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Sunday, March 22, 2026

What Do Bonds Know That The Stock Market Doesn't?

 by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Most investors spend their time watching the S&P 500. That’s a mistake, because the credit market is the real “tell.” The bond market has been whispering a warning for weeks now, and credit spreads are now shouting it. As of this writing, the CDX Index, a benchmark measure of credit default swap spreads, has climbed to a nine-month high while the S&P 500 sits within 5% of its all-time peak. Over the past 20 years, every time that combination appeared, a bear market followed. Every single time.

That’s a track record worth taking seriously, and credit spreads are critical to understanding market sentiment and predicting potential stock market downturns. A credit spread refers to the difference in yield between two bonds of similar maturity but different credit quality. This comparison often involves Treasury bonds (considered risk-free) and corporate bonds (which carry default risk). By observing these spreads, investors can gauge risk appetite in financial markets. Such helps investors identify stress points that often precede stock market corrections.

The chart shows the annual rate of change in the S&P 500 market index versus the yield spread between Moody’s Baa corporate bond index (investment grade) and the 10-year US Treasury Bond yield. Rising yield spreads consistently coincide with lower annual returns in the financial markets.

The reason is that credit is the lifeblood of the economy. Businesses borrow to operate, and consumers borrow to spend. As such, when the cost of that borrowing rises, particularly the premium lenders demand to extend credit to riskier borrowers, it signals that the economy is under stress. That “stress” directly affects forward earnings estimates and increases the likelihood of a valuation repricing.

The “Junk to Treasury” spread is the clearest expression of this dynamic. Investors who buy high-yield bonds, the ones with a meaningful chance of default, should demand a premium above the risk-free rate offered by U.S. Treasury bonds. When that premium compresses, it signals that investors are comfortable speculating, willing to reach for yield without demanding adequate compensation for the risk they’re accepting. When the premium expands, the mood has shifted. Lenders are getting nervous. Credit conditions are tightening. And historically, tighter credit conditions have preceded more challenging environments for stocks.

This isn’t a theoretical relationship; it has repeatedly appeared in the data for decades. The bond market (CDX) prices risk continuously across thousands of issuers and maturities. It’s harder to talk up than equities, and it’s not susceptible to the same retail-driven momentum that can keep stock prices elevated long after the fundamental picture has deteriorated.

When credit spreads widen, investors should pay attention.

What The CDX Is Telling Us Now.

The chart from Sentiment Trader below tells the story as clearly as any amount of prose could. The top panel tracks the S&P 500 since 2007. The middle panel shows the CDX Index of credit default swaps. The bottom panel shows where those spreads stand relative to their 189-bar range, essentially a percentile reading of how elevated they are relative to recent history. (Red markers indicate instances where CDX spreads hit 9-month highs while the S&P 500 is within 5% of its high.)

Notice that each red arrow marks a moment when CDX spreads reached a nine-month high while stocks remained near their all-time highs. The 2007 signal preceded the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. The 2015 signal preceded a sharp correction and an extended period of volatility. The 2022 signal arrived just before the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate-hiking campaign drove the S&P 500 down 25%. And now, in early 2026, the signal has triggered again.

“This has been one of the more important divergences we’ve been tracking recently. CDS is pushing to a 9-month high even with equities near highs, effectively tightening financial conditions. Historically, this setup has been unstable: about half the time it led to sharp drawdowns, while the rest saw either mild pullbacks or continued gains.” – Sentiment Trader

The range-rank reading in the bottom panel is particularly instructive. It shows that current CDX spread levels are not a minor blip, but are registering near the upper end of their recent historical range. That’s not statistical noise, but a market pricing in genuine credit stress. The table below summarizes the four instances over the past two decades where CDX spreads hit nine-month highs while the S&P 500 traded within 5% of its peak. The subsequent market outcomes speak for themselves.

