Tag Archives: Corporate bonds

Central Bankers are Driving Us All Into the Dirt, by Harry Dent

SLL is not the only one saying the US is in a recession. From Harry Dent at wolfstreet.com:

The Great Unwind has started.

One of the major triggers I’ve been warning about is already happening, even before we understand and/or admit that we are in a recession.

Global corporate debt now sits at a record $51 trillion and is poised to hit $75 trillion by 2020 – just four years away. If interest rates rise and the economy slows, it will be very hard for companies to roll these bonds over – and then we get what S&P Global Ratings is calling “Crexit.”

The bond markets dry up for corporate lending, especially higher-yield junk bonds. This would set off a chain of corporate defaults and bankruptcies that would cause central banks to start to lose control of the economy, as they did in 2008 forward.

The simplest depiction of where we’re at comes from the chart below:

At the worst of the recession in 2009, we saw around 180 total corporate bond or loan defaults. As of the first half of 2016 alone, we just hit 100. That means 200+ by year-end… and we’re just at the beginning of the next financial crisis. Note that most of the 2009 defaults were in the U.S., as is the case again due to the energy “frackers.” But Europe has a bigger flurry coming this time.

The next chart shows how that crisis is likely to progress:

We’re now nearing 5% default rates, as opposed to heights of 16% in 2009. Hence, we have a long way to go here – 300%+ or more, and I fully expect the next crisis to be much deeper than 2008/2009. After hitting $154 billion this year, we will see $100’s of billions of additional defaults in the years ahead.

S&P Global ratings consider a credit market correction inevitable; it’s just a matter of when.

So, how did this occur? It’s another product and cost of ZIRP and QE policies that appear to create something for nothing. Corporations lever up at such low rates and use that money to buy back stock and engineer mergers and acquisitions – all just re-arranging the pie, not growing it.

The entire fracking industry was a hugely bad investment in technologies that were not lower-cost, but higher. Only QE that pumped oil prices back up temporarily, and super-low-cost junk bond financing, made this industry viable. But no longer, with oil at sub $50 for years now… and many more to come, by my estimates.

When the economy slows and/or interest rates rise to reflect default risks, then we get a negative spiral of more and more defaults. As I predicted, the (ex) frackers are leading this first round of defaults and we’ll see much more to come.

Bondholders and stockholders will lose, employees will lose, companies will disappear and we’ll face a deeper recession from not facing the last debt bubble… that’s the cost: you pathetic, douchebag, academic central bankers!

And don’t even ask about pension funds’ and municipalities’ growing unfunded liabilities, with such low returns on their investments since 2008 and QE. To deal with unfunded pensions, some Chicago homeowners are seeing property tax increases of up to 300%… Holy crap Batman!

To continue reading: Central Bankers are Driving Us All Into the Dirt

Last Two Times this Happened, it was Mayhem, by Wolf Richter

Today’s theme: The global economy is going to hell in a handbasket. This week’s stock market action made October’s glorious rally a distant memory (see “Crisis Progress Report (13): Time for the Crash,” SLL, 11/8/15). It may be awhile before we see a substantial rally, and rom much lower levels. It’s been like a light switch going on (or, more aptly, off). Nothwithstanding oodles of central bank fiat debt creation, interest rate suppression, and financial asset purchases, the real world, tangible economy is deteriorating alarmingly. From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

Moody’s Warns about Credit Crunch, Unnerves with Parallels to 2008!

The US bond market has swollen to $40 trillion. Over $8 trillion are corporate bonds, up a mind-boggling 50% from when the Fed unleashed its zero-interest-rate policy and QE seven years ago.

So far this year, $1.34 trillion in new corporate bonds have been issued, up 6.8% from last year at this time, which had already been a record year, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA). Bond issuance in 2012, 2013, and 2014 set ever crazier records; 2015 is on track to set an even crazier one: close to $1.5 trillion.

That’s a lot of newly borrowed moolah. Much of it is being used to pay for dividends, stock buybacks, M&A, and other worthy financial engineering projects designed to inflate stock prices, though that strategy has turned into a sorry dud this year.

Junk bonds now make up $1.8 trillion of this pile of corporate debt, nearly double the $944 billion in junk bonds outstanding at the end of 2008 before the Fed saved the economy, so to speak.

But what happens when this flood of cheaply borrowed money begins to dry up as an ever larger percentage of that $1.8 trillion in junk bonds begins to default, while ever more high-grade bonds get downgraded to junk?

That’s the end of the credit cycle – and the beginning of financial nightmares. It’s the phase the bond market has already entered, according to a report by John Lonski, Chief Economist at Moody’s Capital Markets Research.

One metric that marks turning points in the credit cycle is the credit upgrade ratio. In Q2 this year, the ratio of ratings upgrades to total ratings revisions for junk bonds was still 49%. By Q3, this upgrade ratio had fallen to 39%, the worst level since Q2 2009 when it was 30%. Halfway into Q4, there have been 18 upgrades and 57 downgrades, a ratio of 24%, the worst since Q1 2009.

Among investment-grade bonds, the ratio is even more terrible: 1 upgrade and 11 downgrades. “A convincing negative trend may be emerging,” the report said gingerly.

To continue reading: Last Two Time this Happened, it was Mayhem

Neither a Borrower Nor a Lender Be, by Robert Gore

In a debt deflation, you do not want to be in debt. Income and liquidity with which to service your debt shrinks. Deflation increases the real burden of repayment, the opposite of inflation, which devalues the means of repayment and thus works in favor of the debtor.

