Overnight Data Preview

April 13th, 2016 1:03 pm

Via Robert Sinche at Amherst Pierpont Securities:

CHINA: Over the next week the March data on Aggregate Financing Activity will be released, and while the Bberg consensus expects a surge to CNY1,400bn after the February holiday period, the rebound in March FX reserves suggests that domestic bank lending to replace foreign borrowing likely slowed, so Bank Lending may fall short of the CNY1,100bn consensus.

AUSTRALIA: The always interesting Employment Report for March will following 3 months of a net -6.5K total drop that followed a 120.2K surge during Oct/Nov. Another weak report could begin talk of an RBA ease, although the Bberg consensus expects at 17.0K rebound.

NEW ZEALAND: The Manufacturing PMI index for March will follow readings above 55 for the last 4 months.

SINGAPORE: The Bberg consensus expecvts 1Q Real GDP growth will have slowed to 1.7% YOY, which would match a 14-quarter low.

EURO ZONE: The Bberg consensus expects the March Headline CPI to be confirmed at -0.1% YOY and the Core CPI to be confirmed at 1.0% YOY, although the Core CPI could be revised higher.

ITALY: The Bberg consensus expects the EU Harmonized Headline CPI will be confirmed at -0.3% YOY.

UK: The Bberg consensus expects NO CHANGE in Bank of England policy, with the Bank Rate held at 0.5% for the 85th consecutive month.

PPI

April 13th, 2016 11:07 am

Via Stephen Stanley at Amherst Pierpont Securities:

The March PPI figures were softer than expected, as both the total index and the core component declined by 0.1%.  The food component was much more negative than I had anticipated (down 0.9%), with the surprise mainly driven by large drops in fresh fruit and vegetable prices.  These categories often feed through to the CPI in the same month.  Energy costs rose by 1.8%, roughly in line with my expectations.  The core component was also marginally negative, pushed down by declines in financial services prices and wholesale trade services.  Nothing from the core PPI feeds through to the CPI, but a number of services line items are used to calculate the core PCE deflator.  These categories were mixed, but point to the core PCE deflator, if anything, running below the core CPI, as usual.

Speaking of the March CPI, it is due for release tomorrow.  I expect 0.2% increases for both the total and the core.  But they are very different  0.2%’s.  For the headline, my forecast worked out to a high 0.2%, almost rounding up to 0.3%.   However, at the margin, the weakness in the PPI for food led me to shave a hundredth or two off of the total, making me somewhat more comfortable at +0.2%.  For the core component, I also expect a 0.2% advance, but it’s a very low 0.2%.  In fact, my estimate on an unrounded basis is +0.16%, so I would not rule out a 0.1% rise tomorrow.  After back-to-back 0.3% jumps, the core CPI is due for a softer result.  In particular, apparel prices surged by 1.6% in February, and I look for a pullback (I have -0.9%) in March.  I also expect medical care costs to decelerate after back-to-back 0.5% rises in January and February.  If my projections are accurate, the year-over-year advances for the total and the core CPI will hold steady at 1.0% and 2.3% respectively.  Broadly, I look for the year-over-year increases for core inflation to stabilize for the next few months after surging in the past several months.  Year-over-year inflation may accelerate noticeably again in the second half of 2016, but the Fed should enjoy a brief respite during the spring.

Retail Sales

April 13th, 2016 10:42 am

Via TDSecurities:

TD SECURITIES DATAFLASH           

US: Retail Sales Round out Q1 on a Soft Footing

  • Retail Sales fell by 0.3% in March, which was weaker than the market had expected. Core metrics were better on an absolute basis, but also generally disappointed market expectations. Autos were the main pocket of weakness in March with incomplete positive offsets noted elsewhere.
  • This release will do little to counterbalance the well-entrenched narrative of Q1 weakness. In a less encouraging development, the handoff to Q2 for consumer spending looks rather muted. This will certainly keep the Fed sounding cautious, which is a view supported by weak PPI data also released this morning.     

Autos exerted a heavy drag on March retail sales, as the headline fell by 0.3% m/m which was much worse than what the market had expected (+0.1%) and our more conservative forecast (-0.1%). The 2.1% decline in auto sales left the ex-autos metric higher by 0.2% though pockets of weakness elsewhere (clothing and eating/drinking establishments stand out) left this series shy of the 0.4% the market had forecast. Turning to pockets of relative strength, higher gasoline prices motivated a 0.9% increase in sales at gasoline stations while building materials increased by 1.4% for the second consecutive month. Note that there were also positive revisions to the February data, with the headline now showing a flat print (previous: -0.1%) and the ex-autos & gas metric increasing from 0.3% to 0.6%.