Does this mean the current situation will devolve into a bear market? Not necessarily, but history suggests the risk is elevated enough to warrant investors’ attention. It is also worth noting that the magnitude of the subsequent declines varied considerably, from the catastrophic 2008 to 2009 bear market to the more contained 2015 correction. That is due to the severity of the credit impact on the underlying economy. However, they all shared a period of elevated credit spreads that the equity market initially chose to ignore.

So far, this “time is not different.”

The Counterargument Is Not Convincing

The bulls will argue that CDX spreads are widening from historically tight levels and that the absolute level of stress remains modest by historical standards. That’s technically accurate, as shown, Treasury-to-Junk Bond spreads in early 2026 are not at the panic levels seen in 2008 or 2020. So why worry?

It isn’t the absolute level of the CDX that matters, but the direction of travel and the rate of change. If investors wait for the “spike,” it will likely be too late to act. Sentiment Trader’s nine-month high threshold isn’t about measuring the peak of a crisis; it is a warning of a potential turn. Credit stress doesn’t arrive fully formed. It builds. Each of the prior signals triggered before the real damage was done, precisely because spreads were starting to move, not because they had already maxed out.

There’s also the macro backdrop to consider. The S&P 500 enters this period with valuations near the upper end of its historical range, forward earnings estimates elevated, and sentiment still bullish. As investors, we monitor the high-yield spread closely because it is often one of the earliest signals of a fundamental shift in corporate and economic conditions. In other words, watching spreads provides insights into the health of the corporate sector, which is a major driver of equity performance. When CDX spreads widen, they often lead to lower corporate earnings, economic contraction, and stock market downturns. The reason is that a significant widening of the CDX spreads signal:

  • Liquidity Drain: As investors become more risk-averse, they shift capital from corporate bonds to safer assets, such as Treasuries. The flight to safety reduces liquidity in the corporate bond market. Lower liquidity can lead to tighter credit conditions, affecting businesses’ ability to invest and grow and weighing on stock prices.

  • Corporate Financial Health: Credit spreads reflect investor views on corporate solvency. A rising spread suggests a growing concern over companies’ ability to service their debt. Particularly if the economy slows or interest rates rise.

  • Risk Sentiment Shift: Credit markets are more sensitive to economic shocks than equity markets. When CDX spreads widen, it typically indicates that the fixed-income market is pricing in higher risks. This is often a leading indicator of equity market stress.

  • Corporate earnings may decline: Companies with lower credit ratings may struggle to refinance debt at favorable rates, thereby reducing profitability.

  • Economic growth is slowing: A widening CDX spread often reflects concerns that the economy is heading for a slowdown, which can lead to reduced consumer spending, lower business investment, and weaker job growth.

  • Stock market volatility may rise: As credit conditions tighten, investor risk appetite tends to decline, leading to higher volatility in equity markets.

Listening to credit spreads, particularly the high-yield spread versus Treasuries, is a critical indicator of stock market downturns. Historically, they have been a reliable early warning signal of recessions and bear markets.

Key Catalysts Next Week

The calendar downshifts after two consecutive weeks of high-impact data. No marquee releases are scheduled, but don’t mistake a thin calendar for a quiet tape. The dominant forces will be the market’s ongoing digestion of the March 18 FOMC decision, the updated dot plot, and Powell’s characterization of the stagflation dilemma—all compounded by quarter-end institutional flows that historically amplify moves in both directions.

By Monday, traders will have had a full weekend to digest whether the dots shifted to zero cuts (risk-off repricing in housing, small caps, and high-duration tech) or held at one with dovish language acknowledging labor deterioration (relief bid). A parade of Fed speakers throughout the week will provide color, walking back or reinforcing whatever Powell signaled. Those headlines will move markets more than any scheduled data.

Tuesday’s Q4 Productivity final revision matters more than usual. The prior quarter showed output rising 5.4% while hours worked grew just 0.5%. The unit labor cost component is the inflation signal: falling costs give the Fed room, rising costs tighten the stagflation case. Richmond Fed Manufacturing rounds out the regional factory picture alongside the Empire State and Philly Fed surveys.

