How Should Advisers Talk to Clients About Corporate Credit?
When advising clients on corporate credit, the discussion should move beyond headline yields and focus instead on how corporate bonds function within a broader portfolio. This includes clearly outlining their potential income advantages, setting realistic expectations around risk, and explaining how corporate bonds can be positioned across market cycles. A structured conversation helps clients understand not only why they hold corporate bonds, but how those holdings can contribute to long term investment outcomes.
Key benefits to highlight
With this framework in mind, advisers can focus on the specific characteristics that make corporate bonds a valuable portfolio component.
- Attractive income potential: Corporate bonds tend to offer higher yields than government bonds. Advisers can explain that this yield premium reflects compensation for additional credit and liquidity risk.
- Predictable income: Corporate bond coupons generally provide regular, contractual income, particularly in the investment grade segment. Unlike equity dividends, which may be reduced during periods of weaker earnings, bond coupons are fixed. This provides greater income visibility and can support portfolio stability, particularly for income‑focused investors.
- Diversification benefits: Corporate bonds can diversify portfolios. While they remain sensitive to changes in risk appetite, their correlation with equities can be low – particularly within investment grade – helping to reduce overall portfolio volatility and cushion portfolios during periods of market stress.
- Flexibility: Corporate bonds span a wide spectrum of maturities, capital structure positions (from secured to unsecured) and credit ratings. This diversity can allow investors to match their bond exposure to their income needs, risk tolerance and investment horizon.
- Market liquidity: The corporate bond market has continued to deepen and broaden over time, supporting efficient trading across many issuers and sectors. This liquidity facilitates portfolio rebalancing, enabling investors to adjust exposures as market conditions change.
Key risks clients should be aware of
Alongside the benefits, advisers should ensure clients clearly understand the risks associated with corporate bonds and how those risks can affect income, capital values, and portfolio outcomes across different market environments.
- Credit risk: Defaults or credit rating downgrades can have a material impact on corporate bond prices. In extreme cases, such as bankruptcy, issuers may fail to make coupon or principal payments. Even in less severe situations, bonds may be subject to a credit downgrade, which can lower bond prices and cause spreads to widen.
- Market risk: Changes in interest rates or liquidity conditions can also affect corporate bond performance. Rising interest rates typically cause bond prices to fall, with longer-dated issues being particularly sensitive. Liquidity, which can vary widely across issuers and structures, can become an issue when bonds trade less frequently. This could mean investors are unable to sell a position when they need to.
- Contractual and structural risks: These include event risk, such as acquisitions, leveraged buyouts or restructurings that increase indebtedness and weaken credit quality; call risk, when a company redeems a bond early, forcing investors to reinvest the proceeds at lower yields; and covenant risk where weaker covenants reduce investor protection.
- Recession risk: Economic downturns tend to affect corporate bonds unevenly. High yield bonds are particularly sensitive to spread widening. Furthermore, sectors with earnings closely tied to the economic cycle may be more negatively affected in a downturn.
The role of corporate bonds in a client’s multi-asset portfolio
With a clear understanding of both benefits and risks, advisers can position corporate bonds deliberately within a client’s broader asset allocation, using them to help balance income generation, risk management, and return potential across market cycles.
Corporate bonds typically sit between government bonds and equities on the risk spectrum. Their senior position in the capital structure can make them less risky than equities, while their sensitivity to economic conditions makes them riskier than government bonds.
One of their most valuable roles lies in assisting with capital preservation and managing drawdowns. Corporate bonds also offer flexibility across market cycles. Investment grade bonds can often provide relative income and stability when economic growth slows, while high yield bonds tend to benefit during economic expansions. Short-dated bonds, meanwhile, can help to manage interest rate risk.
Exposure to corporate bonds can contribute to improving a portfolio's overall return potential. By offering higher yields than government bonds and lower volatility than equities, corporate bonds can improve the risk profile of a diversified portfolio.
The bottom line
When used effectively, corporate bonds can help deliver attractive risk‑adjusted returns, strengthen long‑term portfolio resilience and may help clients achieve a more balanced long-term investment outcome.