Showing posts with label Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2009

ripfest tighter in bond land, and in many instances, in loans as well

TO BE NOTED: From Zero Hedge:

"Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value: Week Of May 7

Heat seeking in both bonds and loans was the dominant theme, with the usual suspects continuing to rip. Comparing current levels on garbage credits like Neiman Marcus, Sealy and TRW with their spreads 3 months ago and one can only question the sanity of even the credit market. Unlike last week when there were just three Fox Two instances, targeted at Huntsman, Graham Packaging and Neiman Marcus, this past week's IR-signature tracking selection is broader and even junkier.

"Solid" names like Compucom, Huntsman, Neiman Marcus, Sealy and TRW continued their ripfest tighter in bond land, and in many instances, in loans as well, while Aeroflex loans where the best relative secured performer. The only bonds widening in the entire 30 name universe were those of Michael Foods, and Constellation Brands - obviously consumer staples have every right to be seen as the riskiest last week when the rolling squeeze among garbage credits was doing all it could to flatter the equity markets.



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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Some massive tightening in the universe of 30 tracked names with both major loan and bond moves

TO BE NOTED: From Zero Hedge:

"Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value: Week Of April 16

Some massive tightening in the universe of 30 tracked names with both major loan and bond moves. The average loan spread tightened by 100 bps to 700 bps while bonds tightened by almost 200 bps to 1,381 bps from two weeks ago. Taking a cue from the equity markets, the most horrendous HY names saw the biggest tightening with Neiman Marcus and Sealy Mattress bonds both collapsing by over 800 bps. Curiously Sealy's loan only tightened by 20 bps, implying a long loan, short bond trade could be a good continuation trade here. The inverse is true with Cenveo, which saw its loans tighten by over 400 bps, while the bonds tightened a mere 207 bps (with TRS being a little tough to find these days, a one side bond long may be the most feasible trade).





source: Reuters/LPC Loanconnector"