Friday, October 17, 2008
'Armageddon' Prices Fail to Lure Buyers Amid Selling - BLG
By Pierre Paulden and Caroline Salas
Oct. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Credit markets have fallen so far
that they are providing a ``once in a lifetime opportunity,'' and
investors are still selling.
Prices of loans rated below investment grade declined to a
record low 66.1 cents on the dollar, virtually guaranteeing
investors get their money back, based on historical recovery
rates, according to data compiled by Standard & Poor's. Yields on
corporate bonds show investors expect 5.6 percent of the market to go bust, the highest default rate since the Great Depression, according to Christopher Garman, chief executive officer of debt research firm Garman Research LLC in Orinda, California.
While central banks injected $3 trillion into the global
economy, credit markets are tumbling because banks are clamping down on lending, forcing investors to unload assets they bought with borrowed money. The Federal Reserve said Aug. 11 that its quarterly survey shows most ``domestic institutions reported
having tightened their lending standards and terms.''
``There has been widespread liquidation of assets that has
nothing to do with fundamentals,'' said Scott D'Orsi, a partner
at Boston-based Feingold O'Keeffe Capital, a hedge fund which has
$1.3 billion in assets. ``Investors in bank debt are being
presented with a vast number of extraordinary opportunities;
opportunities that I would characterize as once in a lifetime.''
The selling is being compounded by hedge funds and mutual
funds dumping holdings to meet redemptions, which may push prices
even lower, according to analysts at UBS AG.
Assets Seized
Barclays Plc, the U.K.'s second-biggest bank, is auctioning
$642 million of loans seized this week from Dallas-based Highland
Capital Management LP, according to people with knowledge of the
sale who declined to be identified because the sale hasn't been
announced. Hedge funds Tudor Investment Corp., run by Paul Tudor
Jones, and SAC Capital Advisors LLC, managed by Steven Cohen,
sold assets this month to raise cash as stock prices dropped,
according to people with knowledge of the sales.
Barclays spokesman Brandon Ashcraft, and Jack Yang, a
partner at Highland, declined to comment.
Prices of high-yield, or leveraged, loans tumbled 22.2 cents
since Sept. 9, and are down from 95 cents on the dollar since the
start of the year, according to New York-based S&P's LCD unit.
Because bank debt holders typically recover about 70 cents on the dollar in bankruptcy, almost every loan in the market would need to default before investors would lose money, LCD said.
Corporate debt has been pressured by ``incessant selling by
hedge funds and leveraged institutions as they unwind,'' Bill
Gross, manager of the world's biggest bond fund at Newport Beach,
California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., said in a
Bloomberg Radio interview today.
`Priced in Armageddon'
New York-based BlackRock Inc., the biggest publicly traded
U.S. asset manager, asked investors to commit more equity to a $3
billion fund that owns bank loans to reduce its leverage,
according to Ron Schmitz, chief investment officer for Oregon's
state pension fund, which this week agreed to invest an additional $72 million.
Corporate bond prices plunged to 79.9 cents on the dollar on
average from 94 cents at the end of August and 99 cents at the
end of 2007, according to index data compiled by New York-based
Merrill Lynch & Co.
About 90 percent of the market trades like high-yield, high-
risk, or junk, debt, Garman said in an Oct. 3 report to clients.
Prices imply a 5.6 percent default rate, the most since the
record 8.4 percent in 1933, he said. Junk bonds are rated below
BBB- by S&P and Baa3 at Moody's Investors Service.
``It's quite possible that we had priced in Armageddon,''
said Robert Gahagan, head of taxable fixed-income in Mountain
View, California at American Century Investment Management, which
oversees $23 billion in fixed-income assets.
`The Big Picture'
Wall Street firms have curbed lending after taking $661
billion of credit losses and writedowns since the beginning of
last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The collapse
last month of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the fourth-largest
securities firm, sparked a new round of selling as investors
became concerned that more banks may fail, curbing lending even
more.
The sales may hamper efforts by Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson to unlock credit markets and challenge the next president
as a slowing economy drives prices even lower. Industrial output
fell 6 percent in the third quarter, the most since 1991, and a
factory index for the Philadelphia region hit an 18-year low this
month, Federal Reserve figures showed yesterday.
``The big picture is the economy is just starting to
deteriorate,'' said Mark Kiesel, executive vice president at
Pimco, who runs $180 billion in corporate bonds. ``We still think there are a lot of redemptions and hedge fund liquidations coming.''
No `Turnaround'
Hedge funds may be forced to dispose of half their $135
billion in high-yield loans to fund redemptions, Stephen Antczak, a UBS credit analyst in Stamford, Connecticut, wrote in an Oct. 10 report to clients. That may send loan prices as low as 60
cents, he said.
``The de-leveraging that we're witnessing will probably
continue,'' said Paul Scanlon, team leader for U.S. high yield
and bank loans at Boston-based Putnam Investments LLC, which
manages $55 billion in fixed income. ``My sense is that's not
turning around in the very near term.''
The biggest hedge fund run by Citadel Investment Group,
which manages $18 billion, fell as much as 30 percent this year
because of losses on convertible bonds, stocks and corporate
debt, people with knowledge of the returns said. Citadel founder
Kenneth Griffin blamed ``reduced availability of credit'' for the
declines.
Commercial Mortgages
Investors withdrew a record $43 billion from hedge funds in
September, according to TrimTabs Investment Research, which has been tracking the data since 2000. The industry had declines of 9.4 percent this year through the end of September, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc., the worst year in two
decades.
For buyers to lose money on some top-rated bonds backed by
mortgages on offices, hotels, apartment buildings and other
commercial properties, the circumstances would have to surpass
the worst conditions on record, according to Darrell Wheeler,
global head of securitized strategy at Citigroup Inc.
Commercial-mortgage securities rated AAA that require an
unprecedented three-quarters of the underlying loans to default
for any loss of principal are trading at about 70 cents,
according to New York-based Citigroup.
``We're not at these prices because of the fundamentals: We
threw those out the window a year ago,'' he said. ``This is
strictly people want to sell something to raise cash, and it's
easy to sell these CMBS because it's a liquid market.''
Yields on AAA commercial mortgage bonds were at a record
620.7 basis points over benchmark swap rates on Oct. 15, up from
47.8 basis points a year ago, according to Bank of America Corp.
A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
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