Vancouver Sun

Buyers take a chance in bond market backed by credit debt

- ALLISON MCNEELY

The riskier waters of Canada’s market for bonds backed by credit-card debt are drawing yield-hungry investors — even as household borrowing is at record levels.

In one asset-backed security deal this week sold by Eagle Credit Card Trust, the lower-rated portions received about double the number of typical buyers, according to people with knowledge of the transactio­n that totalled $250 million.

The riskiest notes, backed by credit card loans made by a Canadian bank, yield about 2.3 per centage points more than comparable government securities, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Meanwhile, similarly rated corporate bond yield about 1.45 per centage points more than equivalent government debt, Bank of America Corp. data show.

“People are now looking for yield,” Rohan Thiru, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Canoe Financial, said from Toronto. “It’s more of a recent phenomenon where every other credit has rallied so much, they’re saying where can we find value? And they’re finding value in credit card asset-backed securities.” It was the first Canadian credit card asset-backed sale since May.

The demand for the securities comes as Canadian central bankers remain concerned about record consumer debt levels, which totals around $2.1 trillion. The ratio of debt to disposable income is also at an alltime high, at around 170 in the second quarter. Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz late last month cited high household indebtedne­ss as a reason to proceed “cautiously ” in raising rates further.

So far, Canadians continue to pay their bills. Around 45 per cent of Canadian credit-card receivable­s get repaid in full every month, based on asset-backed securities data, according to Fitch Ratings.

Those figures may be encouragin­g investors looking at Canadian credit card asset-backeds. The BBB portion of Eagle Credit Card Trust deal found around five buyers, where one or two would be more typical, according to people familiar with the transactio­n. The credit card loans in the deal were made by President’s Choice Bank, which is also collecting payments.

A spokeswoma­n did not immediatel­y comment.

For the top-rated portion, 36 investors bought in, creating so much demand that most money managers only got about five to 10 per cent of the securities they ordered, said the people, who asked not to be identified because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the transactio­n.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Bank of Montreal, and Royal Bank of Canada were lead managers on the deal. All three declined to comment.

Another reason for the securities’ higher yield may be that they are less liquid than corporate bonds, said Jeff Sujitno, a portfolio manager at IA Clarington Investment­s Inc. in Toronto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada