U.S. junk-bond defaults may quadruple!
NEW YORK - August 4, 2008 -
Defaults on American corporate junk bonds could more than quadruple in the next
year as the declining economy in the United States severely restricts
companies' ability to repay their debts, the Standard & Poor's ratings
agency has said.
The rate of default on America's risky junk, or high-yield, corporate bonds jumped from a 25-year low of 0.97 per cent in December to 1.92 per cent at the end of June.
However, S&P said that it expected the figure to rise to 4.9 per cent by mid- 2009 and conceded that defaults could rise as high as 8.5 per cent.
By contrast, there have been no defaults on European corporate bonds in the past year, according to S&P's new report.
A default on the debt usually leads to bankruptcy and means that bondholders lose some or all of the money they are owed. Diane Vazza, head of global fixed-income research for S&P, said: “Things are going to get much worse yet. The situation in Europe will follow the U.S.”