                                          

This print solidifies the well-entrenched narrative of a very weak Q1 for the US economy. Our current tracking for annualized growth remains around 0.6%. What is arguably a greater source of concern, is that this print makes for a poor handoff to Q2 for consumer spending. For the Federal Reserve, who are balancing concern over the global backdrop with a softer spate of domestic data, momentum in growth heading into the middle of the year is quite important. This print therefore argues for continued caution and will place more emphasis on other parts of the economy to keep the recovery narrative entrenched.

10 Year Note Auction

April 13th, 2016 10:38 am

Via Ian Lyngen at   CRT Capital

We are optimistic about this afternoon’s 10-year auction and expect non-dealer interest to be significant (average is 74% for this benchmark) and see the risks skewed toward a stop-through.  This week’s recent back-up in yields has priced-in a solid concession for supply and the WI suggests a >10 bp pick-up off the recent low-yield marks. Foreign awards at the last four reopenings have edged higher to 26%, leaving overseas bidders as a key wildcard and one we suspect will be supportive in light of the volatility of global risk assets.  3s were well-received and the net paydown of $17 bn for this week’s trio of auctions will provided ample investable cash to fund supply.  Suggesting some caution, volumes this morning have been light with cash trading at 88% of the reopening auction-day norm with just a 28% marketshare vs. the 30% average.

• Recent 10-year auctions have met strong receptions with eleven of the last fourteen auctions stopping-through for an average of 0.8 bp vs. the tails averaging 0.5 bp.

• Foreign awards at 10-year reopenings have edged higher over the last four auctions, taking 26% or $5.4 bn at the last four auctions vs. 25% or $5.3 bn at the prior four. In addition, investment fund interest has increased over the same period, taking 45% or $9.4 bn vs. 42% or $8.8 bn prior.

• Indirect awards have increased, taking 63% at the last four reopening auctions vs. 58% at the prior four.  Over a comparable period, direct bidding has slipped to 11% vs. 12% prior.

* Maturities are high for this week’s trio of auctions at $73 bn, leaving a net paydown of -$17.0 bn – providing ample cash for potential reinvestment.  Largest net paydown since April 2010 – which saw 3s tail 0.4 bp, 10s stop-through 3.3 bp and 30s tail 0.7 bp.

• Technicals have turned bearish with momentum crossed in favor of higher yields from decidedly overbought conditions.  For initial support we have the 1.822% 21- and 40-day moving-average cross with the 1.86% volume-bulge beyond there.  For initial resistance we like the 1.745% 9-day moving-average followed by an opening gap at 1.689% to 1.698%.  Through there is the range-bottom at 1.684% and the recent low yield-close of 1.659%.

What to Watch Today

April 13th, 2016 6:48 am

Via Bloomberg:

WHAT TO WATCH:

* (All times New York)
* Economic Data
* 7:00am: MBA Mortgage Applications, April 8 (prior 2.7%)
* 8:30am: Retail Sales Advance m/m, March, est. 0.1%
(prior -0.1%)
* Retail Sales Ex Auto m/m, March, est. 0.4% (prior
-0.1%)
* Retail Sales Ex Auto and Gas, March, est. 0.3%
(prior 0.3%)
* Retail Sales Control Group, March, est. 0.4% (prior
0%)
* 8:30am: PPI Final Demand m/m, March, est. 0.2% (prior
-0.2%)
* PPI Ex Food and Energy m/m, March, est. 0.1% (prior
0%)
* PPI Ex Food, Energy, Trade m/m, March, est. 0.1%
(prior 0.1%)
* PPI Final Demand y/y, March, est. 0.3% (prior 0%)
* PPI Ex Food and Energy y/y, March, est. 1.3% (prior
1.2%)
* PPI Ex Food, Energy, Trade y/y, March (prior 0.9%)
* 10:00am: Business Inventories, Feb., est. -0.1% (prior
0.1%)
* Benchmark revisions to inventories data
* Central Banks
* 10:00am: Bank of Canada rate decision, est. 0.5% (prior
0.5%)
* 2:00pm: Federal Reserve Releases Beige Book
* Supply
* 1:00pm: U.S. to sell $20b 10Y notes in reopening

