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Official from the OECD says that inflation is the biggest threat to debt markets, which are facing a 'big test'.

A senior OECD official said that inflation is the biggest?risk to global bond markets. This comes as energy prices have risen following?the U.S. and Israeli air war against Iran.

Carmine Di Noia, OECD director of financial affairs and enterprise affairs, said in an interview before the release of Wednesday's annual debt reports by the Paris-based organization that "Now we 'are having another huge stress test."

Investors are worried about inflation and higher energy costs, as oil prices have increased by 16% in the last week.

Di Noia said that if this happens, the higher bond yields will "put even more pressure" on the debt markets, given financing needs remain high and borrowing costs are still high.

SHORTER MATURITIES RAISES RISK OF REFINANCING

The OECD anticipates that governments and businesses will borrow $29 trillion in this year. This is up from $25 trillion last year.

Di Noia stated that they have reduced the maturity of the new debts they sell, and higher yields may reinforce this dynamic.

He noted that the conflict had stoked unrest at a moment when investors on bond markets were changing. The OECD has warned that price-sensitive investors, such as hedge funds, are taking a 'larger role' in the markets.

According to the OECD, the share of corporate bonds maturing within 10 years or less has reached its lowest level since 2009 and is expected to be the lowest ever in 2025.

This increases the risk of refinancing. At a record $13.5 billion, it reached 80% for OECD nations in 2025. As more debt is due earlier and yields rise, debt costs will increase faster. The emerging markets are especially vulnerable, as over a third (35%) of their debt is due to mature in the next 3 years.

The rate increases to combat inflation after the pandemic pushed up government interest rates and raised yields on bonds. The OECD stated that by 2024, these had already surpassed defence spending.

AI DEBT COULD transform the corporate bond market

The OECD stated that the soaring borrowing by AI firms as they race to expand their data centres and processor requirements may make corporate bonds more "equity like".

The report stated that nine major hyperscalers will need to finance $4.1 trillion in capital expenditures until 2030. If the nine companies were to fund half of this on the bond market, they would be responsible for 15 percent of global corporate issuance. Amazon, Alphabet, Google, Meta, and Microsoft are among them.

Di Noia stated that the convergence of the two markets could make it more difficult for investors to hedge their risk and diversify their investments, as the nine make up 12%?of the global stock market capitalisation.

AI infrastructure could also require an additional investment of $5 trillion by 2030. This is likely to increase borrowing in sectors such as real estate, energy, and IT hardware.

The OECD has warned that this raises questions about the market's ability to absorb a new supply in the same magnitude. This is especially true given the fact that sovereign borrowing continues to grow and the changing nature of investors. (Reporting and editing by Dhara Raasinghe, Emelia Sithole Matarise and Yoruk Bahceli)

(source: Reuters)