Stock Investors Buy Into Corporate Bond Surge
March 30 2020 - 3:38PM
Dow Jones News
By Matt Wirz
Companies ranging from Oracle Corp. to Nike Inc. are borrowing
record amounts in the investment-grade bond market to build cash
before the full impact of the novel coronavirus hits the U.S.
economy. Much of the new debt is being purchased by an unusual type
of buyer: stock investors.
"There is a rotation from a number of nontraditional investors
out of other asset classes like high yield, distressed debt and
equities into investment grade," said Andrew Karp, head of
investment-grade capital markets at Bank of America Corp. "Among
other reasons, it's a place to hide from volatility."
Issuance of investment-grade bonds in the U.S. hit about $65.5
billion last week, roughly 10% higher than the previous high-water
mark reached in 2013, according to data from Dealogic.
Retail-oriented giants like Nike and Home Depot Inc. were among
the biggest initial borrowers -- issuing $6 billion and $5 billion,
respectively -- but the pace of new deals remains high, with names
like technology company Oracle and food-services provider Sysco
Corp. joining the fray Monday.
Nontraditional buyers are accounting for as much as one-quarter
of the orders for the new investment-grade bonds Bank of America is
selling, Mr. Karp said. The bank arranged Nike's deal, among
others.
Investment-grade bond prices fell sharply in March as some fund
managers sold out to meet client redemptions, pushing yields up and
making the debt more attractive to buyers like hedge funds that
normally focus on stocks. Many investors became more willing to buy
the bonds after the U.S. Federal Reserve announced its own plans to
start purchasing highly rated corporate debt to bolster the market.
Bond yields rise when prices fall.
The yield of a Bloomberg Barclays index of U.S. investment-grade
corporate bonds was about 3.7% on Friday, down from its recent peak
of 4.58% on March 20, but still well above its level of 2.43% at
the end of February, according to data from FactSet. The index
declined about 8.5% in March through Friday, a relatively steep
decline compared with a 15% fall in the much riskier stocks of the
S&P 500.
Foreign fund managers are also stepping into U.S. corporate
bonds because their hedging cost in dollars has declined even as
investment-grade bond yields have jumped. Bonds issued by banks
were among the biggest gainers Monday, with Wells Fargo & Co.'s
bond due 2051 jumping about 4.5 cents on the dollar to 122,
according to data from MarketAxess.
U.S. Government bond yields fell Monday morning despite gains in
stocks, showing that investors remain concerned about the virus's
long-term economic impact. The 10-year Treasury yield was around
0.624%, down from 0.744% Friday, according to data from
Tradeweb.
The U.S. dollar rose, in contrast to the U.K. pound and South
African rand, after both countries were hit by sovereign
credit-rating downgrades. The WSJ Dollar index, which measures the
U.S. currency against a basket of 16 foreign currencies was up 0.6%
to 93.73 Monday, rebounding slightly from its roughly 4% loss in
the previous four trading days.
Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 30, 2020 15:23 ET (19:23 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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