FX

April 13th, 2016 6:32 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

US Dollar Comes Back Bid

  • The US dollar is well bid in the Europe and is poised to start the North American session with the wind to its back
  • China’s March trade surplus was reported at $29.86 bln, down from $32.59 bln in February
  • The news stream in Europe has been light, and largely limited to the February industrial output report
  • The North American session features US retail sales and PPI, the Bank of Canada meeting, and the Beige Book later in the session
  • The Bank of Canada is widely expected to keep rates on hold
  • Brazil intervened aggressively yesterday, selling a total of 160k reverse swaps contracts to help contain the real’s rally

The dollar is mostly firmer against the majors.  The Antipodeans and sterling are outperforming, while the Swiss franc and the euro are underperforming.  EM currencies are mostly softer.  RUB, MYR, and TWD are outperforming while TRY and the CEE currencies are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was up nearly 2%, with the Nikkei rising 2.8%.  MSCI EM is up 1.4%, with Chinese markets up 1.4% too.  Euro Stoxx 600 is up over 2% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a higher open.  The 10-year UST yield is up 1 bp at 1.79%.  Commodity prices are mixed, with oil down over 1% even as copper is up modestly while gold is down nearly 1%.

The US dollar is well bid in the Europe and is poised to start the North American session with the wind to its back.  Despite firmer equity and industrial metal prices, most emerging market currencies are also succumbing to the rebounding greenback.  

The euro has yet to convincingly breakout of the range that has confined it this month.  That would require a break of the $1.1300 area.  However, as we have noted before, the two-year interest rate differential between the US and Germany (which does a fair job tracking the euro-dollar exchange rate) has been recovering in the dollar’s direction for several days, setting the stage for euro setback after repeatedly trying to convincing push through the $1.1450.  It may require a break of the $1.1270 area to lead more into thinking the euro has put in a top of some importance.  

The US dollar is also pushing higher against the Japanese yen.  The seven-day losing streak was snapped yesterday and today the greenback is trading at a four-day high above JPY109.  The JPY110 area is the next target.  The two-day gain for the dollar could be the largest since February and would seem to undermine the case for intervention.  It is a better two-way market.  However, as the decline in Japanese producer prices shows (-3.8% in March from -3.4% in February), serious challenges for the Japanese economy remain.  A couple of government advisers have called for more fiscal and monetary action.  

Global equities are advancing for the fourth straight session.  The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose for the sixth consecutive sessions and the 1.8% gain today is the most in the streak.  It gapped higher today and closed at its best level since the start of the year.  News that China’s exports and imports fell less than expected helped provide additional impetus.  Iron ore prices were up the daily limit in China and have now risen 11% over this week.  

China’s March trade surplus was reported at $29.86 bln, down from $32.59 bln in February.  The median forecast was for a larger surplus.  Exports, which reportedly fell 25.4% in February, rose 11.5% year-over-year in March, the most in a year.  The median guesstimate was for a 10% increase.  Imports fell 7.6% in March.  In February, they had fallen 13.8%.  The median forecast was for a 10.1% decline.  

The trade data provides another piece of data suggesting that the Chinese economy may be stabilizing.   China is expected to report Q1 GDP figures later this week.  The median forecast is that growth slowed to a 6.7% year-over-year pace from 6.8% in Q4.  Note that although the IMF revised down its forecast for world growth in its updated World Outlook, it did revise up its estimate for China’s GDP to 6.5% from 6.3%.  

Leaving aside the accuracy of Chinese data, one bone of contention may be the sharp increase in China’s steel exports.  The 9.98 mln metric tons exported represents a 30% increase from a year ago.  There is a concern in the US and Europe that China will seek to “dump” its excess steel capacity onto world markets, further depressing the industry, which has experienced both falling prices and jobs losses.  This is one factor that makes officials wary of yuan depreciation.  

Against the dollar, the yuan was fixed higher today, for the third consecutive session.  The dollar has moved broadly sideways against the yuan here in April and remains near its lowest level for this year.  That said, the dollar’s firmer tone against the majors and most emerging market currencies today warns of a weaker yuan tomorrow.  

