Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (2024)

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (1)

Global Credit Outlook 2024

Looking ahead at 2024, some of the same challenges remain and other risks are emerging—all of which require a new playbook for issuers and investors in the debt markets.

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  • IN THIS REPORT
    • IN THIS REPORT
    • Key Takeaways
    • Top Global Risks
    • Economic Outlook
    • Questions That Matter
    • Regional Credit Conditions

An environment of increasingly rapid change, which began with the onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic, requires financial market participants to adapt their playbooks. Conditions that borrowers and investors could safely take for granted for a decade or more have been pushed aside. Most importantly, perhaps, is that markets can no longer expect ultra-accommodative monetary policy and low inflation will be the norm.

While still-robust employment levels and supportive fiscal conditions should continue to underpin the resilience of stronger credits, we expect 2024 to come with additional credit deterioration and defaults for more vulnerable corporate and government issuers.

Borrowers across all asset classes will need to adjust to tighter financing conditions and softer economic growth. While long-term yields will likely peak around midyear, financing conditions will likely stay tight in real terms in 2024. Borrowers have reduced near-term maturities, but the share of speculative-grade debt coming due rises significantly in 2025, making 2024 a pivotal year. Defaults will likely rise further, to 5% in the U.S. and 3.75% in Europe, above their long-term historical trends.

We expect additional credit deterioration in 2024, largely at the lower end of the ratings scale, where close to 40% of credits are at risk of downgrades. Sectors exposed to a decline in consumer spending are most vulnerable. Meanwhile, investment-grade credits should generally continue to show resilience despite some margin compression—with the exception of the real estate sector.

The main risks that could derail our baseline expectations, leading to further credit deterioration, include persistent tight financing conditions amid entrenched inflation; a sharper-than-expected slowdown in global growth; elevated input-cost inflation and high energy prices that squeeze corporate profits and pressure governments’ fiscal balances; vulnerable commercial real estate; and amplifying geopolitical tensions.

Looking ahead, heightened geopolitical risks, the need to accelerate the decarbonization of the economy to address the rise in climate-related risks, and the technology revolution will increasingly shape the future of credit.

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Access All Outlooks

Go deeper into all of our outlooks for what promises to be another challenging period for the global economy and markets.

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Economic Outlook

Global Macro Update: 2024 Is All About The Landing
Economic Outlook U.S. Q1 2024: Cooling Off But Not Breaking
Economic Outlook Eurozone Q1 2024: Headed For A Soft Landing
Economic Outlook Asia-Pacific Q1 2024: Emerging Markets Lead The Way
Economic Outlook Emerging Markets Q1 2024: Challenging Global Conditions Will Constrain Growth
U.K. Economic Outlook 2024: More Stagflation Ahead
Economic Outlook Latin America Q1 2023: A Shift To Lower Growth
Economic Outlook Canada Q1 2024: Growth Is Set To Continue Slowing

What We're Watching

S&P Global Ratings expects additional credit deterioration in 2024, largely at the lower end of the ratings scale. An environment of increasingly rapid change requires financial market participants to adapt their playbooks.

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Questions That Matter

Aligned with our Top Global Risks, we answer the pressing Questions That Matter for 2024 on the uncertainties that will shape the coming year, collected through our interactions with investors and other market participants.

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (10)

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (11)Credit Headwinds

We are back to an environment of higher real interest rates, concluding an era of cheap money that started in the wake of the Great Financial Crisis. Borrowers across all asset classes will need to adjust to tighter financing conditions and softer economic growth. With a durably higher cost of debt, a ramp-up in maturities, and slowing economic activity in the cards for 2024, the focus comes back to credit fundamentals and liquidity analysis.

  • December 4, 2023Could Interest Rate And Recession Risks Derail Corporate Credit?Corporates
  • December 4, 2023Is The Worst Over For The Global Office Sector And China’s Residential Market?Real Estate

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (14)Capital Flows

With the era of easy money over, investors are rebalancing their portfolios to adjust for shifting risks and returns. Borrowers (especially those at the lower end of the ratings ladder facing tighter access to credit) will need to adapt to the reshuffling of capital flows from long-duration speculative assets to safer havens—as well as adapt to the knock-on implications for overall market liquidity, foreign exchange reserves, and investment in emerging markets.

