• Перевести текст.




    An appetite for junk
    WHEN cash
    deposits pay virtually zero, investors have an incentive to take risks in
    search of higher returns. That has been good news for the high-yield, or junk,
    bond market, where companies with poor credit ratings (below the
    investment-grade threshold of BBB) turn for finance. Many companies can now borrow
    at rates that governments would have been pleased to achieve two decades ago.
    Indeed, so low have borrowing costs fallen that some wags have dubbed the
    market “the asset class formerly known as high-yield”.

    Until the hiatus
    related to the budget crisis in America, companies were rushing to take
    advantage of this financing opportunity. In the first nine months of the year
    global high-yield-bond issuance reached $378.2 billion, up by 27% on the same
    period in 2012, according to Dealogic, a financial-data firm. Sprint, an
    American telecoms company, raised $6.5 billion in two simultaneous bond issues,
    the largest-ever junk financing.

    Low rates will
    not last forever, so companies are keen to take advantage of what might be an
    historic opportunity. And investors have been happy to take the extra yields on
    offer, given the positive returns achieved since 2009.

    In America, the
    modern high-yield-bond market dates back to the 1980s. Until then, high-yield
    bonds were usually “fallen angels”—companies which previously had an
    investment-grade credit rating but had seen their finances suffer. But Michael
    Milken and his team at Drexel Burnham Lambert, an investment bank, discovered
    there was a market for high-yield debt from new issuers, often in connection
    with companies making takeover bids.

    The market is
    now huge. A study by Russell, a consultancy, estimated its total size at $1.7
    trillion. Almost half of all the corporate bonds rated by Standard & Poor’s
    are classed as speculative, a polite term for junk. Part of this is down to
    fashion; companies have been urged to return spare cash to shareholders and to
    make their balance-sheets more efficient by taking advantage of the tax
    deductibility of interest payments.

    Another big
    boost to the market has been the broadening of its base beyond America.
    According to Fraser Lundie, a high-yield-bond manager at Hermes, America
    comprised 89% of the market in 1998; now it forms just 57%. Europe has gone
    from 3% of the market to 27%.

Ответы 0

  • Добавить свой ответ

Войти через Google

или

Забыли пароль?

У меня нет аккаунта, я хочу Зарегистрироваться

How much to ban the user?
1 hour 1 day 100 years