The news stream in Europe has been light, and largely limited to the February industrial output report.  The 0.8% decline was a little more than expected and the January series was revised to show a 1.9% rise rather than 2.1%.  However, investor interest is focused on the more than 2% rise in the Dow Jones Stoxx 600, which if sustained would be the biggest gain in a month.  It is the fourth day of the advancing streak.  The gains are led by financials and materials, including energy.  

Comments about Italy’s new attempt to address the bad loan problem and recapitalization of several banks were whipsawed by the price action yesterday.  Italian bank shares had suffered mightily this year but rallied at the end of last week and Monday in anticipation of details of the government’s newest effort.  Bank shares opened higher yesterday, and comments were constructive, but as bank shares sold off, market commentary turned negative.  Italian bank shares are moving higher today.  

Although we too expressed doubts over the initial sketches of the program, we see much in the commentary that suggests too much pessimism.  For example, the reports have emphasized the roughly 360 bln euros of bad loans, but hardly a comment notes that Italian banks have made provisions for some 40-45%.  Moreover, it is easy to scoff at the five billion euro backstop fund as too small, but it is likely to be levered, and the extremely bad loans may be closer to 30-40 bln euros.  The Bank of Italy will issue its new quarterly bulletin next week, and there will be updated numbers.  

The North American session features US retail sales and PPI, the Bank of Canada meeting, and the Beige Book later in the session.  After yesterday’s unexpected 6.2 mln barrel oil build according to API, the official DOE estimate will be anxiously awaited.  US headline retail sales may be dampened by softer auto sales, but excluding autos, a 0.4% gain is expected.  The GDP component is expected to be up 0.4%.  If true, this would be the best reading since last November.  The much smaller than expected rise in import prices reported yesterday warns of the risk of a soft PPI report, but the retail sales data is more important.  Retail sales are about 40% of US household consumption, which in turn is roughly 70% of GDP.    

The Bank of Canada is widely expected to keep rates on hold.  Its economic assessment is more the focus.  Recent data has bene encouraging, and the central bank’s outlook may be lifted.  However, the strength of the Canadian dollar has much good news discounted.  

Brazil intervened aggressively yesterday, selling a total of 160k reverse swaps contracts to help contain the real’s rally.  Yet USD/BRL still closed lower and at multi-month lows just below 3.50.  Most of the gains are due to rising optimism regarding the impeachment vote, which local press reports say could be over by Sunday.  We continue to urge caution here, as Brazil is saddled with so many problems that cannot be solved by an impeachment alone.  Today’s broad-based dollar rebound should also sound a note of caution for Brazil bulls.  

Hungary central bank releases minutes from its March meeting.  Then, it surprised the markets with a 15 bp cut to 1.2%.  The next meeting is April 26, and another 15 bp cut to 1.05% is expected.  March CPI came in lower than expected at -0.2% y/y, the first deflationary reading since September.  Indeed, with deflation risks back in play, we think Hungary will continue cutting rates into mid-year.

Credit Stuff

April 13th, 2016 6:18 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Long VZ Issues Led Trading on Client Buying
2016-04-13 09:52:36.448 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $17.2b vs $13.4b Monday, $19.9b the previous Tuesday.
10-DMA $17.4b; 10-Tuesday moving avg $18b, 3rd highest since
2005,when the series began.

* 144a trading added $2.3b of IG volume vs $2.1b on Monday,
$2.6b last Tuesday

* The most active issues:
* VZ 4.40% 2034; client flows took 99% of volume, buying
2.6x selling
* VZ 4.862% 2046; client flows accounted for 86% of
volume, buying 3x selling
* LOW 2.50% 2026; client selling 5:3 over buying
* ABN 4.80% 2026 was most active 144a issue; client selling
2.3x buying

* Bloomberg US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS at 166.1 vs 168.4
* 2015-16 high/low: 220.8, a new wide since Jan. 2012, was
seen 2/11/2016 / 129.6
* 2014 high/low 144.7/102.3
* BofAML IG Master Index at +168 vs +169
* +221, the new wide for 2015/16 and widest level since
June 2012 was seen Feb. 11; +129, the tight for 2015-16
was seen Mar. 6
* 2014 range was +151/+106, tightest spread since July
2007
* Standard & Poor’s Global Fixed Income Research IG Index at
+214 vs +216; +262, the new wide going back to 2013, was
seen Feb. 11
* The widest spread recorded was +578 in Dec. 2008
* S&P HY spread at +736 vs +749; +947 seen Feb. 11 was the
widest spread since Oct. 2011
* All time wide was +1,754 in Dec. 2008
* Markit CDX.IG.26 5Y Index at 79.5 vs 81.2
* 124.7, a new wide since June 2012 was seen Feb. 11
* 2014 high/low was 76.1/55.0, the low for 2014 and the
lowest level since Oct 2007

