Most credit portfolio managers remain pessimistic and expect credit defaults to continue to rise in all regions over the next 12 months, according to the third-quarter survey from the International Association of Credit Portfolio Managers.
When asked how corporate credit default rates will move over the course of the next 12 months, 83% said defaults will increase during that period. When asked the same question in the previous quarter's survey, 84% of surveyed managers said defaults would rise.
Among the surveyed portfolio managers, 12% believe defaults will remain unchanged over the next 12 months, down from 16% in the previous quarter's survey, and 5% say they will go down, compared with none in the previous survey.
The survey's Aggregate Credit Default Outlook index for the next 12 months rose very slightly to -78.3 in the third-quarter survey from -82.3 in the previous quarter. A negative number indicates credit conditions are expected to worsen, while positive numbers mean conditions are expected to improve.
Som-lok Leung, IACPM's executive director, said in a phone interview that managers' responses to the survey are certainly expected.