Interestingly, the relationship between equity and bond markets differs in deflation-risk periods and inflation-risk periods. In inflation-risk periods, rising inflation rates push up long-term interest rates, reflecting the fear that aggressive monetary tightening will depress future earnings and hence stock prices. Thus, in periods of rising inflation risk, government bond prices and stock prices tend to fall. In deflation-risk periods government bond prices and stock prices usually go in opposite directions, because fixed income markets benefit from the expectation of falling interest rates, while equities suffer from the worsening profit outlook and increasing default risk. Credit spreads tend to benefit from rising inflation because it becomes easier for companies to pay down their debt.

Deflationary periods usually lead to a spread widening across the whole credit market, hitting consumer-related industries the hardest. However, long-term interest rates seem to have a minor influence on fluctuations of credit spreads in the short term. Companies that borrow at a fixed rate are immune to changes in yields and spreads over the life of the borrowing. Yet, there is a refinancing risk, when debt has to be rolled over. Conversely, when companies borrow at floating rates, they are directly affected by changes in money market rates, which are primarily driven by monetary policy.