Friday’s final UMich Consumer Sentiment is the week’s marquee event. The preliminary reading dropped to 55.5—near post-pandemic lows. The one-year and five-year inflation expectations are what the Fed watches most closely; a spike above 3% would validate the hawkish hold and kill remaining hopes for near-term easing.

Underneath the data, the real story is mechanical: Q1 ends March 31. Pension funds and institutional allocators begin quarter-end rebalancing and window dressing. After the sharp rotation out of tech and into value that defined the first quarter, the question is whether those flows reverse or accelerate. In a thin-catalyst week, flow-driven moves can be outsized.

Don’t mistake repositioning for conviction.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/what-do-bonds-know-stock-market-doesnt

Bessent: Public lacks 'good framing' of Iran conflict

 The US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent argued on Sunday that Americans "do not have good framing" of the conflict with Iran, insisting recent military actions have significantly weakened Tehran's capabilities.

Speaking on NBC News, he described a sustained campaign targeting Iran's air force, navy and missile systems, while dismissing media claims that the US is losing ground. The remarks come as tensions rise around the Strait of Hormuz.

Asked whether US President Donald Trump is "winding down or escalating" the war, he said the approaches can overlap, adding that "sometimes you have to escalate to de-escalate."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Bessent:-Public-lacks-'good-framing'-of-Iran-conflict/65923804

IRGC vows to 'completely' shut Hormuz over US strike risk

 The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) warned on Sunday that the Strait of Hormuz would be fully shut if US threats to strike Iran's power plants are carried out. A spokesperson said any attack would trigger immediate "punitive measures." "The Strait of Hormuz will be completely closed and this strait will not be opened until our destroyed power plants are rebuilt," they said.

The statement outlined potential responses, including targeting Israeli energy and communication infrastructure, and striking regional companies with US ties. It also warned that power plants in countries hosting US bases could become "legitimate targets."

The IRGC said the strait remains under its control and open under specific conditions, but stressed it is prepared to escalate, vowing to defend national interests and disrupt US economic assets across West Asia and the Middle East.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/IRGC-vows-to-'completely'-shut-Hormuz-over-US-strike-risk/65923889

Bessent: 'We are jujitsuing Iranians' on oil strategy

 The US Treasury Secretary defended on Sunday a change in policy allowing limited Iranian oil flows, rejecting claims that Washington is funding Iran during the conflict.

In remarks on NBC News, about Friday's decision, he said the oil "was always going to be sold," mainly to China at discounted prices, arguing that keeping global prices lower ultimately reduces Tehran's revenue. When the NBC journalist estimated that Washington's decision to unsanction Iranian oil on vessels would bring a revenue of around $14 billion to Tehran, he said the figure was "grossly overstated," without giving a formal number of it.

Describing the approach as strategic, he said "we are jujitsuing the Iranians," using their own oil flows to maintain oversight, especially when shipments reach markets like Japan or South Korea, where funds can be tracked and potentially restricted.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Bessent:-'We-are-jujitsuing-Iranians'-on-oil-strategy/65923847

'Axios: Trump administration laying groundwork to resume talks with Iran'

 The Trump administration has reportedly begun talking internally about resuming negotiations with Iran.

Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner are involved in discussions to lay the groundwork for re-starting diplomacy, sources told Axios Saturday.

Mediators from Egypt, Qatar and the UK have been passing messages between the United States and Iran, the outlet reported.

Tehran is also considering coming to the table, but with terms that include a ceasefire, guarantees the war will not restart and compensation, according to the report.

The Trump administration has begun talking about possibly resuming peace negotiations with Iran.AFP via Getty Images

There could be room to negotiate over returning frozen assets to Iran, a US official told Axios.

“They call it reparations. Maybe we call it return of frozen money,” the official said. “There’s many different ways that we can wordsmith so that it solves politically what they need to solve.”

