z-spread term structure

I was looking at the z-spread term structure for past 50 years on Bloomberg. For investment grade bonds, rated A or higher, the z-spread increases as the time to maturity increases (as expected). However, for lower grade bonds (B or lower), the z-spread actually decreases with increasing time to maturity. Why does this happen? With time to maturity increasing, the z-spread (premium on top of risk free rate) should always increase, isn't it? Could you please clarify?

thanks,

Sam
 
Quote from saminny:

I was looking at the z-spread term structure for past 50 years on Bloomberg. For investment grade bonds, rated A or higher, the z-spread increases as the time to maturity increases (as expected). However, for lower grade bonds (B or lower), the z-spread actually decreases with increasing time to maturity. Why does this happen? With time to maturity increasing, the z-spread (premium on top of risk free rate) should always increase, isn't it? Could you please clarify?

thanks,

Sam

Increased spec. grade tenor means a person is marrying, as opposed to dating, a piece of garbage. A less-than-credit-worthy firm is more likely to default over a 10 year timeframe than a 1 year timeframe.
 
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