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Friday, November 17, 2017

Vulnerability in the High Yield and Leveraged Loan Markets

This is a research report I wrote up earlier today on a specific vulnerability that worries me in the riskier areas of fixed income. 

Summary
Over eight years after the end of the Great Recession, the economic recovery that has slowly but surely powered the United States into a 4.1% unemployment rate and sent stock market indexes to dozens of record highs this year has now spread around the globe. With heavy-handed support from leading central banks, financial markets are thriving, with suppressed volatility and generally-positive economic data supporting both advanced and emerging economies. Unconventional monetary policies employed by G20 central banks, particularly the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BOJ), have led to an asymmetric recovery in certain sectors of global financial markets, however, whether directly or indirectly. In this report, unconventional monetary policies will be connected to the increasing deterioration of covenants in riskier sections of the fixed income market, and concerns over systemic risk posed by such sectors of the fixed income market will be outlined.








            Introduction
In response to the 2007-2008 financial crisis and succeeding deep recession, central banks in advanced economies found that their conventional monetary policy tools were not as effective as desired. Faced with the zero lower bound dilemma, leading central banks asserted themselves into uncharted territory with the use of new monetary policy measures. The most visible and widely-discussed tool at hand was that of quantitative easing (QE), the process by which a central bank purchased their nation’s sovereign debt (for the ECB, up to 33% of each EU member’s sovereign debt), in a bid to stimulate the economy and lower borrowing costs for consumers. Through such QE operations, the G4 central banks (the Federal Reserve, the ECB, the BOJ and the Bank of England) purchased securities that sent their balance sheets to a combined 37.4% of their cumulative GDP.

Figure 1. Source: Bloomberg
            The composition of the balance sheets for each central bank vary, however. For example, the Federal Reserve invested its $4.5 trillion balance sheet primarily in Treasury securities, as well as agency debt and mortgage-backed securities (MBS):

Figure 2. Source: Bloomberg
            In contrast, the European Central Bank has accumulated nearly 33% of each European Union member’s sovereign debt, the threshold of which was set by the Bank and is unlikely to be increased due to German opposition to the continuation of QE. The ECB also undertook significant purchases of corporate bonds, a program which also is still ongoing. The Bank of Japan has employed the most unconventional monetary policy of the G4 banks, and perhaps of the world. Indeed, the BOJ now employs ‘Quantitative and Qualitative Easing’ (QQE) and ‘Yield Curve Control’ (YCC), as well as maintaining a benchmark interest rate of -0.4%. The YCC portion involves the Bank of Japan maintaining the 10-year Japanese government bond yield at a rate of around 0.00%. The Bank had stepped in with offers to buy an unlimited amount of bonds at a rate of 0.11% earlier this year, when the 10-year yield began climbing, in a motion similar to that of a central bank offering to defend its currency peg if necessary. As part of its QQE program, the Bank of Japan now holds significant stakes in the Japanese sovereign debt market, Japanese corporate debt, Japanese stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), all in bids to suppress volatility and encourage consumer spending.
            The successes and failures of these varied monetary easing programs are not for discussion in this report. Rather, we aim to focus in on the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing operations, and its consequences as reflected on riskier portions of the fixed income market- namely, leveraged loans and the high-yield corporate debt sectors.

            The Federal Reserve’s QE program was designed to decrease borrowing costs for consumers, and the suppressed nature of the 10-year Treasury note yield shows that this has happened.


Figure 3. Source: Bloomberg
            With Treasury yields continuing to plumb record low levels over the last several years due to the Federal Reserve’s QE, investors have been driven to riskier assets in their search for yield. A primary beneficiary of this tactic (a deliberate one, at that) has been the stock market, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite setting over 100 record closes combined this year. While this is due in large part to investor enthusiasm over the expected agenda of President Donald Trump, stock markets were strong and looking stronger in the months leading up to the 2016 presidential election.
            In a sign of investors’ search for yield, even riskier assets have seen stronger returns than stocks. A prime example of this is the return offered on Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s High Yield corporate bond index.


Figure 4. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED.
            On an indexed basis, where the beginning of the 2007-2009 recession was set to 100, the S&P 500 has seen its value increase by a multiple of 1.8, through the end of October 2017. BAML’s High Yield Total Return Index, however, has seen its value more than double over the same period, appreciating by a multiple of nearly 2.2 through October 2017. It is no secret that investors who favored junk bonds over the last eight years have been handsomely rewarded- even today, the effective yield of BAML’s High Yield corporate bond index still tracks above the 10-year U.S. Treasury note, but that’s where the concern starts.


Figure 5. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED
            The effective yield has hit record lows on multiple occasions since the end of the previous recession, with the most recent nadir in 2014, though even today junk bonds hold a slim premium over Treasuries.
            Let’s recall the purpose of a premium. We first recognize that U.S. Treasuries are the risk-free rate, as the U.S. government will not default on its debt (this has been called into question over the last decade, but for all intents and purposes, we will leave this assumption undisturbed). To hold an asset that is riskier than Treasuries, therefore, leaves investors demanding compensation for retaining that risk. Such compensation comes in the form of a premium, the higher yield compared to Treasuries. Relative to Treasuries, highly-rated investment grade corporate bonds (i.e. AAA-rated or AA-rated) will trade with a small premium to Treasuries, as they are quite unlikely to default. Riskier corporate bonds, such as A-rated bonds, will contain a larger premium with their correspondingly-higher risk, and so on. Junk bonds, sitting at the bottom of the ladder, are those with the highest risk, and thus the highest premium… until this economic expansion.