The news comes one day after President Trump said he was considering “winding down” the war, as the war entered its fourth week Saturday.

“We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the terrorist regime of Iran,” he wrote on Truth Social Friday.

Both sides were in the middle of talks around Iran’s nuclear program when the US and Israel suddenly launched devastating strikes on Feb. 28 that took out Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and roughly 40 of Tehran’s top military commanders.

Part of the challenge is the mystery whether new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei is really the one in charge.via REUTERS
Iran said reopening the Strait of Hormuz would require a guarantee not to strike the country in the future.US NAVY/AFP via Getty Images

Iran’s Foreign Ministry said Saturday that fully reopening the critical Strait of Hormuz would require a ceasefire and a guarantee not to strike Iran in the future.

US officials expect at least another two weeks of war, as they prepare for possible talks.

Part of the challenge in resuming talks is also the mystery around whether new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei is really the one in charge, and what conditions his condsi in after being injured in the strike that killed his father.

https://nypost.com/2026/03/21/world-news/trump-administration-laying-groundwork-to-resume-talks-with-iran-report/

Mamdani is giving e-bikers a ‘license to kill’ as NYPD loosens enforcement

 by Steve Cuozzo

New Yorkers instinctively avoid raving street-corner lunatics. They don’t know if the psycho might suddenly come at them with a knife, so they cross to the other side to be safe.

There’s no street to cross when the lunatic is the man they elected as their mayor. But if there was, they might get run over by e-bikers to whom Zohran (Madman) Mamdani gave license to kill.

Because he wants to shield them from ICE, motorized bikers can now speed as fast as they want yet face only a civil ticket. This, even as Madman wants to slow auto traffic to a 10 mile per hour crawl.

It isn’t breaking news that traffic lights and human life mean nothing to e-bikers. I watch them zoom up First Avenue, and sometimes down the one-way uptown avenue, from the safe perch of my 16th-floor windows.

In a part of town with more restaurants and fast-casual food places than a neighborhood needs, nothing matters to deliverers except this:

General Tso’s chicken must go through! Never mind collateral damage to human beings.

I watch frightened pedestrians, many of them elderly or impaired, recoil just in time to avoid being struck.

‘No repercussions’

They remind me that three years ago, a wrong-way, hit-and-run Postmates biker ran down my colleague Doree Lewak on the Upper West Side and left her permanently maimed. And of “Gone Girl” actress Lisa Banes, who was killed by one.

And of how my wife narrowly escaped being crippled by a restaurant delivery guy near Columbus Circle. She escaped with only a bruise thanks to her quick reflexes — and luck.

I’m fortunate to have good peripheral vision and high alertness at age 76, but they aren’t enough. A firing squad gives a condemned man better odds than a doped-up, headphones-wearing e-biker coming at 35 mph.

Delivery companies have their greedy hands in e-bike anarchy.

But they’re blameless compared to a mayor who unshackles the oarsmen from legal accountability.

Top cop Jessica Tisch wrote in a New York Post opinion column in May 2025, after former Mayor Eric Adams imposed criminal court summons on errant e-bikers, that a loophole “rendered [traffic court] summons essentially worthless.”

Because e-bikers need no licenses, she wrote, they “can simply ignore a traffic summons with virtually no meaningful repercussions.”

Now, Mayor Madman has pulled the NYPD’s teeth to cause repercussions.

He isn’t merely out of step with capitalist New York City. He’s a grinning devil who charms as he kills. Ted Bundy was good at it, too. The mayor is not Ted Bundy, but he possesses the mass murderer’s sinister, seductive wiles.

His victims include New Yorkers who were gullible enough to vote for him based on his pledge of a rent freeze and free buses.

They’ll come to regret it if he gets his way on raising taxes — or the next time they cross the street.

https://nypost.com/2026/03/21/opinion/mamdani-is-giving-e-bikers-a-license-to-kill-as-nypd-loosens-enforcement/

Trump deploying ICE to airports on Monday to ease crowded TSA lines

 ICE officers will be deployed to airports to help clear the horrendous security lines for the TSA, which ran out of funding more than a month ago because of a Democrat shutdown, President Trump announced Sunday.