You do not want to be a creditor, either. There are two risk components of interest rates: rate risk, the risk that rates in general rise, and credit risk, the risk that the borrower does not repay. While interest rates for the most creditworthy borrowers may stay low, for any borrowers for which there is even a hint of doubt about ability to repay, the risk premium over perceived riskless debt rates widens and the interest rate skyrockets. Widening risk premiums and skyrocketing interest rates adversely affect the price of the underlying debt, inflicting losses on creditors. If the borrower defaults, the loss can be the entire investment.

Risk premiums have already widened significantly on the debt of natural resources companies and for emerging market governments and companies. They are nowhere near the levels reached in the last financial crisis, so it is not too late to sell, because they will probably attain and surpass those levels.

Turning to other debt, there is no better candidate for sale than municipal bonds. Such debt is an investor favorite because most municipal interest is either tax-advantaged or tax free. Historically, default rates on municipals have been low. However, if the stock market knows what it is talking about and the economy is heading into a recession or worse, state and local governments’ income, property, and sales tax collections will be reduced, just as they were during the last crisis. The demand for services, particularly the social safety net and policing—crime increases during economic downturns—will increase. Revenues down and spending up means that the ability of governments to pay their debts deteriorates.

There’s another consideration. A significant portion of governments’ pension and medical liabilities are unfunded. Estimates of the aggregate state and local shortfall range from $1 to $4 trillion. With a shrinking economy, governments will have less money to either make current payments into pension and medical funds or make up for past shortfalls. Not only that, but those funds’ investment returns are plummeting. Low interest rates have been a problem, but now they must contend with falling equity markets, too. Diminishing revenues, increased demand for government services, huge unfunded liabilities which are only going to get bigger—selling municipal bonds is as close to a no-brainer investment decision as the financial markets are ever going to hand you.

The case for selling corporate bonds is almost as compelling. There are a few triple A, gold-plated corporate credits that can probably survive anything short of the destruction of the planet. They will be in such demand that the interest they pay will be minimal. The vast majority of corporations will be operating in a shrinking economy, and that means shrinking revenues, profits, and ability to service their debt.

The dirty secret of the latest bull market is the games companies have been playing with their own stock. Stock bulls constantly point to cash on corporate balance sheets and rising earnings per share as reasons to buy. What they don’t point out is that many corporations, in the name of “shareholder friendliness” have either been spending the bulk of their profits, or all of their profits and going into debt, to buy their own shares and pay dividends. That balance sheet cash is borrowed and the rising earnings per share are because the share count, the denominator in earnings per share, has shrunk. In many cases gross revenues and total profits have been stagnant or declining.

The low interest currently being paid on most investment-grade (BBB or better) municipal and corporate bonds offers little compensation for their rising credit risk, making the decision to sell that much easier. While the credit rating agencies have their gradations for the creditworthiness of various bonds, the market often applies a simpler test: is a bond going to pay or not? If it decides payment is in doubt, the market quickly and substantially marks down the price of the questionable bond, leaving holders no way out without hitting fire sale bids and sustaining painful losses.

This analysis applies to municipal and corporate bonds only. The day will come when markets question the creditworthiness of US government bonds and debt securities with US government guarantees (they certainly should), but we’re not there yet. For the time being, the US government’s debt and guarantees are regarded as the benchmark of creditworthiness and that will probably continue for a while. We will know things are changing when interest rates on government debt show a sustained increased in the face of economic contraction and deflation.

During the last financial crisis and recession, many municipal and corporate bonds were subject to precipitous drops. Even as the crisis unfolded, most investors found it inconceivable that stalwart industrial and financial companies would go bankrupt or require government rescues, but they did. This time the window for selling corporate and municipal bonds is still open, but once the herd realizes that financial turmoil and economic contraction will impair the ability to pay across broad swaths of the bond market, it will snap shut.

THE ROOT CAUSES OF TODAY’S FINANCIAL TURMOIL IN A FASCINATING HISTORICAL FAMILY SAGA

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AMAZON

KINDLE

NOOK

A “Crush” of Bond Sales Before the Market Goes to Heck, by Wolf Richter

Corporations are funneling as much debt as they can into the market. We know what direction they’re leaning on interest rates. From Wolf Richter, at wolfstreet.com:

The scenario that corporations have been feverishly preparing for over the past few years took another step forward on Friday with the release of “robust” jobs data.

It triggered a sell-off in US stocks. Treasuries plunged, and yields jumped, with the 10-year yield reaching 2.24%, up 13 basis points for the day, and up 60 basis points from the low at the beginning of February.

That the US economy gained 295,000 jobs in February on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, blew past economists’ expectations. As these kinds of reports pile up, they’ll nudge the Fed to begin raising interest rates by mid-year. The Fed already abandoned QE though Wall Street had hyped the last round as “QE Infinity.” The zero-interest-rate policy would be next; that’s what the ultimate insiders, the decision makers in corporate America, are preparing for. For them, it means the free money, or nearly free money, is going to get more expensive.

They weren’t surprised by the jobs report, unlike the markets. They expected a blowout that would confirm their suspicions that the Fed would begin raising rates in a few months. They’ve been preparing for it by creating the maximum hype about the persistence of ludicrously low yields while simultaneously selling the maximum amount in debt to Fed-blinded investors before it all blows up.

http://wolfstreet.com/2015/03/08/heres-what-corporate-america-screams-about-bonds-sell/

To continue reading: A “Crush” of Bond Sales