(Bloomberg News) Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world's biggest mutual fund, is prepared to cut its holdings of emerging-market corporate debt next year on concern a flood of new sales and further economic slowdown in China will put an end to a 12-month rally in the securities.

The plunge in yields to a record 4.73 percent since the Federal Reserve unveiled a third round of asset purchases known as quantitative easing in September means some corporate bond prices don't accurately reflect the chances of further economic deterioration in Asia or Europe, said Brigitte Posch, who helps manage about $92 billion in emerging-market corporate bonds for Newport Beach, California-based Pimco.

"The rally will probably continue until the end of the year, but the market is starting to get weaker," Posch said in an interview in Rio de Janeiro on Oct. 22. "At the beginning of next year, depending where the credit spreads are, I will probably be increasing my underweights. If we have two more months of this type of rally, I'd rather be more defensive."

The average yield on emerging-market corporate bonds fell 155 basis points, or 1.55 percentage point, this year to a record low on Oct. 19, according to the JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEMBI gauge. The average yield for U.S. investment-grade debt declined 96 basis points in that period to 2.73 percent, according to data compiled by Bank of America.

An underweight allocation means owning less of a security or sector than is usually held in a benchmark portfolio.

Slower Growth

Developing-nation companies and sovereigns sold $287.1 billion of dollar bonds this year, a 59 percent jump from the same period last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. OAO Sberbank sold a record $2 billion of bonds last week in the biggest debt offering by a Russian company since 2009.

Colombian banks have sold $3.55 billion of bonds this year, putting the tally above the total for the prior 13 years.

"It's getting harder for the market to digest the volume," Posch said during the interview.

Several smaller emerging companies that took advantage of investors' demand to sell bonds may find it harder to repay debts, Posch said, without citing examples. Mining and metals companies will be affected by slower growth in China, the world's biggest consumer of copper and iron ore, she said.

China's gross domestic product will expand 7.7 percent this year, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, the slowest pace since 1999.

"Investors didn't have enough time to understand the credit, decisions are taken very quickly and those companies may have problems in refinancing or repaying debts if the market shuts," Posch said. Investors who buy bonds of new companies without appropriate due diligence will "end up in tears," she said.

Pimco, which oversaw $1.82 trillion of assets as of June 30, is a unit of insurer Allianz SE. The firm, known for its bond funds run by Bill Gross, began expanding into other asset classes including stocks more than two years ago and in April announced plans to open its first Latin American office in Rio de Janeiro.