Categories: Economic News

Borrowing Costs Soar Across Global Credit Markets

EDITOR'S NOTE: As frantic rate hike speculation begins to take hold across global markets, corporate credit costs are skyrocketing. Firms who weren’t able to issue bonds with lower yields are certainly feeling the pain as yields rise at a parabolic incline—and to think that the rate hike cycle hasn’t yet begun. While we’re focusing on the Fed and the impact of higher interest rates in the US, it’s easy to forget that this scenario is playing out in major economies across the globe. As investors attempt to price in the rate hikes, many of which are projected or announced by central banks, some analysts are starting to sound the alarm that such measures may not be sufficient to stop inflation from accelerating skyward. What “that” outcome might look like, should we get there, is anyone’s guess. But overall, it probably won't be more than a few shades lighter of gloomy.

Photo: Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) -- Borrowing costs are soaring across global credit markets as investors prepare for the end of an era of loose monetary policy.

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In Europe, borrowing costs for the most credit-worthy companies rose above 1% for the first time since the summer of 2020. Meanwhile, the junk market’s window for refinancing at cheaper rates has now closed. And the worldwide cost of protecting against defaults for both investment grade and high-yield firms is surging.

Investors are scrambling to position for more hawkish policies from the Federal Reserve to the Bank of England and the European Central Bank as officials seek to tame runaway inflation. An unexpectedly strong U.S. jobs reading Friday added to the Fed’s case for raising rates, pushing up U.S. credit risk gauges and roiling Asian markets Monday.

“It’s a crazy situation at the moment with all this speculation about rate hikes,” said Michael Koehler, a credit strategist at Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg, by phone. “Long-term, we believe it’s good to be overweight credit but for now investors are feeling the pressure.”

The speed of the moves has caught analysts by surprise. Last week, Commerzbank AG strategists became the first to significantly beef up spread targets, saying that widening “looks set to kick in earlier and more forcefully” than they had thought.

European junk firms that haven’t already eased their debt burdens by issuing bonds with lower coupons missed their chance.The global credit rout sent the average yield on sub-investment grade bonds in Europe to 3.74%, about 20 basis points above the average coupon, according to a Bloomberg index, which has a one-day lag.

For some borrowers, market volatility is proving too big an obstacle. Last week, a group of banks led by Barclays Plc was forced to delay for a second time a cross-border $1.2 billion debt sale for Apollo-owned Covis Pharmaceuticals Inc. The deal struggled to draw demand from investors even after sweetening terms.

Read More: Apollo-Backed Covis Pharma Delays Struggling Junk-Debt Offering

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Even safer corporate bonds are having to offer more compensation. The average yield on euro investment-grade corporate bonds rose by almost half last week to 1.1%, based on Bloomberg indexes.

The cost of protection against defaults for a basket of European high-grade firms kept rising on Monday: it now takes 66,000 euros ($75,500) annually to insure 10 million euros of debt, up from 58,800 euros a week ago.

‘Stock Picking’

“Stock picking in credit is more important than ever at the moment, investors really can’t afford to be caught out amid so much volatility,” said Ben Pakenham, head of European high-yield and global loans at Aberdeen Standard Investments in London. The pace and uncertainty about the number of hikes this year “has sent longer dated credits into a bit of a tailspin.”

Investors were showing hints of caution even before last week’s slump. The sweeteners they demanded to buy newly minted bonds, known as new issue concessions, had doubled from the same period last year. And when borrowers offered more than one tranche to the market, buyers showed preference for the shorter one, which is less prone to losing value when yields rise.

Still, there may be opportunities for the intrepid. Volatility in the euro high-grade tracker, using a 30-day metric, has shot up to its highest level since June 2020, offering a chance for buy-the-dip investors.

“There is some value to be had for those who are willing to ride out the choppy waters of the next few months before the inflation picture starts to cool somewhat,” CreditSights strategists wrote in a note to clients Monday.

EMEA

The long-awaited U.K. gilt and a potential issuance from the EU may boost SSA sales this week and keep the sector ahead again in Europe’s publicly syndicated debt market.

Americas

As the prospect of aggressive central-bank rate hikes continues to grow, U.S. credit markets are showing signs of stress, with high-grade spreads widening to their most since November 2020.

Asia

Chinese high-yield dollar bonds dropped Monday morning, with notes of developer Logan Group Co. leading declines as traders in mainland China returned after a week-long holiday.

(Updates to add context for high-yield and global markets.)

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Originally posted on Yahoo Finance.

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