Whenever the credit risk premium falls
Whenever the equity risk premium falls below current spread levels, there is a quasi-arbitrage opportunity between corporate bonds and equities. After a long period with a positive equity credit premium, the picture changed in 1999, signaling the height of the equity bubble. The interpretation of this was that expected returns on corporate bonds versus equities were extremely attractive. While corporate bonds actually outperformed equities by far between 2000 and 2002, those years were characterized by a massive widening of credit spreads. Due to the bursting of the tech bubble and the credit spread tightening since fall 2002, the gap has closed.
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