Financials Lead Busy High-Grade Issuance In Corporate Market
March 21 2012 - 3:11PM
Dow Jones News
Seven high-grade issuers are on track to borrow at least $6.35
billion Wednesday, adding to the $85 billion already sold this
month as companies rush to borrow at historically low levels.
The financial sector is leading the riot as American Express Co.
(AXP) and Lloyds TSB Bank each issued $1.5 billion deals of
five-year bonds. The Amex notes were sold at 1.3 percentage points
over Treasurys, while Lloyds expects to pay 3.1 points over
Treasurys.
Capital One Financial Corp. (COF) completed a $1.25 billion sale
of three-year notes priced at 2.179%, or 1.6 points over
Treasurys.
Also in the market are $750 million offerings from Swiss
agribusiness company Syngenta AG (SYT) and a unit of Brazilian oil
operator Schahin Petroleo e Gas SA, plus a $600 million issue of
three- and five-year notes from Caterpillar Inc. (CAT), and a $250
million deal of 12-year paper from Raymond James Financial Inc.
(RJF).
The heavy issuance follows a light session Tuesday, when the
market took in just $600 million as it digested a slate of $12
billion from eight issuers a day before. The week's tally should
finish Wednesday near the $20 billion mark -- the higher end of
forecasts from earlier in the week.
Strategists from RBS Securities called March volume
"gargantuan."
The March 2011 figure to beat is $110.5 billion, according to
data provider Dealogic.
Markit's CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, a proxy for
corporate-bond sentiment, is on track to improve 1.2% and finish at
81 basis points, the best closing price in more than a year.
Earlier it had improved 3% to 79.6 basis points, its best level
since February 2011.
The index tracks credit-default-swap contracts that pay out when
corporate bonds default; a lower figure means the cost of insuring
against default has fallen, and suggests investor sentiment is
improving.
A few technical dynamics might be benefiting the index this
week. On Tuesday, it underwent a biannual roll-over to update the
components. Because investors often employ the index as a hedge,
short-term flows around a roll-date can create a divergence from
the broader corporate bond market.
Among individual bonds, trading was more mixed. Five of the top
10 most actively traded bonds underperformed Treasurys, according
to MarketAxess. Morgan Stanley (MS) 10-year bond spreads widened
0.09 percentage points and Oracle Corp. (ORCL) spreads weakened
0.03 points.
Outperformers included BNP Paribas (BNP) and American
International Group (AIG). BNP's 2021 bond spreads tightened 0.04
points, and AIG's 2017 bonds narrowed 0.06 points.
Average bond spreads have been tightening recently as Treasury
yields rise, suggesting high-grade bonds are bringing in new
investors.
Yields in the Barclays corporate bond index rose 0.01 percentage
point to 3.51% Tuesday, the highest since Jan. 25, and up from the
3.27% multi-decade low on March 2. Spreads rose slightly Tuesday to
1.767 points, but remain near a seven-month low.
Anthony Valeri from LPL Financial said recent Treasury weakness
isn't the start of a new bear market, as some others have
suggested, but just a new trading range defined by 2.1% to 2.4% for
the 10-year yield.
"The increase in real yields, inflation expectations, and Fed
rate hike expectations is a rare trifecta that shows the bond
market's acceptance of recent improvement," Valeri wrote
Wednesday.
But enough global risks will keep a bear market from developing.
"European debt issues remain a risk, rising energy prices may weigh
on consumers, and economic growth continues at a sluggish pace, all
of which may support Treasurys and the broader bond market."
The 10-year Treasury yield was on track to improve 0.07 points
Wednesday to 2.29%.
-By Patrick McGee, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2382; patrick.mcgee@dowjones.com
Capital One Financial (NYSE:COF)
Historical Stock Chart
From Sep 2024 to Oct 2024
Capital One Financial (NYSE:COF)
Historical Stock Chart
From Oct 2023 to Oct 2024