US primary credit market competition hits record high as bond demand surges, report shows
BY Reuters | CORPORATE | 02/25/26 11:00 AM ESTFeb 25 (Reuters) - U.S. primary credit markets are now the most competitive on record, based on Barclays' analysis of over one million investor records since ?2017, driven by high demand for new ?corporate bonds.
The increased demand led to tighter allocations and heavier early-stage trading, ?as indicated by reports submitted to the Financial Industry ?Regulatory Authority's (FINRA) system for reporting over-the-counter transactions ?in fixed-income securities.
A dataset ?constructed by Barclays from this system, Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine (TRACE), showed ?that issuances have increasingly "sold out" ?across a broader and more diverse investor base.
Barclays cited a mix of structural and cyclical ?forces, including a larger pool ?of ?funds competing for new-issue allocations, stronger foreign demand and higher coupons since the Federal Reserve's 2022 rate liftoff, ?which have increased reinvestment needs.
Competition in the first half ?of 2025 was about 15% higher in investment-grade debt and roughly 30% higher in high-yield compared with 2017, a period already considered highly competitive, the report said.
The ?most ?liquid parts of the market saw the ?steepest rise of 30% to 35%, spanning major sectors ?such as banking, capital goods, consumer non-cyclical, consumer cyclical and technology, as well as large offerings and bonds with five- to ten-year maturities.
Unmet primary market demand is also feeding into secondary trading, as per the report, with turnover on deals larger ?than $1 billion rising to 26% in the first 10 days of 2025, up from 15% in 2017, with ?broader initial ownership boosting ?early activity. (Reporting by Pritam Biswas in Bengaluru; ?Editing by Vijay Kishore)
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