  • December 4, 2023How Long Can The Golden Age Of Private Credit Last?Private Markets
  • December 4, 2023How Will The Path Of Interest Rates In 2024 Affect Corporate Borrowing Strategies?Market Dynamics

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (17)GeopoliticalUncertainty

Geopolitical risks have returned to center stage, with the war between Israel and Hamas, the prolonged Russia-Ukraine conflict, and ongoing U.S.-China tensions. This increased geopolitical fragmentation affects corporates and governments in their strategies for supply chain and energy security, with potential broader implications on food prices, global trade, and inflation—while increasing the potential for event risk.

  • December 4, 2023What Are The Credit Implications Of Intensifying Conflicts And Political Disruption?Sovereigns
  • December 4, 2023Which EMs Are Better Positioned To Outperform In 2024?Emerging Markets

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (20)Energy & Climate Resilience

New challenges are also emerging from the necessity to accelerate the world’s transition to a low-carbon economy to limit the potential dramatic consequences of climate change. Extreme weather conditions and worsening physical risks continue to increase and influence credit fundamentals. However, we believe companies' and governments' readiness to address these risks, in large part, remains low and could become even more challenging to overcome in an environment of slower growth and tighter financing conditions.

  • December 4, 2023How Will Challenging Credit Conditions Affect Resiliency And Adaptation To More Costly Climate Hazards In 2024?Physical Climate Risk
  • December 4, 2023Can The Shift To Net Zero Accelerate Amid Growing Headwinds?Energy Transition

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (23)Crypto, Cyber, & Tech Disruption

The transformation of global and regional financial systems amid the adoption of new technologies—from generative artificial intelligence to blockchain and beyond—is accelerating an era of growth and discovery while also heightening single-entity and systemic cyber risk, forcing corporate and government entities to adapt their playbooks.

  • December 4, 2023What Are The Key Credit Risks And Opportunities Of AI?Artificial Intelligence
  • December 4, 2023Will Technological And Regulatory Developments Unleash Institutional Blockchain Adoption?Digital Assets

Webinar Replay: Global Credit Outlook 2024—New Risks, New Playbook

S&P Global Ratings’ Global Credit Outlook 2024 presented our macroeconomic and credit outlooks for the year ahead, including our base-case forecasts, assumptions, and key risks for what promises to be another challenging period for the global economy and markets.

Regional Credit Conditions

S&P Global Ratings’ Global Credit Outlook 2024 harnesses the power of our regional and global Credit Conditions Committees (CCC), which meet quarterly to review conditions in Asia-Pacific, Emerging Markets, Europe, and North America, cascading into our global coverage. At the CCCs, our senior researchers, economists, and analysts from around the world evaluate the trends affecting the current and future states of economies, industries, and credit markets—to identify the base case and downside scenarios and rank the exogenous risks that underpin our credit ratings and inform potential rating impacts across various asset classes.

  • Credit Conditions North America Q1 2024: A Cluster Of Stresses
  • Credit Conditions Europe Q1 2024: Adapting To New Realities
  • Credit Conditions Asia-Pacific Q1 2024: China Slows, India Grows
  • Credit Conditions Emerging Markets Q1 2024: Not Getting Easier

Webinar Replay: New Risks, New Playbook—Questions That Matter

S&P Global Ratings answered the pressing questions that matter on the uncertainties that will shape 2024—collected through our interactions with investors and other market participants.

Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (30)
Global Credit Outlook 2024: New Risks, New Playbook (2024)

FAQs

What is the credit risk in 2024? ›

We expect additional credit deterioration in 2024, largely at the lower end of the ratings scale, where close to 40% of credits are at risk of downgrades.

What is the credit market outlook for 2024? ›

In 2024 we remain positive on the credit market, anticipating strong total returns and continued demand from yield and duration buyers. Investors are looking to add high-quality duration and to move away from short-maturity investment solutions, made less attractive by major central banks' expected interest rate cuts.

What is the structured finance outlook for 2024? ›

We are forecasting only modest (single-digit) growth in global structured finance issuance volume to roughly $1 trillion in 2024. Interest rates, regulations, consumer credit, and geopolitical uncertainty are some of the topics we are monitoring in 2024, among others.

What is credit outlook? ›

Credit Outlook reports are Fitch Ratings most-anticipated and widely read series of credit research. Discover how Fitch Ratings analysts expect credit conditions will evolve in 2024 to better inform your investment strategies and credit risk decisions.

Is 2024 a recession year? ›

In its Global Economic Prospects report in January, the World Bank said risks of a global recession in 2024 had receded thanks to the US economy performing better than expected in 2023.

What are the top credit risks? ›

Chief among them are probability of default, loss given default, and exposure at default. The higher the risk, the more the borrower is likely to have to pay for a loan if they qualify for one at all.

What will happen to the economy in 2024? ›

Global growth is projected at 3.1 percent in 2024 and 3.2 percent in 2025, with the 2024 forecast 0.2 percentage point higher than that in the October 2023 World Economic Outlook (WEO) on account of greater-than-expected resilience in the United States and several large emerging market and developing economies, as well ...

What are projected interest rates end of 2024? ›

“We forecast mortgage rates to stay above 6.5% through this quarter and next.” Fannie Mae Housing Forecast. The 30-year mortgage rate will end 2024 at 6.4%, up from 5.9% in the previous forecast. The average mortgage rate will remain at 6.7% in Q2.

What will interest be in 2024? ›

Interest rates have held steady since July 2023.

At its March 2024 gathering the Fed decided to keep the federal funds target rate at 5.25% to 5.5%, where it has remained since July 2023.

What is the outlook for CMBS in 2024? ›

The outlook for 2024 is more optimistic, with forecasts calling for a rebound in non-agency volume to close to $55 billion. This certainly bodes well for liquidity, something the market has been starved of for several quarters.

What is the financial outlook for 2025? ›

With elevated interest rates and no significant revenue-raising reform in sight, the federal deficit hovers around 6.0 percent over our forecast horizon, reaching 6.2 percent of GDP in fiscal 2024 and edging down to 5.9 percent in fiscal 2025.

What is the future outlook for finance? ›

Overall employment in business and financial occupations is projected to grow faster than the average for all occupations from 2022 to 2032. About 911,400 openings are projected each year, on average, in these occupations due to employment growth and the need to replace workers who leave the occupations permanently.

Is a 900 credit score possible? ›

Highlights: While older models of credit scores used to go as high as 900, you can no longer achieve a 900 credit score. The highest score you can receive today is 850. Anything above 800 is considered an excellent credit score.

What is the difference between credit watch and credit outlook? ›

Rating outlook vs credit watch

Outlook applies to long term ratings and usually, credit watch applies to both long term and short term ratings.

What is the default risk? ›

Default risk, also called default probability, is the probability that a borrower fails to make full and timely payments of principal and interest, according to the terms of the debt security involved. Together with loss severity, default risk is one of the two components of credit risk.

What is credit risk prediction? ›

Credit risk prediction is an effective way of evaluating whether a potential borrower will repay a loan, particularly in peer-to-peer lending where class imbalance problems are prevalent.

What is the possibility of credit risk? ›

Credit risk is the probability of a financial loss resulting from a borrower's failure to repay a loan. Essentially, credit risk refers to the risk that a lender may not receive the owed principal and interest, which results in an interruption of cash flows and increased costs for collection.

What is the credit risk lifecycle? ›

The credit risk life cycle refers to how consumer credit risks are managed. The credit risk life cycle starts with an application for a credit product. If the application is approved and the offer of credit is taken-up, then the account management portion of the life cycle takes over.

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