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Canadian
Corporate Bond Newsletter
Summer 2004 |
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The
Canadian corporate bond market seems to have hit its tight yield spreads
for this cycle, as can be seen by the chart below of the Corporate Bond
Index yield spread. The recent Yellow Pages 10 year issue has
widened from the issue spread |
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of 95 bps to 116 bps. Where BBB (low) Yellow Pages
seemed attractive at .9% above 10 year Canadas in the 4% range, it might not
seem adequate when 10 year Canadas are above 7%!
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Corporate Bond Yield Spread
1980-2004
(SCM Universe Corporate les Canada Yield Spread)
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We
see this retrenchment in below investment grade debt as well. The spectre of
rising rates makes a mockery of "high yield"
with a cash yield of 5%
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when Treasury Bills might have the same yield in the not too distant future.
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Yellow Pages Issue After
Market Spread
(YPG 5.71% of 2014 vs. CAN 5% of 2014)
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This
declining enthusiasm for risk can also be seen in many distressed debt names.
After major price jumps in 2003, in tandem with the strong equity market, many
have settled back substantially.
Calpine the fallen angel power generation company, shown in the chart below,
had recovered from
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its low of $35 in the fall of 2002 to $80 in early 2004.
It now trades in the low $60s as worries about its long term viability and the
increasing subordination of its unsecured debt combine with the general decrease
in market liquidity.
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Calpine Price Chart
(Calpine Cda Energy Fin. 8.75% of 2007)
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While we continue to think that the economy and improving
credit risk are on the side of corporate bonds, they are very expensive in
historical terms. This is due to the loose monetary conditions and the consequent
stretching for yield by investors starved for income. The credit spread between
corporate bonds favours higher quality issues at present. The spreads on longer
term issues have backed up making them relatively attractive compared to shorter
term corporate bonds. We look for spreads to widen as monetary policy is tightened.
We think that the spread widening will be felt the most in the lower
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quality and more liquid issues. We look for a slow
but steady increase in spreads, with "gapping" in issuers and sectors
falling out of favour due to disappointment. A financial accident could move
spreads out dramatically, given the Fed tightening and the reduced liquidity
in the markets. These are hard to predict, but inevitably occur during the
tightening cycles. Given the enormous complexity of the current vogue of financial
products, it is hard to pinpoint the potential stress points. Our candidates
would be mortgage hedging in the U.S. or a Russian or Chinese financial problem.
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