Corporate America's undertakers prepare for feast after
lean years
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[March 14, 2018]
By Jessica DiNapoli
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As the era of cheap
money gradually draws to a close and rising inflation and interest rates
cast a shadow over Wall Street's nine-year bull market, one corner of
the financial industry is cheering.
Debt restructuring experts are gearing up for a pickup in business,
expecting more debt defaults and more financial stress in general ahead,
an ominous sign for investors already rattled by last month's stock
market sell-off.
Restructuring advisors at several firms told Reuters they were more
optimistic now than at any time since the 2008 financial crisis, and
have started preparing for a wave of debt overhauls that could begin in
earnest as early as 2019 and last for years.
"We are recruiting heavily, junior people, MBAs, operational people...
We are seeing significant growth and significant hiring," said Lisa
Donahue, global leader of the turnaround and restructuring practice at
consulting firm AlixPartners LLP.
That confidence reflects the view that rising interest rates will make
it harder for struggling companies to borrow more or roll over their
debt, as the era of abundant cheap credit fueled by the Federal
Reserve's zero-rate policy and its asset buying draws to a close.
Restructuring professionals also point to outflows from the junk bond
market, a key funding source for less creditworthy borrowers, and
creeping inflation, which slowly results in an across-the-board rise in
costs for companies. U.S. President Donald Trump's trade tariffs
announced earlier this month could exacerbate these inflationary fears.
At one of the corporate restructuring industry's biggest annual
gatherings last month in Las Vegas, many participants spoke of reaching
a turning point after several lean years.
"I think it's starting to turn," Michael Goodman, managing director at
investment bank SSG Capital Advisors LLC, told Reuters after the
conference of the Turnaround Management Association and the Commercial
Finance Association.
"In the last five years, if companies had a credit issue, they solved
the problem with new debt. They won't be able to do that anymore, and
the outcomes are debt restructurings and (distressed) sales," he said.
This optimism stands in stark contrast with the apprehension in other
parts of Wall Street. Investment bankers advising companies on mergers
and acquisitions have been cheering on the buoyant markets as good for
their business. For restructuring specialists, however, the years of
cheap credit were the lean times.
As companies took advantage of record-low borrowing costs to refinance
hundreds of billions of dollars in junk-rated corporate debt in the last
six years, the number of announced debt restructuring deals nearly
halved to 144 deals last year from 282 in 2009, according to Thomson
Reuters data.
(Graphic: U.S. restructuring market since the recession. http://tmsnrt.rs/2FjHhMz
)
There is no industry-wide employment data, but membership in
professional associations tumbled. The number of the Turnaround
Management Association members fell 23 percent to 6,190 in 2016 from its
peak in 2009, according to its most recent data.
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The Federal Reserve headquarters in Washington September 16 2015.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
The Association of Insolvency and Restructuring Advisors saw its membership
plunge by 40 percent to 1,403 last year from its high in 2010.
While those numbers have yet to recover, a pickup in enrollment in professional
courses is an early sign that the industry is on the mend.
Tom Morrow, who is executive director of the Association of Insolvency and
Restructuring Advisors, and one of the top providers of training courses for the
industry, said attendance jumped by 28 percent last year to 299 students,
recovering from a post-recession trough.
"Firms are starting to hire again," he said.
STRAIN BEGINS TO SPREAD
The industry made it through the lean times thanks energy sector debt defaults
brought by a 2014 slump in oil prices followed by a wave of retail bankruptcies
caused by the rise in online shopping and Amazon.com Inc's expansion.
Now signs of strain begin to emerge in other sectors. Community hospital
operator Community Health Systems Inc saddled with about $14 billion in debt,
faces significant annual maturities over the next few years, as interest rates
begin to rise. Miner Murray Energy Corp, which weathered a rout in coal prices,
has seen its 2021 bonds dip nearly 20 percent from earlier this year to about 44
cents on the dollar.
In another promising sign for the restructuring business, U.S.-based junk bond
funds have been experiencing net outflows for eight straight weeks, the longest
such streak since 2007. So far this year, outflows have reached $13.73 billion,
up from only $743 million a year ago.
The average yield on junk bonds has risen to 6.2 percent from 5.4 percent in
October 2017, though that is still below the double-digit levels seen in
February 2016 after the energy market rout, according to Bank of America Corp
data.
To be sure, not all ailing companies will be on the hook right away. While some,
such as Claire's Stores Inc, face significant debt maturities in 2019, other
have refinanced their debt pushing payments as far back as 2024 and 2025,
according to Eric Rosenthal, senior director of leveraged finance at Fitch.
However, some already seek help in revamping their businesses to avoid a
full-blown debt crisis later on.
"There is a willingness to say 'hey, we need to get out in front of the curve,
we need to make sure we are not the example in our industry that doesn't make
it,'" said Brian Fox, a managing director at consulting firm Alvarez & Marsal
Holdings LLC, which serves as operational consultants.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and
Tomasz Janowski)
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