Peak rates boost U.S. demand for riskier form of corporate debt
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[March 15, 2024] By
Shankar Ramakrishnan
(Reuters) - The U.S. market for one of the riskiest types of corporate
debt is resurging this year, as companies cater to investor demand for
assets that can lock in high yields for several years ahead of an
expected decline in interest rates.
Holders of these bonds, called junior subordinated debt, are among the
last to be paid in case of a default and companies can defer interest
payments.
The reward for such high risk is yields that exceed those of senior
bonds, for maturities of up to 40 years, though issuers typically call,
or redeem, the bonds in five or 10 years.
Like stocks, these hybrid bonds rank low in a company's capital
structure, but they resemble bonds with interest payments.
With the Federal Reserve widely expected to start cutting rates later
this year, investors are scrambling to get their hands on securities
that will pay the current levels of high interest for years to come.
To meet this demand, five companies this year have issued $4.6 billion
of junior subordinated debt, and a sixth hit the market on Thursday.
This pace is significantly faster than in the last two years, Barclays
data shows, with $8 billion issued in full-year 2023.
Barclays' analyst Bradford Elliott estimates sales of junior
subordinated bonds could reach $15 billion to $20 billion this year.
Investors have plowed in a net $1 billion into funds that invest in
hybrid bonds since October, he noted.
The renewed interest is giving companies an additional financing option
as debt comes due.
INCREASING ATTRACTIVENESS
A change in Moody's rating methodology on Feb. 1 has made hybrid bonds
more attractive for companies, bankers and analysts said.
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Last month, Moody's said it would start giving 50% equity credit when
rating a company's hybrid debt or count half of an issuer's subordinated
debt as equity capital, up from 25% previously. The move, in line with
S&P and Fitch, means companies can reliably use hybrid bonds to raise
more capital without hurting their credit ratings.
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Midtown Manhattan is seen in New York City, New York, U.S.,
September 5, 2023. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
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Among issuers of junior subordinated debt so far this year, NextEra
Energy Capital used some of the proceeds to refinance short-term
commercial paper.
Energy Transfer, which owns and operates a diversified portfolio of
energy assets, said it refinanced preferred shares, another type of
hybrid bond that is riskier than junior subordinated debt.
Daniel Botoff, global head of debt capital market syndicate at RBC
Capital Markets, said junior subordinated debt also had a tax
advantage over preferred shares.
"It is more cost-efficient for companies to issue junior
subordinated debt whose interest payments were tax-deductible to
refinance taxable preferred stock that is becoming callable," Botoff
said.
STRONG DEMAND
With strong demand, the average credit spreads on corporate hybrid
bonds, or the premium paid over Treasuries, tightened nearly 200
basis points since it peaked at 523 basis points in October, Elliott
said.
The six companies that have issued subordinated bonds this year paid
6% to 8% in yields, just 150-200 basis points more than on their
higher ranked senior bonds.
In another sign of firm demand, Energy Transfer increased its
offering in January to $800 million from an initial $500 million. It
received $5 billion in orders, Informa Global Markets data showed.
Hybrid bonds are "sensitive to macro conditions," said Tim Crawmer,
global credit strategist at Payden & Rygel. "They have a higher
correlation to improving credit quality and improving equity risk
sentiment than they do to interest rates."
(Reporting by Shankar Ramakrishnan; additional reporting by Davide
Barbuscia; editing by Paritosh Bansal and Richard Chang)
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