Goldilocks is back, better watch out

It’s official: Goldilocks is back, at least for junk bonds, according to a JPM analyst quoted in Bloomberg:

March 29 (Bloomberg) — Junk bond sales reached a record this month as rising profits and record low Federal Reserve interest rates foster lending and investment to the lowest-rated borrowers.

Companies worldwide issued $38.3 billion of junk bonds in March, passing the previous high of $36 billion in November 2006, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Yields fell 0.95 percentage point to within 5.96 percentage points of government debt, the narrowest gap since January 2008, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show.

This is “an almost ‘Goldilocks’ environment for leveraged credit markets,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts led by Peter Acciavatti, the top-ranked high-yield strategist in Institutional Investor magazine’s annual survey for the past seven years, said in a March 26 report to the bank’s clients.

Sales soared as investors plowed a record $33.6 billion into speculative-grade funds this quarter, according to Cambridge, Massachusetts-based research firm EPFR Global. Bonds of Stamford, Connecticut-based Frontier Communications Corp. and Consol Energy Inc. of Pittsburgh, which sold a combined $5.95 billion of debt last week, rose about 2 cents on the dollar to 102 cents.

That’s a turnaround from February, when companies canceled sales at the fastest pace since credit markets began to freeze in 2007 amid concern that the inability of European governments to trim their budget deficits will threaten a global recovery.

Loan Revival

About $20 billion of high-yield, or leveraged, loans have been completed in February and March, compared with $38 billion for all of 2009, according to New York-based JPMorgan. Speculative-grade securities are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and BBB- by Standard & Poor’s.

Elsewhere in credit markets, yield spreads for company bonds shrank by an average 3 basis points last week to 151 basis points, or 1.51 percentage points, the narrowest since November 2007, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Global Broad Market Corporate Index. Yields rose to 4.02 percent from 3.98 percent. …

Looks like credit investors are “all-in” again, just like the stock market crowd. This never ends well.

…“Appetite is definitely there,” said Joel Levington, director of corporate credit for Brookfield Investment Management Inc. in New York, which has $24 billion in assets under management.

Sales of high-yield bonds in March more than doubled last month’s total of $16 billion, driving issuance this year to $78.5 billion, the busiest quarter on record, Bloomberg data show. High-yield companies, taking advantage of the lower borrowing costs, said they planned to repay debt with proceeds from at least $20 billion of this month’s sales.

“The mindset of investors is that this spread product is ideally situated for this kind of macro environment,” said Charles Himmelberg, the chief credit strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York.

Just what macro environment might that be? Silly me, I thought we were sliding down the backside of a credit bubble.

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2 thoughts on “Goldilocks is back, better watch out

  1. Silly You indeed! You forgot that Goldman is doing God’s work, that Bernanke and Geithner avoided the 2nd great depression and that the V-shaped nascent recovery will take us back to the old normal :-) :-) :-)

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