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Bad Credit? For Corporate Borrowers, It's Not A Problem

MATTHEW CRAFT   09/ 5/10 03:29 PM ET   AP

Broke

NEW YORK — With rising fears of a prolonged recession and stomach-churning moves in the stock market, corporate bond markets have performed so well this year they look like they're part of a parallel universe.

Banks are reluctant to lend, but large corporations with the weakest credit ratings have had little trouble finding investors happy to hand over their cash.

Companies sold $24.6 billion in junk bonds in August, the eighth-best month ever for sales, according to Thomson Reuters data. Among those feeding in the market: Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Rite Aid Corp. and acquisitive power giant NRG Energy Inc.

So how is it that companies with bad credit find it so easy to borrow in this economy?

"A lot of that has to do with living in a world where investments pay less than 1 percent," said Diane Vazza, head of fixed income research at rating agency Standard & Poor's.

The Federal Reserve's near-zero interest rate target means sticking cash in savings accounts or money market funds will yield next to nothing. Stocks are increasingly volatile. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 4.7 percent in August, though it's up 3.8 percent so far this month.

Given the alternatives, many investors have piled into corporate bonds, which offer yields ranging from 3 percent to 8 percent and, more importantly, the promise of getting your money back.

Investors have been yanking money out of stock funds and putting them in bond funds for much of the year. But the trend is intensifying. In the week ended August 25, investors took $4.6 billion out of stock funds and dropped $5.96 billion into bond funds.

"I think people are saying, 'The economy is sluggish; How are stocks going to go up?'" said Martin Fridson, global credit strategist at BNP Paribas. "And you have to wonder how are (companies) going to increase earnings? They've done all the cutting they can."

Bond investors, by contrast, don't have to worry about earnings. They just need corporate borrowers to pull in enough cash to cover their interest payments.

For bond fund managers, the quickest and cheapest way to put the flood of cash to work is to buy newly issued debt. Borrowers with junk ratings -- those with the greatest chance of going under -- have been able to tap them for $176.6 billion this year, a record-setting pace. Of that amount, 61 percent was used to reduce other debts or push due dates into the future. Toys R Us, for instance, last month sold $350 million in notes paying 7.37 percent and plans to pay off more expensive debt.

The ability to refinance and roll over their debts has rewarded many companies with a second lease on life, Vazza said. It's the key reason fewer corporate borrowers have missed their payments to creditors. S&P's default rate has dropped from 11 percent of all low-rated bonds at the start of the year to 5.5 percent.

The refinancing spree has also shrunk the threat posed by a wave of debt coming due over the next five years. This spring, market pundits and bloggers warned that this $800 million pile of bills, called a "maturity wall," would crush borrowers and shove many companies into bankruptcy.

This maturity wall now looks less daunting thanks, in part, to the savings investors have handed over to bond funds. Without it, many more companies would have fallen into bankruptcy.

It's a little noticed benefit of retail investors' newfound preference for fixed-income investments over domestic stock funds. Some see this change of heart as a symptom of a "bond bubble" and argue that Americans have turned too pessimistic on stocks that look cheap by many measures.

Fund flows usually follow performance, and so part of fixed-income's popularity with investors is probably a result of return-chasing. Americans love a winner, and high-yield bonds have returned 8.9 percent this year, after posting a 57.5 percent return in 2009.

David Rosenberg, chief economist and investment strategist at Gluskin Sheff, argues that many Americans are making a sensible investment shift. Members of the baby boomer generation need to limit risks and shy away from stocks as they near retirement.

Junk bonds are the riskiest of fixed-income investments because they're most likely to default. But that danger has plummeted over the past year.

"It's called 'junk,' but it's the part of the bond market that offers some of the best risk-reward attributes," Rosenberg said. The typical high-yield junk bond, for instance, pays 5.6 percentage points more in yield than the 2.7 percent you get from a 10-year Treasury note. "Are they risky? Yes, they are. But the risks are actually lower because corporate balance sheets are arguably stronger today than at any point in the past 15 years."

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ThePeacemakers
Concerned Citizen
04:23 PM on 09/08/2010
What a phony economy.

