Edmonton Journal

Investors enjoy big returns from roaring bond market

- JOE RENNISON and ERIC PLATT

Bonds sold since March by blue-chip U.S. companies including Northrop Grumman Corp., Intel Corp. and Coca-cola Co. have surged in value, as investors scrambled to get hold of the unusually high coupons offered during the most intense phase of the pandemic.

Intel’s Us$1-billion bond maturing in 2060, launched just before the U.S. Federal Reserve announced sweeping measures to support the corporate bond market, has soared to more than US144 cents on the dollar from its sale price of just over US98 cents, according to data from Marketaxes­s. At the time it was sold the bond was offering a yield of more than five per cent — roughly four times better than the longest-maturity U.S. Treasury yield.

Morgan Stanley Inc.’s Us$2-billion 30-year bond, issued near the bottom of the bond market sell-off on March 19 with a yield of 5.6 per cent, has risen to US148 cents on the dollar. Such returns are similar to those on offer in the equity market, where the benchmark S&P 500 index is up 34 per cent from its March nadir.

“The price moves are shockingly big,” said Matt King, global macro strategist at Citigroup Inc. “But they’re the natural consequenc­e of one of the most abrupt sell-offs ever being followed by easily the most abrupt rally back.”

Bonds — especially highly rated, investment-grade bonds — rarely deliver such rapid returns, as investors typically buy them for steady income rather than price appreciati­on. Such wild swings are a sign of investors clamouring for the high interest rates that issuers were pushed into paying as the market convulsed.

Now, the Intel bond yields just three per cent and Morgan Stanley 3.1 per cent, in line with the yields on bonds issued more recently.

Longer-dated bonds, which dominate the league table of best-performing issues, are more susceptibl­e to large price movements. But even shorter-dated debt has offered eye-catching returns — including some securities issued by lower-rated companies.

A Us$500-million five-year bond sold by junk-rated Avis Budget Group Inc. at the beginning of May rose to US117 cents on the dollar this week. Embattled cruise operator Viking Cruises Co.’s Us$675-million five-year bond rose to US115 cents, while a 10-year bond sold by Ford in April, a month after the car company was cut to junk, has climbed to US119 cents.

A turning point for the market came on March 23 when the Fed stepped in to support the corporate bond market, going as far as pledging to begin buying companies’ debt to help support prices.

Although the Fed has not yet fully rolled out its bond-buying program, investors have poured almost US$40 billion into investment-grade bond funds since the central bank’s announceme­nt, according to data from EPFR Global. That in turn has helped fuel a record amount of bond issuance.

An analysis of US$965 billion of bonds sold in the U.S. since the beginning of March by the bond-trading platform Marketaxes­s, carried out for the Financial Times, showed that the debt is now trading at more than US$70 billion above its face value.

“If you were willing to lend to companies when markets were illiquid and there was a tremendous amount of uncertaint­y then you’ve been rewarded for that,” said Ashish Shah, head of fixed income at Goldman Sachs Asset Management.

GSAM’S investment-grade credit fund has risen 20 per cent since March 23, lifting year-to-date returns to about four per cent, according to data from Morningsta­r Direct.

Other funds have rebounded. American Funds’ Us$1.2-billion corporate bond fund stands out as one of the best-performing investment-grade corporate bond funds tracked by Morningsta­r, up 8.8 per cent for the year.

At the bleakest point in March it was down 7.5 per cent.

Pimco Investment Management Co.’s investment-grade credit bond fund, one of the largest of its kind with close to US$18 billion under management, has bounced back from a year-to-date loss of more than 12 per cent in March to a gain of 1.6 per cent.

Overall, investment-grade credit has returned 15.7 per cent since the Fed’s interventi­on, according to an index run by Ice Data Services.

Still, a number of analysts say the market has further to run, despite the yield on investment-grade bonds closing in on a record low set at the beginning of this year, according to the Ice index.

Dovish monetary policy is expected to keep interest rates low, meaning that investors have been obliged to venture into riskier corporate bonds to eke out higher returns. Furthermor­e, as companies begin to emerge from the downturn caused by the spread of coronaviru­s, an element of caution and conservati­ve management is likely to set in, said analysts.

That means cash is conserved, new bond sales drop off and existing debt is paid down, benefiting investors in the market.

“What you are witnessing is the early stages of a new credit cycle,” said Viktor Hjort, global head of credit strategy at BNP Paribas. “That is when you can get double-digit returns in investment-grade credit.”

If you were willing to lend to companies when markets were illiquid … then you’ve been rewarded for that.

 ?? VALENTYN OGIRENKO/REUTERS FILES ?? An Uber Eats food-delivery courier waits for an order in Kyiv in May. Consumers stuck at home have boosted that business globally by 52 per cent to US$4.68 billion in the first quarter. Uber is now turning to expanding grocery delivery service in Latin America.
VALENTYN OGIRENKO/REUTERS FILES An Uber Eats food-delivery courier waits for an order in Kyiv in May. Consumers stuck at home have boosted that business globally by 52 per cent to US$4.68 billion in the first quarter. Uber is now turning to expanding grocery delivery service in Latin America.
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