The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Decade of Debt’

O With interest rates at rock-bottom levels, companies found it cheaper than ever to tap corporate bond market

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NEW YORK: Whatever nickname ultimately gets attached to the now-ending Twentytens, on Wall Street and across Corporate America it arguably should be tagged as the “Decade of Debt.”

With interest rates locked in at rockbottom levels, courtesy of the Federal Reserve’s easy-money policy after the financial crisis, companies found it cheaper than ever to tap the corporate bond market to load up on cash.

Bond issuance by American companies topped US$1 trillion (RM4.12 trillion) in each year of the decade that began on Jan 1, 2010, and ends on today at midnight, an unmatched run, according to SIFMA, the securities industry trade group.

In all, corporate bond debt outstandin­g rocketed more than 50% and will soon top US$10 trillion, versus about US$6 trillion at the end of the previous decade.

The largest US companies, those in the S&P 500 Index, account for roughly 70% of that, nearly US$7 trillion. What did they do with all that money?

It’s a truism in corporate finance that cash needs to be either “earning or returning”, that is, being put to use growing the business or getting sent back to shareholde­rs.

As it happens, American companies did a lot more returning than earning with their cash during the ‘Tens. In the first year of the decade, companies spent roughly US$60 billion more on dividends and buying back their own shares than on new facilities, equipment and technology.

By last year, that gap had mushroomed to more than US$600 billion, and the gap in 2019 could be just as large, especially given the constraint on capital spending from the trade war. The buy-back boom is credited with helping to fuel a decade-long bull market in US equities.

Meanwhile, capital expenditur­e growth has been choppy at best over 10 years. This is despite a massive fiscal stimulus package by the Trump administra­tion, marked by the reduction in the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%, that it had predicted would boost business spending.

One byproduct of stock buy-backs is they make companies look more profitable by Wall Street’s favourite performanc­e metric, earnings per share. than they would otherwise appear to be.

With companies purchasing more and more of their own stock, S&P 500 EPS has roughly doubled in 10 years. Meanwhile, net profit has risen by half that, and far more erraticall­y. – Reuters

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