Junk, emerging-market firms eager to borrow as further
rates rise in sight
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[April 19, 2021] By
Yoruk Bahceli and Tom Arnold
(Reuters) - Junk-rated and emerging-market
companies look set to raise record amounts of debt in coming months,
urged on by bankers who advise taking advantage of funding markets
before Treasury yields rise and push up borrowing costs.
February's bond selloff gave companies a taste of the kind of market
volatility they may face when Treasury yields, the reference rate for
global borrowing costs, rise in earnest. Ten-year yields rose 80 basis
points in the first quarter, climbing above 1.77% before easing last
week to around 1.5%.
But even after the sell-off, corporate debt yields remain near all-time
lows, so borrowers are hurrying to refinance existing debt. With the
Federal Reserve broadly expected to taper stimulus from 2022, borrowing
costs could rise above 2% by year-end.
"Volatility and the sharp upward moves in yields served as a gentle
reminder that low base rates weren't necessarily going to be here
forever. That motivated borrowers to start thinking about (refinancing)
if they hadn't already," said Chris Munro, head of global leveraged
finance at BofA in New York.
Even as Treasury markets were roiled during the first quarter,
junk-rated firms raced to tap markets and raised a record $205 billion,
according to Refinitiv.
In the U.S. junk bond market, the world's biggest, 77% of the issuance
was aimed at refinancing, compared with 66% in all 2020. At $122
billion, refinancing volumes were the highest ever, JP Morgan estimates.
Leveraged loans, also used by junk-rated companies, saw $301 billion
raised in the United States for the second-highest quarter ever,
according to JP Morgan. With such loans, coupon payments rise when
underlying interest rates go up.
Around 44% of the volume was from repricings, which allow borrowers to
lower the coupon on existing loans.
Emerging-market companies, also vulnerable to higher rates, raised a
record $165 billion in the first quarter, JPM data showed, with a record
51% of proceeds going to refinancings.
"If it's a sector that's been severely impacted and you're uncertain
when your business is going to return to normal, there is probably a lot
of security in knowing that you have opportunistically tackled your
refinancing," Munro said.
(GRAPHIC - EM, junk yields near record lows after Treasury sell-off:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/rlgpdzjylpo/em%20hy%20yields%20chart.png)
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., March 19, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
FAR FROM OVER
Banks like JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs are reporting bumper first-quarter
earnings, driven by booming capital markets activity and trading.
"We recommend issuers to accelerate issuance plans as U.S. Treasury rates are
skewed to increase further and more market volatility may lie ahead," said
Stefan Weiler, head of CEEMEA debt capital markets at JP Morgan.
Weiler expects a record $500 billion in emerging corporate hard-currency debt
issuance this year.
Junk bonds and leveraged loans will break records, too, BNP Paribas analysts
reckon, predicting U.S. issuers will raise over $1 trillion across the two
markets this year.
Munro at BofA said refinancing would remain high, though he also expects more
acquisition financing.
"The economics of refinancing early still make a lot of sense for corporate
clients and similarly a lot of financial sponsors are trying to refinance their
capital structures," he said.
Markets are pricing more price swings ahead, with implied bond volatility well
above early-2021 levels.
The rush hasn't swept up higher-rated companies, whose issuance fell 5%
year-on-year in the first quarter, according to Refinitiv. Vast cash balances
following last year's funding spree could be the reason.
The incremental increase in Treasury yields is also less significant for
investment-grade companies from a cost perspective, as their debt has an average
maturity of over 10 years, said Shobhit Gupta, head of U.S. credit strategy at
Barclays.
Longer maturities mean the amount of debt needing refinancing every year is low,
so rising borrowing costs have less effect on those companies' debt-servicing
costs.
Even so, if issuers believe rates will keep going higher, some companies could
"bring forward their supply and also perhaps change the nature of it a little
bit, maybe issue longer-dated paper on the margin," Gupta said.
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli and Tom Arnold, additional reporting by Marc Jones;
editing by Larry King)
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