* IG issuance totaled $13.15b Tuesday vs $7.45b Monday, pushes
2016 above $500b
* Last week’s Recap and Issuance Stats
* Note: subscribe bar in upper left corner
* YTD IG issuance $520.5b
* 250 issuers priced $458.305b in 423 tranches in 1Q, an
increase of 2% vs 1Q 2015; 1Q Recap & Issuance Stats

Credit Pipeline

April 13th, 2016 6:11 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: Finland to Price; OFC Files
2016-04-13 09:33:48.766 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Set to price today:

* Republic of Finland (FINL) Aaa/AA+, to price $bench Global
3Y, via managers Barc/GS/HSBC/JPM; guidance MS +13 area

Most recent updates:

* Corporate Office Properties (OFC) Baa3/BBB-, files debt
shelf; last issued in June 2015
* Sydney Airport Finance (SYDAU) Baa2/BBB, has mandated
BAML/JPM/Sco to arrange investor meetings commencing April
18; capital markets transaction may follow
* Tokyo Metropolitan Government (TOKYO) na/A+, mandated
Barc/BAML/JPM/Nom for investor meetings beginning April 18;
144a/Reg-S deal may follow
* Wal-Mart (WMT) Aa2/AA, as 2 April maturities totaling $2b;
last seen in June
* Kia Motors (KIAMTR) Baa1/A-, mandates BAML/C/HSBC/JPM/Nom to
arrange investor meetings from April 4; has not issued in
USD since 2011, has $500m maturing June 14
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A, to buy Valspar (VAL) Baa2/BBB
for about $9.3b
* Equity purchase will be financed with $8.3 billion of
new debt and $1 billion of cash, he said
* Company said it has committed bridge financing from
Citigroup

Recent Updates:

* Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Limited (ANZ) Aa2/AA-,
has mandated ANZ/C/HSBC/JPM to arrange investor
meetings/conference calls from March 10; USD 144A/Reg S
subordinated transaction may follow (March 10)
* Rogers Communications (RCICN) Baa1/BBB+, files $4b debt
shelf
* Philippines holding non-deal investor meetings in U.S. March
3-9; C/CS/DB/HSBC/MS/SCB/UBS to assist organization of
meetings
* Con Edison (ED) A3/A-, plans issuance of $1b-$1.5b long-term
debt
* IBM (IBM) Aa3/AA-, plans to acquire Truven Health Analytics
for $2.6b
* Mylan (MYL) Baa3/BBB- to acquire Meda (MEDAA) for about
$9.9b including debt
* Cash portion of deal to be financed via bridge facility
* Nasdaq (NDAQ) Baa3/BBB to acquire Marketwired from OMERS
Private Equity; no terms disclosed
* Deal to be funded via debt, cash on hand
* Duke Energy (A3/A-) to buy Piedmont Natural Gas (A2/A) for
$4.9b in cash; to finance the transaction with a combination
of debt, $500m-$750m of new equity and other cash sources;
fully underwritten bridge facility is in place with Barclays
to complete the transaction
* Deal funding may require $3b in new debt, BI says
* Abbott Labs (ABT) A2/A+, to purchase Alere (ALR) Caa1/CCC+,
for $56/shr; co. says it will fund buy with debt; Feb. 1
statement
* Alere’s net debt, $2.6b, to be assumed, refinanced;
Abbott seeks up to $9b bridge loan for deal
* Dominion Resources (D) Baa2/A-, to buy Questar (STR) A2/A,
for $25/shr cash; RBC/Mizuho providing financing, co.
expects to sell $1.5b debt for purchase; Feb. 1 statement
* Corporacion Andina de Fomento (CAF) Aa3/AA-, investor call
Jan. 28, via BofAML/C/DB/HSBC; Global $bench offering may
follow; reported in November it plans to raise $3.5b in
credit markets this year

Updates:

