Bond Credit Spread Singapore: What It Is and Why It Matters

Bond Credit Spread Singapore: What It Is and Why It Matters

Definition: A bond credit spread is the difference in yield between a corporate bond and a comparable-maturity Singapore Government Securities (SGS) bond. It represents the extra return investors demand for taking on the issuer’s credit risk above the risk-free rate.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Please consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions. Data current as at Q1 2026.

Table of Contents — Bond Credit Spread Singapore: What It Is and Why It Matters
  1. What Is a Bond Credit Spread?

    When Singapore investors buy a corporate bond, they take on credit risk — the risk the issuer may default. To compensate, corporate bonds offer a higher yield than risk-free SGS bonds of the same maturity. The credit spread is:

    Credit Spread = Corporate Bond Yield − SGS Bond Yield (same tenor)

    For example, if a 5-year SGS bond yields 3.0% and a 5-year investment-grade corporate bond yields 4.2%, the credit spread is 1.2 percentage points (120 basis points or bps). Higher spreads mean higher perceived credit risk.

    What Drives Bond Credit Spreads in Singapore?

    • Issuer credit rating: Investment-grade bonds (BBB- and above) have lower spreads than high-yield or unrated bonds. AAA-rated issuers trade very close to SGS yields.
    • Economic environment: During recessions, spreads widen as investors demand more compensation. During growth periods, spreads compress.
    • Sector: Capital-intensive or cyclical sectors carry wider spreads than defensive sectors even at the same rating.
    • Liquidity: Less liquid bonds require a liquidity premium, widening the spread above pure credit risk.
    • Bond tenor: Longer-dated bonds typically have wider spreads as credit uncertainty increases over time.

    Credit Spread Categories

    Credit Spread (bps) Typical Issuer Risk Level
    0–30 bps Singapore government-linked entities, AAA banks Near risk-free
    30–100 bps Investment-grade corporates (A/AA rated) Low credit risk
    100–250 bps Investment-grade lower tier (BBB rated) Moderate credit risk
    250–500 bps High-yield / sub-investment-grade Significant credit risk
    >500 bps Distressed bonds High default risk

    Singapore Corporate Bond Market

    Singapore’s corporate bond market is anchored by SGX-listed bonds and MAS-supervised SGD bonds. Major issuers include DBS, OCBC, UOB, statutory boards (HDB, LTA), and S-REITs (which issue medium-term notes or perpetual securities). Most retail-accessible Singapore corporate bonds are in SGD 1,000 denominations (SGX bond market) or SGD 250,000 (institutional OTC market).

    For REIT investors, S-REIT perpetual securities are a key category — subordinated, non-dated instruments that carry spreads of 200–400 bps due to their subordination and perpetual nature. See our Perpetual Bond Singapore glossary entry for detail. Also use our Bond Yield to Maturity Calculator to compute effective yields for Singapore bonds.

    Using Credit Spreads for Investment Decisions

    Singapore investors can use credit spread data to: assess whether a corporate bond is fairly priced; monitor spread widening as an early warning of deteriorating credit quality; compare bond investments across sectors; and time bond purchases — buying during stress-driven spread widening can lock in attractive yields. Credit spread data for SGX-listed bonds is available on the SGX bond screener.

  2. FAQ

What Is a Bond Credit Spread?

When Singapore investors buy a corporate bond, they take on credit risk — the risk the issuer may default. To compensate, corporate bonds offer a higher yield than risk-free SGS bonds of the same maturity. The credit spread is:

Credit Spread = Corporate Bond Yield − SGS Bond Yield (same tenor)

For example, if a 5-year SGS bond yields 3.0% and a 5-year investment-grade corporate bond yields 4.2%, the credit spread is 1.2 percentage points (120 basis points or bps). Higher spreads mean higher perceived credit risk.

What Drives Bond Credit Spreads in Singapore?

  • Issuer credit rating: Investment-grade bonds (BBB- and above) have lower spreads than high-yield or unrated bonds. AAA-rated issuers trade very close to SGS yields.
  • Economic environment: During recessions, spreads widen as investors demand more compensation. During growth periods, spreads compress.
  • Sector: Capital-intensive or cyclical sectors carry wider spreads than defensive sectors even at the same rating.
  • Liquidity: Less liquid bonds require a liquidity premium, widening the spread above pure credit risk.
  • Bond tenor: Longer-dated bonds typically have wider spreads as credit uncertainty increases over time.

Credit Spread Categories

Credit Spread (bps) Typical Issuer Risk Level
0–30 bps Singapore government-linked entities, AAA banks Near risk-free
30–100 bps Investment-grade corporates (A/AA rated) Low credit risk
100–250 bps Investment-grade lower tier (BBB rated) Moderate credit risk
250–500 bps High-yield / sub-investment-grade Significant credit risk
>500 bps Distressed bonds High default risk

Singapore Corporate Bond Market

Singapore’s corporate bond market is anchored by SGX-listed bonds and MAS-supervised SGD bonds. Major issuers include DBS, OCBC, UOB, statutory boards (HDB, LTA), and S-REITs (which issue medium-term notes or perpetual securities). Most retail-accessible Singapore corporate bonds are in SGD 1,000 denominations (SGX bond market) or SGD 250,000 (institutional OTC market).

For REIT investors, S-REIT perpetual securities are a key category — subordinated, non-dated instruments that carry spreads of 200–400 bps due to their subordination and perpetual nature. See our Perpetual Bond Singapore glossary entry for detail. Also use our Bond Yield to Maturity Calculator to compute effective yields for Singapore bonds.

Using Credit Spreads for Investment Decisions

Singapore investors can use credit spread data to: assess whether a corporate bond is fairly priced; monitor spread widening as an early warning of deteriorating credit quality; compare bond investments across sectors; and time bond purchases — buying during stress-driven spread widening can lock in attractive yields. Credit spread data for SGX-listed bonds is available on the SGX bond screener.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a bond credit spread in Singapore?
It is the difference between the yield on a corporate bond and a comparable SGS bond of the same maturity. It represents the extra return investors demand for taking on the issuer’s credit risk above the risk-free government rate.
Why do bond credit spreads widen during a recession?
Default risk rises, investors become more risk-averse, and demand higher compensation for corporate bonds. Corporate bond prices fall (yields rise) while SGS bonds rally (yields fall), widening the spread.
What is a typical credit spread for Singapore investment-grade corporate bonds?
Investment-grade Singapore corporate bonds (BBB- and above) typically trade at 50–250 basis points above equivalent-tenor SGS bonds, depending on sector, credit rating, and market conditions.
Where can I find Singapore corporate bond credit spread data?
The SGX bond screener provides yield data for SGX-listed bonds. MAS publishes SGS yields at mas.gov.sg. For institutional-grade spread data, Bloomberg and Reuters are the standard sources.
Are Singapore Savings Bonds (SSBs) affected by credit spreads?
No. SSBs are issued by the Singapore government and carry no credit risk — backed by the full faith and credit of Singapore. SSB yields are directly linked to SGS benchmark rates with no credit spread component.