Showing posts with label High-Yield Bonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label High-Yield Bonds. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

even though such risks are much reduced following government interventions at banks

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

"
High-yield bonds feel thaw

By Aline van Duyn and Nicole Bullock

Published: April 27 2009 19:24 | Last updated: April 27 2009 19:24

The US high-yield market is finally starting to show signs of thawing.

Even as default rates soars to historic highs, investors have increased the amount of money invested in the market for risky corporate bonds, and yields in the high-yield or junk bond market have fallen sharply. It is a further sign of improving sentiment in credit markets and follows an earlier surge in issuance in the investment grade market.

Investments most easily tracked are those by mutual fund investors. Since December 2008 more than $8bn has been invested in the high-yield market by US retail investors, according to Goldman Sachs research.

Goldman Sachs analysts said: “On the one hand, the high yield cash market has outperformed to such a degree that it is one of the few asset classes to post a positive return year-to-date.

“On the other hand, the default rate has surged to an annualised rate of 14 per cent year-to-date, and March was among the worst months for default in the past 20 years. What gives?”

Analysts and investors say that, in spite of the overall reductions in yields in the junk bond market to levels last seen since October, there remain clear differences in the availability of credit. Specifically, the riskiest companies – those with ratings in the triple C range – continue to have trouble raising new money or completing debt exchanges.

Greg Hopper, portfolio manager at Artio Global Investors says: “The high-yield market was very cheaply priced at the end of last year, even if one assumed that we were going to have an Armageddon-like default rate.

“A lot of investors recognised that through the first few months of the year.”

Initially investors targeted beaten down bonds in the secondary market, but over the last month, there has been enough liquidity for bankers to start testing the appetite for new issuance, albeit for the strongest companies. HCA and Crown Castle have both sold more than $1bn in new debt.

Mr Hopper says: “Where there had been concern about companies being able to refinance, that concern is starting to fall away, beginning with the best quality companies.”

But investors should beware of buying junk indiscriminately, especially since the market has rallied. Like many other credit markets, high-yield is a picker’s market now. Martin Fridson, head of Fridson Investment Advisors, says many institutions have been wary of plunging into the high-yield market, even as retail investors have been buying into it, because of the risks that the rally might run out of steam.

Specifically, he says investors are still concerned about the potential for a renewed crisis among financial institutions, even though such risks are much reduced following government interventions at banks.

He says: “It is possible that the worst is over, but as long as the economy is still not improving, there remains a risk of a severe relapse of the financial system”.

Whether the rally is sustainable remains up for debate given the tightness of lending in general throughout the world and expectations of potentially the highest rate of corporate defaults.

Mr Hopper highlights three concerns: the health of the banking system, the threat that new issuance returns too strongly and floods the market or a disorganised bankruptcy of General Motors, which is the process of trying to restructure $27bn in unsecured junk debt.

He says: “If GM comes through this without having to go through Chapter 11 or if it goes through some sort of more orderly Chapter 11 that would provide further positive impetus to the high-yield market.

“If, on the other hand, the efforts to reorganise the auto industry unravel that could be a risk to the market. But it is more of a risk to the auto sector in particular than the whole high-yield universe.”

Even though issuance of high-yield bonds in April – at $7bn so far – looks set to be the highest since July of last year, credit is not yet available for the riskiest companies. Moreover European high yield markets have seen only one issue since June 2007.

Greg Peters, head of global fixed income research at Morgan Stanley, says: “We caution investors who correlate a thawing high yield new-issue market with the end of this credit crunch, as the financing markets are still fragile for levered corporates.”

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

How rare is this? Well, this hasn't happened over a full year since 1993 when all three were positive.

TO BE NOTED: From EconomPic Data:

"Abnormal Markets...

High yield bonds are outperforming investment grade corporate bonds, which are outperforming equities (year to date 2009).



How rare is this? Well, this hasn't happened over a full year since 1993 when all three were positive.



And the last time high yield had positive returns, while investment grade bonds and equities had negative returns... well I don't have enough data to tell if that's ever happened.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

"Yields on speculative-grade bonds imply a U.S. default rate of 21 percent, higher than the record set during the Great Depression in 1933"

For the second day in a row, I've been sidetracked by a post. I should be working on my first novel, which is a philosophical horror roman. What do I mean by Philosophical Horror? Imagine taking the neurons of Stephen King and Albert Camus, tossing them in a bag, adding a few synapses, and shaking them. There. That's the start of a philosophical horror book.

Now, here's the story on Bloomberg:

"By Bryan Keogh

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Yields on speculative-grade bonds imply a U.S. default rate of 21 percent, higher than the record set during the Great Depression in 1933, according to John Lonski, chief economist at Moody’s Investors Service.

The extra yield investors demand to own U.S. high-yield bonds was 19.19 percentage points on Dec. 1, according to Moody’s. Assuming a 20 percent recovery rate, the spread implies a default rate of 20.9 percent, Lonski said yesterday in a market commentary. That compares with a rate of 11 percent in January 2001, 12.1 percent in June 1991 and 15.4 percent in 1933.

Defaults and bankruptcies are accelerating as financing options for high-yield companies dwindle amid the longest U.S. economic recession in at least 26 years. The U.S. default rate rose to 3.3 percent in October, according to Moody’s, which forecasts the rate to increase to 4.9 percent in December and 11.2 percent by November 2009.

“The default rate is going to start rising quickly, soon enough it’s going to be breaking above 10 percent,” Lonski said in an interview. “Lack of access to financial capital is a very big problem for high-yield bonds.”

Now, to me this is preposterous. It's driven by an irrational aversion and fear of risk, which can cause these kind's of scenario's to come true. Of course, I could be wrong about this, but it doesn't pass my smell test.

What's the smell test? I use my nose as a kind of Bayesian filter and take a good whiff of the probabilities that might arise. I don't believe that we'll have more defaults than the Depression. Next, you'll be telling me that the Sun is more likely to Supernova than Junk bonds not default.

Would I buy these bonds? Um, um, um, sure, why not? I'll take a hundred. Put it on my tab.

"The National Bureau of Economic Research, the panel that dates American business expansion, on Dec. 1 confirmed that the U.S. economy has been in a recession for 12 months, making it the longest since 1982. The economy shrank at a 0.5 percent pace in the third quarter after expanding 2.8 percent in the previous three months. Economists expect a 2.2 percent contraction in gross domestic product for the fourth quarter, the average estimate from a Bloomberg survey.

Three companies have sold $2.7 billion of high-yield bonds this quarter, compared with $30 billion in the same period a year ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Leveraged loans arranged this year total $301 billion, down more than a third from last year, Bloomberg data show.

“There’s a lot of forced selling of high-yield bonds by hedge funds owing to the need to de-lever as well as by mutual funds in response to redemptions,” Lonski said. “You’re looking at a market where the sellers well outnumber the buyers and the reluctance on the part of buyers makes sense if only because a bottom for economic activity is not yet in sight.”

High-yield, high-risk bonds are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s and BBB- by Standard & Poor’s."

Okay. Deleveraging is a problem. But I still think this is overdone.

Now I'll probably have to talk about that Bayesian post that Hsu wrote.