Is The Debt In Your High-Yield ETF Safe?

Year to date, we have seen an increase in the reported acquisition financing and decrease in refinancings relative to the last couple years, but we believe these numbers at face value are misleading.  In fact, this year we have seen a small number of very large M&A deals occur that have skewed the numbers.  If you were to exclude the top five new deals this year4, all of which were for M&A, we get a total M&A use of proceeds of only about 23.5% of remaining deals and refinancings 53%…both of these virtually unchanged from 2014.

Having participated in this market for decades, we don’t see the current use of proceeds as something to be concerned about or a signal that the cycle is turning—rather we see the current new issue activity as good support for our belief that markets have generally been tame and well behaved.  There are always companies that add leverage at the wrong time through dividend payments to the private equity sponsor, LBOs at high valuations, or merger and acquisition (M&A) transactions, but we are certainly not seeing this at the same level as we saw heading into the 2008 collapse, after the massive leverage binge in 2006 and 2007.  Currently there are selective, company specific issues with leverage, which active managers can work to avoid, but this is simply not a widespread asset class issue.

As we look at today’s high yield market, not only are we seeing great value from a spread/yield perspective on much of the market, but it is important to point out that this is in the face of well below average default rates, bond maturities pushed out for several years, and improving cash flow coverage relative to interest (meaning more room for potential cash generation at the corporate level).  While there are certainly names to avoid in the energy and commodity space—areas where we do expect default rates to meaningfully tick up—we believe the fundamentals are relatively tame for much the rest of the high yield market.  We don’t expect that we are on the verge of the credit cycle going bust; thus, we see the current environment as a terrific opportunity for active investors in the high yield debt markets.  Read more on our thoughts in our piece, “Making Sense of Markets.”

1 Acciavatti, Peter Tony Linares, Nelson R. Jantzen, CFA, Rahul Sharma, and Chuanxin Li. “Credit Strategy Weekly Update,” J.P. Morgan North American High Yield Research, April 10, 2015, p. 4-5.

2 Richmond, Adam, Meghan Robson, and Jeff Fong, “Leveraged Finance Insights,” Morgan Stanley Research, June 15, 2015, p. 1.

3 Acciavatti, Peter Tony Linares, Nelson Jantzen, CFA, Rahul Sharma, and Chuanxin Li. “Credit Strategy Weekly Update,” J.P. Morgan North American High Yield Research, October 3, 2015, p. 38.

4 Acciavatti, Peter Tony Linares, Nelson Jantzen, CFA, Rahul Sharma, and Chuanxin Li. “Credit Strategy Weekly Update,” J.P. Morgan North American High Yield Research, September 18, 2015, p. 6.

 

Although information and analysis contained herein has been obtained from sources Peritus I Asset Management, LLC believes to be reliable, its accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. Information on this website is for informational purposes only. As with all investments, investing in high yield corporate bonds and loans and other fixed income, equity, and fund securities involves various risk and uncertainties, as well as the potential for loss. Past performance is not an indication or guarantee of future results.