April 27, 2024

Off the Charts: Junk Bonds Gain Popularity Even as Yield Falls

During the first quarter of this year, a record $133 billion of such bonds were sold around the world. While sales in the United States fell a little short of the record set in the third quarter of last year, that was more than made up for by rising sales in Europe and Asia.

At the same time, the yield on such bonds has fallen to the lowest level on record. The Bank of America Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield index yielded 5.7 percent at the end of the quarter, as can be seen in the accompanying graph. That was down from 6.1 percent at the end of the year, and from 8.3 percent at the end of 2011. Junk bonds are those rated below investment grade by the bond rating agencies, and their current popularity reflects the search for yield by many investors, whose alternatives include savings accounts that pay almost nothing.

To some, that is cause for concern. In a speech to the Economic Club of New York last week, William C. Dudley, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, pointed to “potential excesses in certain corners of the financial markets,” saying the high-yield market and the related leveraged loan market “do seem somewhat frothy.”

He added, however, that even if those markets were to incur major setbacks, the overall economy might not be badly affected. “The size of the asset classes in question is relatively modest, and most of the investors in these assets are not highly leveraged,” he said. “So if asset valuations were to adjust sharply and some investors experienced painful losses, I do not expect that such a shock would threaten financial stability.”

Since the last century, high-yield bonds have generally done better than stocks in good markets, and better than stocks in bad markets as well. In 2008, the Merrill Lynch high-yield index fell 26 percent, while the total return of the Standard Poor’s 500 stock index was a negative 37 percent. And when recovery came, the bonds rose more. In 2009, the bond index leapt more than 57 percent, well over the return of more than 26 percent on an investment in stocks. But that advantage has disappeared this year. In the first quarter, the bond index returned 2.9 percent — including capital gains from rising prices and the interest received on the bonds. But the S. P. 500, including reinvested dividends, rose 10.6 percent.

Martin Fridson, the chief executive of FridsonVision, a research firm, notes that the spread between Treasuries and junk bonds has fallen for three consecutive quarters. He says it is unlikely that will continue, and forecasts that spreads will widen in the current quarter. If so, investors in high-yield bonds could lose money as prices decline.

The perceived frothiness of the high-yield market would seem to be illustrated by the relatively low difference — or spread — between the yields on junk bonds and on United States Treasuries. At the end of the first quarter, it was 4.86 percentage points, well below the historical average.

Moreover, the yield on Merrill Lynch’s index of lowest-quality junk bonds — those rated CCC plus or lower by Standard Poor’s — is 9.3 percent, only a few basis points higher than the record low set in spring 2007, as credit markets were about to fall. But Treasury rates were much higher then, so the level of speculation would seem to be much lower.

Mr. Fridson also noted that nearly a third of the companies that issued high-yield bonds for the first time in 2012 were among the lowest-quality borrowers. “When high-yield managers are under pressure to invest large cash inflows, as they were last year, and when high-yield issuers feel no particular pressure to borrow, the financing window may open to lower-quality credits that would be excluded under other circumstances,” he wrote in a commentary published by Standard Poor’s Leveraged Commentary and Data.

Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy at nytimes.com/economix.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/06/business/economy/junk-bonds-gain-popularity-even-as-yield-falls.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

U.S. Shares Waver After Drops in Asia and Europe

On Friday, after steep declines in Asia and Europe, the trend carried over to Wall Street, where stocks opened with further losses. But as the trading session wore on, the markets found some footing, wavering between gains and losses but avoiding the extremes often seen in recent weeks.

Analysts were quick to point out that on a day before a summer weekend low volumes could unfold into a bumpy and unpredictable trading session.

“I think it is this wrestling match between the fear and paranoia that drove the market yesterday, and people realizing stocks are really cheap here and bargain hunting,” Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners, said.

With deep concerns about the euro zone and global economic growth overshadowing the financial markets, it is not at all clear whether any gains will stick throughout the trading session.

“There are definitely solid arguments on both sides,” Mr. Landesman said. “We could have two or three directional swings by the end of the day.”At noon, the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index, which lost 4.5 percent on Thursday, was about even for the day. The Dow Jones industrial average was down 20 points, or 0.2 percent.

Europe’s major stock indexes ended the day lower. The Euro Stoxx 50 index was off 2.1 percent. The FTSE 100 in London was down 1 percent and the CAC 40 in Paris was down nearly 2 percent. Banks were among the biggest losers once again.

Asia, which had missed the worst of the selling Thursday, suffered painful losses on Friday. The Nikkei 225 index in Japan closed down 2.5 percent, and the key market indices in Singapore and Hong Kong closed down more than 3 percent.

The losses reflected an accumulation of bad news, including feeble economic data in the United States and Europe and signs that some banks were having trouble borrowing on the interbank market. Tension on money markets, which some analysts said was overblown, awoke unpleasant memories of the seizure in interbank lending that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

“It is specifically risk on, risk off,” said George Rusnak, national director of fixed income for Wells Fargo. “Everybody is taking risk off the table.”

“This is probably going to be a trend over the next several weeks,” he said. “There is not a lot of robust trading going on right now.”

Mr. Rusnak and other analysts again noted that concerns have mounted related to the banking sector, especially with respect to the exposure of American banks to European counterparts.

“Really what it boils down to is ripple effects,” Mr. Rusnak said.

One drag on the American markets on Friday was Hewlett-Packard, which is considering plans to spin off the company’s personal computer business into a separate company and spending $10 billion on Autonomy, a business software maker. It fell more than 20 percent, as the most actively traded share at midday on the technology index, dragging it down nearly 1 percent.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury bond yields crept up to 2.08 percent, compared with 2.06 percent late Thursday, when it touched record lows below 2 percent during the day.

Robert S. Tipp, a managing director and chief investment strategist for Prudential Fixed Income, said global growth concerns and those related to euro zone fiscal health and recent bailouts were undercurrents in the markets.

“Clearly the markets remain on edge not only about the U.S. growth outlook but with the continued tensions among the various parties to the Greek deal,” he said, referring to the recent rescue package for Greece. “The growth outlook being hurt in Europe, and the ongoing sluggish data we have seen in the United States is the underlying issue the stock market is trying to grapple with.”

He said the crisis of confidence was evident as investors parked money in cash and into short-term fixed-income assets.

“Investors are concerned about being able to get, as they say, return of principal, not return on principal,” he added.

Julia Werdigier, Bettina Wassener and Hiroko Tabuchi contributed reporting.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/20/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss