;
A fragmented market. A broader opportunity set.
Credit markets have evolved. What was once considered a single asset class has become a broad, fragmented and multi-layered ecosystem spanning bonds, derivatives, private markets, currencies and capital structures—from senior secured debt to subordinated and hybrid instruments. The same issuer can be financed and traded under very different conditions.
This complexity does not only create challenges. It also creates opportunity.
The same credit risk can now be accessed, priced and hedged through multiple instruments, each shaped by different liquidity conditions, investor constraints and market dynamics.
In this environment, credit is no longer defined by a single market price, but by multiple coexisting pricing regimes.
From allocation to toolkit
Rather than relying on binary risk-on or risk-off decisions, investors can adapt exposures internally — across quality, instruments, maturities and market segments — as conditions evolve.
A broader toolkit may offer new opportunities for selectivity, relative value and active risk management throughout the cycle.
What this paper explores
This fourth paper in our credit series examines how the structure of credit markets is reshaping investment opportunities.
You will discover:
- Why credit markets have become increasingly fragmented
- How structural shifts are changing liquidity and pricing dynamics
- How investors can use credit as a flexible toolkit across the cycle
- How Candriam approaches selectivity in this multi-layered market
;
”Credit investing is not about timing entry and exit from the credit asset class, but about how to use the various tools to adapt positioning within a diversified and segmented universe
Taming a Wide Universe
As credit markets become more segmented, more flow-driven and more instrument-dependent, navigating them requires more than traditional allocation. It requires selectivity.
Discover the key insights from the paper in this short video
Tame Risk.
Don't run from it.
Credit can feel calm because returns are steady most of the time. But credit is asymmetric: the upside is limited to the coupon, while the downside can be permanent if fundamentals weaken or liquidity disappears.