Loose money era leaves trail of U.S. corporate debt
junkies
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[February 05, 2019]
By Jessica DiNapoli, Kate Duguid and Joshua Franklin
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Many U.S. companies
that gorged on cheap debt with forgiving terms over the last decade now
find themselves shackled by it, spending much of their earnings paying
off lenders rather than investing in their businesses or hiring.
As small firms, which together account for half of U.S. employment,
begin to feel the squeeze, this could have a chilling effect on hiring,
wages and consumption, adding to headwinds from wobbly financial markets
and ebbing global growth, economists and corporate finance professionals
say.
The number of companies struggling with their debt obligations is
hovering near record highs. Some 17 percent of publicly-traded U.S.
companies had trouble making debt interest payments at the end of last
year, up from less than 10 percent in 2010 and off from a high of over
20 percent in 2016, according to the Institute of International Finance
Inc, a trade group for financial institutions.
In value terms, such firms account for a fraction of companies the IIF
monitors. But they exemplify the struggles of a bigger universe of
private firms which have loaded up on so-called leveraged debt,
typically variable-rate loans offered on generous terms by banks and
non-bank lenders.
With Federal Reserve rate increases pushing up interest expenses and the
U.S. economy facing a slowdown as it nears a cyclical downturn, more and
more of those borrowers may scramble just to stay afloat.
"It could reduce capital expenditures, capital deployment and lock up
the economy, because companies could be so focused on making debt
payments that they may not be hiring," said Christopher Zook, chief
investment officer of family office CAZ Investments LLC.
Take CPI Card Group Inc, which makes credit and debit cards for banks
and retailers. The card maker was among firms that tapped the leveraged
loan market, when it borrowed $435 million for general purposes before
it went public in 2015.
CPI repaid some of the loan with proceeds from its public offering, but
as its profits have deteriorated, the company has nearly lost its
ability to service the remaining debt. Its earnings for 2018 roughly
matched its debt expenses, according to Moody's Investors Service, down
from nearly five times the size in 2014.
The company cut its headcount by 13 percent between 2015 and 2017 to
1,200 workers. Last year, it shut a plant in Littleton, Colorado, where
it is headquartered, according to the state's Department of Labor and
Employment.
As Americans complete the shift to chip-enabled credit cards, CPI
forecasts revenue will rise in 2019. But the forces that have held it
back will persist: the credit card maker is losing market share to
competitors, and high inventories help big banks keep prices low, says
Stephen Morrison, analyst at Moody's. CPI Card declined to comment.
EASY CREDIT
Investors' hunt for higher returns in an era of record-low interest
rates has given debt-laden companies access to cheap, easy credit,
encouraging them to take on more debt than would be possible in less
forgiving conditions.
As a result, the median debt levels of non-financial companies relative
to their earnings already exceed levels before the last financial
crisis, according to Standard & Poor's rating agency. (Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2RrYs4M)
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A NYPD officer stands guard at the entrance of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York in the Manhattan borough of New York, U.S.,
December 16, 2017. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
While U.S. policymakers assure that credit conditions remain broadly healthy,
the volume of leveraged loans, which are rated as junk or near junk, has doubled
to a record $1.4 trillion over the last five years.
"The leveraged loan market can be considered a canary in the coal mine for the
U.S. economy," said Jeremy Swan, managing principal for financial sponsors at
accounting firm CohnReznick LLP.
Drug store chain Rite Aid Corp is another example of how initial relief offered
by such loans turned, over time, into a burden. The Pennsylvania-based company
borrowed over $1 billion on loose terms in 2013 to refinance old debt, according
to Refinitiv data.
Credit ratings agencies welcomed the financing at the time because it would help
the chain, though still heavily indebted and facing uneven sales, lower its
interest costs.
Yet the debt burden proved too much in the years to come.
"They couldn't grow because they had so much debt," said Mickey Chadha, a senior
credit officer at Moody's Investors Service. "They didn't have the cash flow and
the capital to invest in their stores."
Last year, the retailer, after two failed attempts to sell itself, sold about
1,900 stores to competitor Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc to reduce its leverage
at a time when the rise of e-commerce has challenged its business.
The number of associates Rite Aid employed slowly declined to 87,000 from 89,000
as it worked toward paying off the debt, according to the company's annual
reports. Its store count fell to 4,536 from 4,623.
After the sale to Walgreens Boot Alliance, Rite Aid had 2,550 stores and 59,000
employees. Its shares are trading below $1, though it recently announced plans
for a reverse stock split.
"Rite Aid has made significant progress in reducing the company's debt and
simplifying and strengthening its capital structure over the last several
years," the retailer said in a statement.
The company said it recently refinanced, pushing out maturities until 2023 and
winning improved interest rates. It also has about $1.9 billion in liquidity,
"providing strong flexibility to operate and invest in (its) business."
Economists say generous lending terms allow highly leveraged companies that
otherwise might be pushed into bankruptcy to carry on, but the firms' pullback
from investment and hiring can exacerbate an anticipated slowdown and hurt
thinly-capitalized non-bank lenders.
"It's a fault line in the ecosystem that threatens the broader economy," said
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. "I don't know if we should
send off the red flares, but [definitely] the yellow flares."
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli, Kate Duguid and Joshua Franklin in New York;
Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Tomasz Janowski)
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