The move is meant to speed up security lines, which have stretched up to three hours at some airports as TSA agents walk off the job or call out sick because they haven’t been paid in weeks.

“On Monday, ICE will be going to airports to help our wonderful TSA Agents who have stayed on the job despite the fact that the Radical Left Democrats, who are only focused on protecting hard line criminals who have entered our Country illegally, are endangering the USA by holding back the money that was long ago agreed to with signed and sealed contracts, and all,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump announced Sunday that ICE officers will be deployed to airports facing delays thanks to to the partial government shutdown.Yuri Gripas / Pool via CNP / SplashNews.com

The president predicted his decision to send the federal immigration agents to airports nationwide would be met with criticism from the left.

“But watch, no matter how great a job ICE does, the Lunatics leading the incompetent Dems will be highly critical of their work,” Trump said, asserting, “THEY WILL DO A FANTASTIC JOB.”

Border czar Tom Homan will be “in charge” of the operation, the president added.

Homan said during an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday that he doesn’t envision ICE agents doing the jobs of TSA screeners, but rather handling other aspects airport security.

Deploying ICE agents to the airports is meant to speed up security lines.AFP via Getty Images

“I don’t see an ICE agent looking at an x-ray machine – because you’re not trained in that – [but] there are certain parts of security that TSA is doing that we can move them off those jobs and put them in the specialized jobs to help move those lines,” he explained. 

“We’ll put together a plan today, and we’ll execute tomorrow,” Homan said. 

The border czar indicated discussions are ongoing about how many ICE agents will be deployed to airports. 

“We’re going to do what we can to help TSA move people through the line,” he added. 

Travelers have been facing security line hell this past weekend, with wait times Sunday hitting nearly three hours at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, two hours at Houston’s George Bush International Airport, and more than an hour at JFK in New York.

Even before dawn, the TSA precheck line at JFK appeared to be at a standstill and stretched longer than the regular security checkpoint line. 

Nearly two-hour-long lines awaited frustrated flyers attempting to reach their gates at New York’s LaGuardia Airport Sunday morning, with the queue in Terminal B stretching into the parking lot. 

In New Jersey, wait times at Newark Liberty International Airport ranged from 5 minutes to longer than 30 minutes in some terminals. 

At Philadelphia International Airport, the 6 a.m. security lines were backed up to the Marriott hotel on the premises. 

I have never seen a line this long in Philly,” Reuters reporter Jarrett Renshaw wrote on X

Widespread TSA absenteeism amid a partial government shutdown prompted Trump to start mobilizing ICE agents for use at airports on Saturday, as he called on Democrats to end the stonewalling that has cut off funding and paychecks for TSA screeners.

Roughly 50,000 TSA agents have been working without pay amid the shutdown, which is entering its 36th day. 

Thousands of others have called in sick since Feb. 14, and hundreds have quit their jobs altogether.

ICE, unlike TSA, was funded through last summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. 

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) slammed the plan.  

Massive TSA PreCheck line seen at Terminal B at LaGuardia Airport in NYC on Sunday morning.

“The last thing the American people need are untrained ICE agents at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or, in some instances, kill them,” Jeffries said on “State of the Union.” 

Republicans have pushed to fund DHS, while Democrats have sought standalone funding for agencies like TSA that would exclude immigration operations.

“It’s unfortunate that Republicans have decided that they would rather force TSA agents to work without pay, inconvenience millions of Americans all across the country and now potentially expose them to untrained ICE agents and create chaos at airports throughout the land, rather than get ICE agents under control,” Jeffries argued.

https://nypost.com/2026/03/22/us-news/trump-deploying-ice-to-airports-on-monday-to-ease-crowded-tsa-lines/