is a statement about what investors are pricing: low near-term default risk, functioning liquidity, and confidence that refinancing won’t become a widespread problem.

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The Numbers

Here’s the latest snapshot:

  • ICE BofA U.S. High Yield option-adjusted spread: 2.79% (Jan. 7, 2026)

  • 10-year Treasury yield: 4.15% (Jan. 7, 2026)

  • Fed funds target range: 3.50%–3.75% (FOMC decision on Dec. 10, 2025)

  • CPI inflation: +2.7% year over year (Nov. 2025)

  • Core CPI (ex-food and energy): +2.6% year over year (Nov. 2025)

  • Unemployment rate: 4.6%; nonfarm payrolls: +64,000 (Nov. 2025)

Why It Matters

High-yield spreads compress when investors believe three things at once: the economy can absorb tighter financial conditions, the default cycle stays contained, and liquidity remains available for weaker balance sheets. When spreads sit near 3%, the market is effectively saying risk is present, but it is not urgent.

That message matters for portfolios because credit often sets the boundary conditions for everything else. Tight spreads lower the cost of capital at the margin, support buybacks and refinancing, and reduce the odds of a forced deleveraging wave. If that backdrop holds, equity volatility can rise without turning into a full-blown risk-off regime.

The tension is that spreads can stay calm right up until they don’t. The more informative question for 2026 is not “Will spreads widen?” but “What would make them widen?” Watch for a shift in the mix: downgrades that push issuers into high yield, weaker interest coverage as old coupons roll off, or signs that lenders are demanding more protection in covenants and pricing. Credit doesn’t need to scream to change the opportunity set—it just needs to stop whispering “all clear.”

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Takeaway

Going into 2026, high-yield spreads are the market’s quiet confidence gauge. If they remain tight, the cycle likely stays investable. If they drift wider without an obvious shock, it’s often the earliest sign that the economy’s “soft landing” is losing altitude.

— Lauren Brown
Editor, American Ledger

Sources

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED), January 2026 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/BAMLH0A0HYM2

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED), January 2026 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/DGS10

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, December 2025 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20251210a.htm

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, December 2025 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, December 2025 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/cpi.pdf

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