Leveraged loans diverge from high yield

Bloomberg analysis shows leveraged loans underperforming high‑yield bonds in early 2026 — an unusual split that signals shifting risk pricing and could affect lenders’ funding and syndication strategies. Lenders will want more granular monitoring as credit spreads and investor appetite reshuffle. (bloomberg.com)

Bloomberg’s proprietary analysis found the U.S. leveraged‑loan market slipped behind the high‑yield bond market in early 2026, breaking a multi‑year correlation between the two asset classes. (bloomberg.com) Fitch reported trailing‑12‑month default rates in December 2025 of 4.8% for leveraged loans versus 2.5% for high‑yield bonds, a spread that underpins lenders’ renewed price sensitivity for loan risk. (fitchratings.com) Fitch also flagged that roughly 17% of the loan market sat on its “Market Concern Loans” list versus about 10% for high‑yield, a concentration that supports why arrangers are widening spreads and demanding finer surveillance. (fitchratings.com) Syndicated loan activity plunged in Q4 2025—down 61% from Q3 to $156 billion—as banks tightened terms and pulled back on distribution, reducing immediate syndication capacity for leveraged credits. (sikich.com) CLO managers and Moody’s expect increased CLO issuance and buyout refinancing to absorb some loan supply, but that technical shift reallocates where credit risk lands and changes pricing dynamics between loans and bonds. (bloomberg.com) The Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation projects equipment and software investment will rise about 6.2% in 2026, increasing origination flow for equipment lenders even as loan pricing and monitoring demands tighten. (leasefoundation.org) Northteq and other vendor whitepapers are already promoting automation for sell‑side syndication in equipment finance to scale placements without bloating balance sheets, while Solifi announced Document Intelligence to cut document‑verification times by up to 70% and completed the Leasepath buy to broaden mid‑market origination tooling. (monitordaily.com) U.S. dealer inventories hit about 2.97 million units and roughly 88 days’ supply in November 2025, pressuring dealers’ cash cycles and increasing reliance on pricier floorplan lines. (harneypartners.com) Solifi’s Datascan acquisition targets inventory‑risk tooling for wholesale/floorplan lenders, and Kawasaki Motors Finance’s migration to Solifi’s wholesale platform demonstrates faster onboarding, ERP integration and dealer self‑service that reduce friction for dealers and lenders facing tighter funding windows. (thomabravo.com) The SBA delivered $150 million through its Transaction‑Based Working Capital Pilot in February 2026, signaling persistent working‑capital demand even as syndicated channels re‑price and reallocate capacity. (sba.gov) Solifi’s Experience Hub and its partnerships with Liventus and Consult Disrupt aim to accelerate implementations, cloud migration and automation so lenders can increase granularity in monitoring, syndicate smaller tickets and preserve balance‑sheet capacity amid the current loan/bond repricing. (magazine.factoring.org)

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