Investors build war chests to buy bonds of distressed
European companies
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[January 24, 2020] By
Abhinav Ramnarayan and Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - Years into a bond market
bull-run, investors are banking on a brighter future for funds that buy
the debt of financially troubled European companies whose bonds are
offering meatier returns because they are more risky.
With European economic growth expected to be subdued in 2020, and
default rates tipped to rise, investors expect an increase in the number
of companies that will struggle to service their debt.
That creates an opportunity: to buy the bonds of a troubled company at a
deeply discounted price, and make big profits if the company manages to
turn itself around and the bond price recovers.
Private equity groups and asset managers are creating so-called special
situation funds to identify suitable targets for these high-risk - and
potentially high-reward - bets.
"We have seen a significant increase in the number of stressed and
distressed European corporates being screened during our team's
discussions," said Mark Brown, co-head of special situations in Europe
at private equity firm KKR.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2020/Jan/24/images/ads/current/state_bank_LDA_charity_010818.png)
"We do think we are late-cycle and, as the fund is focused on deploying
capital in a cyclical downturn, having capital ready to go makes sense,"
he said.
The appeal of distressed debt is enhanced by the fact that a large chunk
of the European bond market is offering yields close to or below zero.
KKR last year started fundraising for a third special situation fund and
is seeking $1.5 billion.
Elsewhere, JP Morgan Asset Management launched its first ever special
situations fund in November, raising just over $1 billion, while private
equity firm CVC raised $1.4 billion for a global special situations fund
in June.
PIMCO is also fundraising for a special situations fund, said a person
familiar with the matter.
Bond prices show markets beginning to price in increased concern that
the most troubled European companies will struggle to fund their debt
obligations, providing an opportunity for those who specialize in
dealing with such situations.
The ratio of European high-yield bonds trading at a spread of more than
1,000 basis points over their respective government benchmarks-- one
measure of distressed debt -- hit 7% at end-2019 compared to 1.4% a year
earlier, JP Morgan data showed.
For an interactive version of the graphic, click here https://tmsnrt.rs/30BiWu1.
RIVAL PLAY
In a slowing economy, most investors will have to look at challenging
situations if they want to perform, said Amundi high-yield portfolio
manager Marina Cohen.
"There are clearly going to be some opportunities in those types of
(distressed) situations in the mid-term."
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![](../images/012420pics/busine35.jpg)
Staff work on the Jaguar XJ production line at their Castle Bromwich
Assembly Plant in Birmingham November 29, 2011. REUTERS/Eddie
Keogh/File Photo
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Recent examples of such plays include Israel's Teva Pharmaceutical <TEVA.TA>,
Britain's Jaguar Land Rover and French supermarket chain Casino <CASP.PA>, all
of which found themselves in difficult situations earlier last year before
rebounding and raising fresh debt.
Recent performance for distressed debt funds has lagged another favored debt
play - lending money to help finance mergers and acquisitions via leveraged
buyout funds (LBFs).
LBFs generated an internal rate of return of nearly 14% in the second quarter of
2019, according to the latest data available from the investment software
provider eFront, compared to 8.5% for distressed debt funds.
For an interactive version of the graphic, click here https://tmsnrt.rs/2Ye2ONM.
But the volume of money flowing into distressed debt suggests investors see
improving prospects there.
Assets under management in European distressed debt -- which combine unrealized
funds from existing investments and "dry powder" for future investments -- hit a
record $48.5 billion in June, Preqin data showed.
"They (special funds) have been waiting and watching for a few years now, and we
may finally be moving towards an environment where this trade becomes viable,"
said White & Case European leveraged finance lawyer Jeremy Duffy.
For an interactive version of the graphic, click here https://tmsnrt.rs/2qfAeyT.
In one recent example, investors rushed into Jaguar Land Rover's five-year bond
offer in November, with demand so strong that the company had to print another
seven-year tranche, raising 800 million euros in total. Jaguar - owned by
India's Tata Motors <TAMO.NS> - offered a yield of 5.875% and 6.875% on the
tranches, respectively.
Earlier in 2019, the British carmaker was hit by a $4 billion writedown, a slump
in China sales and Brexit worries that forced it to look for alternative funding
from bond markets.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2020/Jan/24/images/ads/current/pestcontrol_bch_termites.png)
Adding to the appeal of distressed debt, European Central Bank stimulus has
compressed yields across the European bond market to such an extent that
volatility is likely to be quite high in a downturn.
"Wobbles within individual companies are triggering some quite severe selloffs,"
said Laura Frost at M&G Investments.
"That presents an opportunity for people like us".
(GRAPHIC - Bond 'tourists' added to Aston Martin's summer travails:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/12/9577/9489/aston%20martin.png)
(Additional reporting by Yoruk Bahceli in London; Editing by Katya Golubkova and
Mark Trevelyan)
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