Junk Bond (High-Yield Bond)
How Junk Bonds Work
The mechanics are the same as any corporate bond: the issuer borrows money, pays periodic interest, and returns the principal at maturity. The difference is who is borrowing and how much they pay for the privilege.
Companies that issue junk bonds typically fall into one of a few buckets:
Fallen angels: Companies that were once investment-grade but got downgraded due to deteriorating financials. Think of a large retailer or energy company hit by an industry downturn.
Rising stars: Younger or smaller companies that haven’t yet built the track record for an investment-grade rating but are growing and may eventually get upgraded.
Leveraged buyout (LBO) issuers: Companies loaded with debt after a private equity acquisition. The heavy leverage pushes their rating below investment grade.
Distressed issuers: Companies in serious financial trouble where default is a real possibility. These bonds trade at steep discounts and attract specialized distressed-debt investors.
Junk Bond Rating Scale
The line between investment-grade and junk is sharp, and crossing it has real consequences.
| Category | S&P / Fitch | Moody’s | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Highest Junk (Speculative) | BB+, BB, BB- | Ba1, Ba2, Ba3 | Moderate — closest to investment-grade |
| Highly Speculative | B+, B, B- | B1, B2, B3 | Substantial default risk |
| Ultra Speculative | CCC+, CCC, CCC- | Caa1, Caa2, Caa3 | Very high default risk |
| Near Default / Default | CC, C, D | Ca, C | Default imminent or already occurring |
The BB-rated tier is sometimes called the “crossover” zone. These bonds trade closer to investment-grade spreads and are the most popular segment of the high-yield market. As you move down to B and CCC, yields spike — but so do default rates.
Why Junk Bonds Pay Higher Yields
Higher yield is compensation for higher risk. The credit spread — the yield premium over comparable-maturity Treasuries — tells you exactly how much extra return the market demands.
| Bond Type | Typical Spread Over Treasuries | What It Signals |
|---|---|---|
| Investment-Grade (BBB) | 100-200 basis points | Low perceived risk |
| High-Yield (BB) | 200-400 basis points | Moderate risk, near investment-grade |
| High-Yield (B) | 400-600 basis points | Substantial risk |
| Distressed (CCC and below) | 800+ basis points | Significant default concern |
When spreads widen — say, the average high-yield spread jumps from 350 to 600 basis points — it signals that investors are growing nervous about credit risk, often because the economy is slowing. When spreads compress, it means risk appetite is healthy and investors are comfortable reaching for yield.
Default Rates and Recovery
Default risk is the defining feature of junk bonds. Historical averages provide a frame of reference, but actual default rates vary widely with economic conditions.
| Period | Approximate Annual Default Rate (High-Yield) |
|---|---|
| Long-term average | 3-5% |
| Strong economy | 1-2% |
| Recession | 8-12%+ |
When a junk bond defaults, investors don’t necessarily lose everything. Recovery rates — the percentage of face value bondholders eventually receive — average roughly 40-50% for senior unsecured bonds. Secured bonds recover more; subordinated bonds recover less.
This is why diversification matters so much in junk bonds. Any single issuer can blow up, but a diversified portfolio of 50-100+ high-yield bonds can absorb individual defaults and still deliver attractive total returns.
Risks of Junk Bonds
Credit (default) risk: The headline risk. The issuer may not be able to make interest payments or repay principal. This risk increases sharply during recessions when corporate cash flows deteriorate.
Interest rate risk: Like all bonds, junk bond prices fall when interest rates rise. However, high-yield bonds are less sensitive to rates than investment-grade bonds because their higher coupons provide more cash flow cushion and their duration tends to be shorter.
Liquidity risk: The high-yield market is less liquid than the investment-grade or Treasury market. During market stress — precisely when you might want to sell — bid-ask spreads widen and finding a buyer at a fair price becomes harder.
Economic sensitivity: Junk bonds behave partly like equities. In a recession, high-yield spreads blow out and prices can drop 15-30%, resembling stock market losses more than typical bond behavior.
Downgrade risk: A company already rated junk can get downgraded further, pushing its bond price lower and its spread wider even without an actual default.
Junk Bonds vs. Investment-Grade Bonds
| Feature | Junk Bonds | Investment-Grade Bonds |
|---|---|---|
| Credit Rating | BB+ / Ba1 and below | BBB- / Baa3 and above |
| Yield | Higher — compensates for default risk | Lower |
| Default Risk | 3-5% average annual rate | Under 0.5% average annual rate |
| Interest Rate Sensitivity | Lower (shorter duration, higher coupons) | Higher |
| Correlation with Stocks | Higher — behaves partly like equity | Lower |
| Institutional Restrictions | Many pension funds and insurers can’t hold them | No restrictions |
| Liquidity | Lower, especially during stress | Higher |
How to Invest in Junk Bonds
High-yield bond ETFs and mutual funds: The most practical route for most investors. These funds hold hundreds of junk bonds, spreading default risk across many issuers. Look at the fund’s average credit quality, effective duration, expense ratio, and yield to worst.
Individual bonds: Buying single junk bonds requires significant credit analysis skill and a large enough portfolio to diversify properly. One default in a concentrated portfolio can wipe out years of coupon income. This approach is typically reserved for institutional investors and specialized high-yield funds.
Closed-end funds: Some closed-end funds focus on high-yield bonds and may use leverage to amplify returns. This adds another layer of risk — check the fund’s leverage ratio and premium/discount to NAV.
Key Takeaways
- Junk bonds (high-yield bonds) are rated below BBB- / Baa3, indicating elevated default risk.
- They pay higher coupons and wider credit spreads to compensate investors for that risk.
- Default rates average 3-5% annually but spike during recessions, making diversification essential.
- Junk bonds are more correlated with equities than investment-grade bonds — they can suffer stock-like losses in downturns.
- The BB-rated segment is closest to investment-grade and carries the least risk within the junk universe.
- High-yield bond ETFs are the most practical way for individual investors to access this market.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are they called “junk” bonds?
The term dates back to the 1980s when high-yield bonds gained mainstream visibility through financier Michael Milken and Drexel Burnham Lambert. “Junk” reflects the below-investment-grade credit quality. The industry prefers “high-yield” as a more neutral label, but both terms describe the same thing: bonds with higher default risk that pay higher interest.
Are junk bonds a good investment?
They can be — in the right context. Junk bonds have historically delivered returns between investment-grade bonds and equities, with less volatility than stocks. They work best as a diversified allocation (via a fund) rather than concentrated bets on individual issuers. Timing matters: buying when spreads are wide typically produces better outcomes.
What happens when a junk bond defaults?
The issuer stops making interest payments or fails to repay principal. Bondholders enter a restructuring or bankruptcy process. Recovery rates for senior unsecured high-yield bonds average around 40-50% of face value, though they can range from nearly nothing to 70%+ depending on the company’s remaining assets.
How are junk bonds different from stocks?
Junk bonds are still debt — bondholders have legal priority over stockholders in bankruptcy and receive fixed coupon payments. However, during economic downturns, junk bond returns often correlate more closely with equities than with Treasuries, because credit risk dominates interest rate risk at the lower end of the rating spectrum.
What does it mean when high-yield spreads widen?
Widening credit spreads mean investors are demanding more compensation for holding junk bonds relative to Treasuries. This typically signals growing concern about the economy, rising default expectations, or a broader risk-off shift in markets. Narrowing spreads indicate confidence and improving credit conditions.