They say Americans don't save enough, but when they start saving, an account can barely draw interest because they want you spend more money at companies investing in mainly other countries and outsourcing jobs or invest into the ALWAYS volatile stock market where it can get skimmed.
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ThinkTwiceWriteOnce
Jarndyce v. Jarndyce
02:31 PM on 09/07/2010
The American consumer is a great beast…..too bad it’s destined to be road kill.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
11:53 AM on 09/07/2010
We see the financial reform really got a handle on things. The more we read the more we learn--there is nobody minding the store. Cookies are just flying out of the jar. And, some are having their cake and getting to eat it too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lisa Shields
Poet & Advocate For Special Needs Children
07:48 AM on 09/07/2010
Fascinating.
Businesses benefited for years from the low prime rates,where the government loaned them money we actually took loans at HIGHER rates of interest to pay back. During the same time, consumers were hit with rates that were in line with usury...and my GOD, how the money rolled in!

If this economy is to actually turn around, businesses have to also acquire "the new thrift" concept, which includes not being brain dead about their credit. To strip consumers to their shorts for a mortgage (Better than no doc mortgages and liar loans, but not by much) but to not apply a similar standard to businesses is a huge mistake, and invitation to future fails.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jalaroc
01:48 AM on 09/07/2010
basically, a repeat of the housing bubble, the only thing keeping it all going is the massive influx of funds from investors. Companies will start to get greedy and start speculating.......ahem ..sorry..."diversifying risk" with the cash brought in by the bonds to increase the return on capital that would probably otherwise have gone to business expansion. The end result of the speculation, encouraged and handled by wall street, will be companies inevitably coming up 7 on the craps table of wall street and being unable to pay either on the interest or the principle of the bonds. Investors will lose their shirts because the companies will have gone bust and another credit freeze will occur because the banks will panic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vic S
Who stole my cheese?
09:22 PM on 09/06/2010
The system is rigged against small businesses, the middle class and blue collar workers. Rich fat cats are dipping their greedy paws in the honey pot, and they're not sharing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
USNDC
Smartest President ever ? ... not even close.
06:29 PM on 09/06/2010
Bankrupt your corporations ... and you get a trillion dollar loan from the taxpayers.

Lose your job ... then your home ... then our credit rating ... and see what those same corporations give you !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
only livin boy in NY
03:25 PM on 09/06/2010
why would it be...since the tax paers are on the hook
02:59 PM on 09/06/2010
People are voting not to spend on corporate America. Buy used or trade with people.
A county close to mine is raising their sewer rates 100%. The consumer protection agency said this is a fair increase.
If I were the people who lived in this town-I would have my water turned off and deposit an out house right on the front lawn of the politicans.
People can take a free dump right in here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iblogleft
Certifiable
02:21 PM on 09/06/2010
Citizens get put out on the street, corporations get another loan. Cool eh?
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
02:17 PM on 09/06/2010
In order to have real earnings, workers need money to spend.

No more stagnant wages. They must rise.

They can't cut jobs or trample on pay levels forever.

http://motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2010/01/vicious-cycle-stagnant-wages
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
02:15 PM on 09/06/2010
Admittedly, I am more than a little obsessed with the Deloitte "shift index" report, but I think it tells so much that is typically overlooked. It says that since the 1960's, corporate return on assets for nearly every U.S. sector has steadily fallen. It is getting alarmingly close to 0.

It is as though business has been automating Americans out of jobs at any price, driving old line retailers out of business with new stores and malls at any price, and utterly failing to recognize that their returns are a function of the ever shrinking earnings of their customers. The profits grow through punishing the work force. Labor productivity is held sacred to the point of ridiculousness, when the last employee will run the hollowed out company and the last squeezed customer becomes homeless.

To me, it raises the question of how any corporation will be able to pay off its bonds.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
01:55 PM on 09/06/2010
We get lots of news that Corporate America is doing great.
We get very little news to suggest corporations are helping the economy recover.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissingAmerica
01:36 PM on 09/06/2010
They lay off people to save money to pad the bottom line to make them look good to investors. What I foresee is that when there are no more workers to lay off, and they can no longer pad the bottom line at the expense of the few remaining in the working class, the investors who greedily bought into the companies are going to be joining the unemployed in the bread lines, scratching their hands and wondering how they got there in the first place. It's time to end the free ride for the corporations, but it will take a government with kahones to do it and a willingness for politicians to do what's best for this country. While there are a few in Congress I would trust to do this, there are too many, including the entire GOP party, who can pop their heads out of their assets to see what they are doing to this country. If ever we need gutsy people and faith in miracles, it is now.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
02:17 PM on 09/06/2010
Well said, thank you!!