Finance & economics | Floating and sinking

Corporate America faces a trillion-dollar debt reckoning

With interest rates set to stay higher for longer, who will bear the brunt?

An illustration of a businessman ascending above the ground, suspended by a cluster of balloons shaped like a dollar signs.
Image: Vincent Kilbride

Big American companies are living in a debt dreamland. Although cheap borrowing has fuelled the growth of corporate profits for decades, the biggest firms have been largely insulated from the effects of the Federal Reserve’s recent bout of monetary tightening. That is because many of them borrowed plentifully at low, fixed interest rates during the covid-19 pandemic. The tab must be settled eventually by refinancing debt at a much higher rate of interest. For now, though, the so-called maturity wall of debt falling due looks scalable.

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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Painful for longer”

From the October 14th 2023 edition

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