US and Euro HY Default Rates: July 2025

Winnie Cisar - Global Head of Strategy, CreditSights
Logan Miller - Head of European Strategy, CreditSights
Luke Jensen - Analyst, Quantitative Strategy, CreditSights

13 August 2025

Download the Full Report to Gain:

Insights into July 2025 US and Euro High Yield Default Rate Trends, Sector Shifts, and Distress Signals, including:

  • Comparative Trends in US and Euro HY Default Rates: Examine the latest issuer-weighted and debt-weighted default rates for both markets, with a focus on July’s notable declines and narrowing regional gaps.
  • Sector-Level Shifts in High Yield Defaults: Discover which sectors, including Leisure, Media, and Transportation, drove changes in default rates and distress ratios this month.
  • Key Drivers of HY Market Distress Ratios: Understand the factors behind recent movements in distress ratios, and see how single-issuer changes are impacting sector-level results.
  • Special Situations and Bankruptcy Headlines: Learn about recent Chapter 11 filings, distressed exchanges, and other notable events shaping the US and Euro HY landscape.
  • Forward-Looking Risk and Market Implications: Get insights into defaults on the horizon and what these trends mean for investors and risk managers navigating the high yield space.

Executive Summary

  • The US HY issuer-weighted LTM default rate fell 11 bp to 2.8% in July; the debt-weighted default rate fell 16 bp to 3.1%.
  • The Euro HY issuer-weighted LTM default rate fell 60 bp to 2.0%, while the debt-weighted default rate dropped by twice that amount, falling 120 bp to 2.6%.

  • At the US sector level, Leisure had the only notable change, with its rates falling to 0.0% from 2.1% issuer-weighted and 2.4% debt-weighted in June. Media and Transportation saw rate increases driven by decreased issuer counts and face values, with no new defaults in either sector.
  • The US HY distress ratio was 6.8% as of August 12, down 29 bp from last month’s update and continuing the decline from its April month-end peak of 10.0%. Media remained the highest sector at 27.9%, with all sector-level shifts driven by single-issuer changes in distressed counts.
  • The Euro HY distress ratio rose 17 bp to 6.7%, reversing its downward trend from the April peak of 8.5% and narrowing the US-Euro gap to 11 bps from 57 bp. Similar to US HY, Media maintained the highest distress ratio (16.7%) and all sector-level shifts were single-issuer changes in distressed count.

US & Euro HY Default Rates

The charts below show the issuer-weighted and debt-weighted LTM default rates across the ICE BofA US and Euro HY indices.

The US HY issuer-weighted LTM default rate decreased to 2.8% in July from 3.0% in June. he debt-weighted default rate had a similar decline, falling to 3.1% from 3.3%. There were no new defaulters in July—the only change was AMC’s (AMC) July 2024 distressed exchange aging out of the LTM default cohort. There is a default on the horizon for next month’s update, as Innovate (VATE) executed an exchange of 2026 senior secured notes (US Special Situations: Innovate completes refi transactions, extends debt maturities).

 

 

Fill out the below form to view the full article:

Please note that we can only respond to valid business email addresses and the interview is already available to clients.

Stay in the loop with the latest credit insights direct to your inbox