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The Credit Market Lens

Energy Credit Market Returns Reflect Sector Discipline

Behind the recent rally in energy credit lies a multi-year story of management discipline, restrained capital spending, and sector consolidation.
Energy Credit Market Returns Reflect Sector Discipline
Energy Credit Market Returns Reflect Sector Discipline
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Key takeaways

  • Domestic trends drive U.S. market moves: Over the past week, U.S. markets looked through geopolitics and went back to the usual domestic drivers, including AI optimism, Federal Reserve expectations, and the May jobs report released Friday. 
  • The longer story behind energy credit: Energy credit outperformance is not primarily tied to the spike in oil prices; it reflects a more credit-friendly sector structure. 
  • Oil price regimes underpin energy sector sensitivity: When oil prices are above breakeven (that is, the minimum price to balance the total cost of production), then the oil price itself matters less for energy sector performance; below breakeven, energy credit becomes much more sensitive to changes in oil prices.

Last week, despite seeing little tangible progress toward resolving the Iran conflict, U.S. markets quickly reverted to their familiar domestic anchors: AI capex optimism and the Federal Reserve outlook.

It was, on balance, a strong week for risk markets, helped by renewed enthusiasm around AI spending and IPO demand, until Friday’s post-payroll sell-off reminded investors that, in this market, good news can still be bad news. A stronger labor report prompted markets to reprice toward a more hawkish Fed hiking interest rates as early as this year.

This capped a week in which geopolitical tension mattered less than the usual mix of domestic micro and macro forces, particularly given already rich valuations in risk assets. The macro risks have not changed much: either a growth slowdown driven by a lingering energy supply shock, or an overheating economy that pushes inflation higher and puts upward pressure on both yields and risk assets.

Within credit markets, one sector that’s shown ongoing strength amid macro turbulence is energy.

Figure 1: Energy sector spread outperformance started before the Iran conflict

Energy sector credit outperformance versus broader U.S. high yield and EM bond indexes began before the recent oil rally, suggesting other drivers beyond higher crude prices.
Source: J.P. Morgan, Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 4 June 2026. Data are drawn from the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Total Return Index (Unhedged USD) and the J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index (EMBI) Global Composite (excluding the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council or GCC) and track relative performance of energy sector issuers within each index versus the broader index; numbers below 1.0 indicate energy sector outperformance.

Higher prices have helped sustain spread tightening, especially in the USD HY Index. But the bigger driver, in our view, has been the sector’s shift toward a more disciplined, credit-friendly posture from a capital management standpoint, a trend that will likely persist. That shows up in three ways.

First, unlike in past periods of rising oil prices, U.S. oil rig counts have remained relatively inelastic. Figure 2 shows that since the post-COVID recovery and the 2022 energy price spike, the number of operating U.S. oil rigs has been broadly stable despite large swings in oil prices. That is a sharp contrast with the pre-2020 period, when the relationship was much tighter, and even more so relative to the pre-2015 “wildcatting” phase of the shale revolution. Some of this reflects better operational efficiency, but absent a prolonged period of elevated prices, near-term growth in rig counts still looks unlikely.

Figure 2: U.S. rig counts have become more inelastic to moves in oil prices

U.S. oil rig counts have become less responsive to oil price changes, remaining broadly stable since the post-COVID recovery despite large swings in WTI crude prices.
Source: Baker Hughes, Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 29 May 2026. U.S. oil rig counts are indexed to 100 as of 27 July 2018; on that date there were 861 U.S. oil rigs in operation. WTI = West Texas Intermediate crude oil.
Second, the dollar-denominated HY energy universe has consolidated materially since the shale boom peaked in 2014. Figure 3 shows that in the past decade, the number of unique energy exploration and production (E&P) issuers in the USD HY Index has fallen from roughly 100, or about 9% of index par outstanding, to around 30, or roughly 3%, today. But the broader energy sector still accounts for just over 10% of index market value. We believe this divergence largely reflects the growing share of integrated oil companies with exposure across the entire supply chain. As a result, sector earnings are less dependent on drilling activity alone.

Figure 3: Over the past decade there has been consolidation within the E&P component of the energy sector

The number of unique energy exploration and production issuers in the U.S. high yield index has dropped sharply over the last decade, highlighting consolidation in the sector.
Source: ICE-BAML, PIMCO as of 31 May 2026
Lastly, Figure 4 shows that disciplined drilling and consolidation have driven a multi-year deleveraging cycle. From 2014 through the COVID-induced default wave, the energy sector consistently carried higher net leverage than the broader USD HY Index. Since the 2020 defaults cleared out the weakest index-eligible names, however, leverage has improved and the sector has become a higher-quality part of the HY market. We believe that dynamic should persist as higher energy prices support the sector’s EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) while management teams remain reluctant to pursue large, debt-funded capex programs.

Figure 4: The high yield energy sector now has lower net leverage than the overall index, even before the EBITDA tailwind from current energy prices

After years of elevated leverage, the high yield energy sector has deleveraged since 2020 and now carries lower net leverage than the overall U.S. high yield market.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 31 March 2026. Data are drawn from the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Total Return Index (Unhedged USD).

Figure 5: Oil prices matter for HY energy performance, but only when they are below the breakeven price

In U.S. high yield energy, oil prices have a bigger effect on excess returns when prices are below breakeven; above breakeven, the relationship weakens.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 31 May 2026. Data are drawn from the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Total Return Index (Unhedged USD).

Figure 6: The relationship between energy sector performance vs. the index in high and low oil price regimes also holds for EM corporates

EM energy corporates also show stronger spread sensitivity when oil prices are below breakeven and weaker sensitivity when prices are above that level.
Source: J.P. Morgan, Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 31 May 2026. Data are drawn from the J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index (EMBI) Global Composite, using subset constituents that are energy corporates.

Figure 7: The relationship doesn’t hold for EM sovereigns, whose need to maintain access to U.S. dollar funding through cycles is important

Unlike corporates, oil-exporting EM sovereigns do not show the same regime-dependent spread behavior, reflecting different balance sheet and funding dynamics.
Source: J.P. Morgan, Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 31 May 2026. Data are drawn from the J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index (EMBI) Global Composite, using subset constituents that are issued by oil-exporting sovereigns.

The takeaway for both HY and EM corporates is straightforward. Once oil prices are above breakeven, further moves in oil tend to matter less for credit performance.

In options terms, the put option embedded in energy firms’ credit is then deep out of the money, so its delta is low and changes in oil prices have a smaller effect on spreads. Below breakeven, the opposite is true: The energy sector becomes much more sensitive to oil prices, and relative performance beta rises materially.

Interestingly, Figure 7 shows that this relationship does not hold for oil-exporting EM sovereigns. Two factors help explain why. First, unlike corporates, sovereigns typically hold substantial U.S. dollar reserves that help service external debt and reduce the risk of spread stress when oil prices fall. Second, EM sovereigns’ effective fiscal breakeven is often lower than that of EM corporates: They can continue to collect export revenues without the same immediate weakening in their cash flows or balance sheets. That makes sovereign spreads less mechanically tied to oil prices, especially over shorter horizons.

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