Figure 6. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED
            Above is a graph depicting the spread between Moody’s Seasoned Baa-rated corporate bond yield and the 10-year Treasury note yield, in percentage points. While we remain above the record lows reached prior to the 2007-2009 recession, we continue trudging further down the scale. This depression of the spread indicates investors are willing to receive less of a premium to hold these risky bonds over U.S. Treasuries, as investors continue to hunt for yield.
            At first blush this chart is not all that impressive, but let’s view it in tandem with Figure 5. The Baa-10 year Treasury spread in Figure 6 is low, but the effective yield of BAML’s High Yield corporate bond index is at or near record lows. So, while the premium for Baa corporate bonds isn’t as low as it was in 2006, the actual yield of those Baa corporate bonds is lower, leaving investors with less income overall. That drive for income we discussed earlier only pushes investors deeper into riskier segments of the financial markets, and makes them more willing to take on risk to receive income. This is an intended consequence of the Federal Reserve’s QE program, but it’s a consequence that is beginning to lead to deteriorating credit conditions.

Credit Boom
            The Federal Reserve’s intent to make investors become more willing to take on risks has combined with the Federal Reserve’s lowering of borrowing costs to increase lending to make a dangerous entity in high yield bonds and leveraged loans. Let us first review the volume of total U.S. corporate bonds, U.S. leveraged loans, and U.S. high yield bonds in a historical sense, respectively.
Figure 1. Source: Bloomberg.

Figure 2. Source: Bloomberg.

Figure 3. Source: Bloomberg.

            It is not difficult to ascertain the trend in the broad corporate bond market. As shown in Figure 1, we are already well past the previous year-to-date record of U.S. corporate bond issuance, with just over $1.7 trillion in corporate debt issued through mid-November. The same is found in the leveraged loan market, with volume once again surging past the previous year-to-date record to clock in now at $1.2 trillion. We are not yet at a new year-to-date record in the U.S. high yield sector, currently in at $300 billion through mid-November. It remains to be seen if a new year-to-date record will be achieved in 2018 or later, but is unlikely to happen this year.
            The volume of these riskier loans is a testament to investors’ increasingly-frenzied hunt for yield. Unfortunately for investors, this has placed the bargaining power in the hands of the lender & debt issuer, given if one investor doesn’t like the terms, another investor that is more driven for income will take those same terms. This has led to a startling deterioration in the quality of investor protections on high yield and leveraged loan securities, as evidenced in the following quote from a Bloomberg article:

“Protections have gotten so lax in the $1 trillion market for U.S. leveraged loans that if an offering comes with decent covenants, lenders take it as a sign that something’s wrong with the deal.
“You do have to think twice when you see a loan with a covenant these days,” says Thomas Majewski, managing partner and founder of Eagle Point Credit Management.
It’s not a crazy assumption in a market where 75 percent of new loans are now defined as “covenant-lite,” meaning a company could, for example, rack up as much debt as it wants regardless of its performance. In such a lenient atmosphere, the reasoning goes, a loan must be a stinker if a borrower has to resort to promising even standard protections.”
            Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-21/safety-becomes-stigma-in-loan-market-that-s-ditching-covenants

Speaking from a common sense viewpoint, one could (and perhaps should) find it alarming that investors continue to eat up leveraged loans which come with increasingly fewer protections for investors. The phenomenon is not limited to the United States, either – in Europe, “cov-lite” loans have emerged as a popular security for those searching for income – despite a different name, the concept of less protection for investors is the same.
Moody’s, which publishes its Covenant Quality Index, has also noted the decline in protections for investors.


Figure 4. Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-21/safety-becomes-stigma-in-loan-market-that-s-ditching-covenants
            Another quote from the aforementioned article, this time from a Moody’s executive, once again strikes a risk-averse investor as quite alarming.

“ “It’s basically the worst it’s ever been in terms of loan covenant protections,” says Derek Gluckman, senior covenant officer at credit-rating firm Moody’s Investors Service. And that includes the heady pre-crisis year of 2007. ”


Conclusion
It is a sense of dread that many may have felt when looking back on the subprime mortgage industry after it succumbed during the financial crisis. Back then, investors were also hunting for extra income, and the issuance of such securities seemed to benefit all parties involved: the issuer, underwriter and trader for the associated fees and profits, and the homeowner for getting a home. But, of course, it all came crashing down when those investors began to realize just how deteriorated the subprime loans have become.

            It is important to distinguish between the subprime crisis, which was severely exacerbated by a lack of regulation and truly abhorrent lending practices, and this concern over riskier sections of the fixed income market. It remains to be seen how these deteriorating leveraged loans and high yield corporate bonds will fare when (not if) financial conditions begin to tighten. The Federal Reserve is expected to once again increase interest rates next month, and gradual tightening of monetary policy is also expected through the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet tapering. While it remains plausible companies are able to rein in the weakest links of such deteriorating credit instruments, history tells us it’s far more appetizing for both the corporation and the investor to put profits first and handle the consequences later.