* GM Financial said in an investor presentation that global
senior notes funding could be ~$10b-$13b this yr vs $11b
last yr; co. priced $2.75b on Feb. 25
* Shire (SHPLN) to buy Baxalta (BXLT) Baa2/BBB, for $45.57 per
Baxalta share, representing an aggregate consideration of
~$32b
* Shire May Have Debt Capacity to Pay 45% Cash for BXLT at
$48: BI
* Shire has secured an $18b fully underwritten bank
facility
* Shire launches $18b Baxalta acquisition loan to
syndication
* CVS Health (CVS) Baa1/BBB+, has ability to raise $10b
incremental debt
* Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) Baa2/BBB to buy Rite Aid
(RAD) B2/B for $17.2b; Walgreens sees financing deal via
existing cash, assuming existing RAD debt and new debt
issuance
* In Depth story on possible debt
* Walgreens $4.5b loan planned to take out part of $12.8b
bridge
* Filed automatic mixed shelf; last issued in Nov. 2014
* GE could add more than $25b of debt for M&A and buybacks; it
views its industrial balance sheet as having more than $20b
of flexibility

* The following names may be added to calendar in coming days,
weeks, months:

M&A-related:

* Molson Coors (TAP) Baa2/BBB-, to acquire Miller Coors for
$12b in cash with fully committed financing in place;
expects new debt portion of financing to be 75-80%, ~$9b
* TAP last priced a USD deal in April 2012
* Pfizer (PFE) A1/AA, completed its ~$16.8b acquisition of
Hospira (HSP) Ba1/BBB-; Pfizer said in Feb. that it expected
2/3 of deal to be financed by cash, 1/3 via new debt
* Air Liquide (AIFP) na/A+, acquiring Airgas (ARG) Baa2/BBB,
for $13.4b; AIFP has committed bridge financing, plans to
refinance via capital raising in EU3b-EU4b range in
combination of USD/EUR long-term bonds
* CFO said Nov. 18 that it will try to finance at 10 yrs
rather than at 5 yrs; planned bond sales to be “more or
less in line with that of Air Liquide today”
* Dell (Ba2/BB+) plans to buy EMC (A1/A) in deal valued at
$67b; debt financing commitment of $49.5b via CS, JPM,
Barclays, BofAML, C, DB, GS, RBC
* $10b pro-rata loan portion of financing launched Jan. 27
* Emera (EMACN) na/BBB, to acquire Teco Energy (TE) na/BBB+,
has fully committed $6.5b bridge loan; received approval for
deal from Teco holders on Dec. 3
* Avago Technologies (AVGO) to buy Broadcom (BRCM) A2/A- for
$37b; filing shows debt commitment letter including $4.25b
TLA, $11.25b TLB, $500m RCF, as much as $3b under another
TLB entered
* Anthem (ANTM) Baa2/A- to acquire Cigna (CI) Baa1/A; bridge
pact of as much as $26.5b via BofAML/CS/UBS
* Aetna (AET) Baa1/A to acquire Humana (HUM) Baa3/BBB+ for
$37b cash/stock; sees financing to include ~$16b new term
loans, debt and commercial paper
* Teva (TEVA) Baa1/BBB+ to acquire Allergan Generics for
$40.5b; co. says it’s working towards satisfying conditions
to close deal by end of 1Q but “possible” closing may be
“slightly delayed”
* Co. entered bridge agreement in Sept. for up to $27b in
loans and separate commitment letter for up to $6.75b
loans

Shelf Filings:

* National Oilwell Varco (NOV) A2/A+ filed debt shelf on Nov.
13; last seen in Nov. 2012
* ITT (ITT) Baa3/BBB-, files automatic mixed securities shelf;
last priced a new deal in 2009, has just 1 issue outstanding
* British Telecommunications (BRITEL) Baa2/BBB files; last
issued in Feb. 2014
* General Dynamics (GD) A2/A files; last issued in 2012 with
$2.4b 3-part deal
* Target Corp (TGT) A2/A, files automatic mixed shelf; last
priced a new issue in June 2014

China Bond Defaults

April 13th, 2016 6:08 am

Via the FT:

Chinese bond defaults by state-owned enterprises are on the rise, heightening investor anxiety that is creating difficulties for other companies aiming to sell debt.

Since the start of April, two SOEs have missed scheduled bond payments, while a third suspended trading of its notes as it warned of difficulty in making a payment due next month.

For years bond defaults were unheard of in China’s onshore corporate bond market, with the government reliably stepping in to bail out troubled issuers. The first-ever onshore corporate bond default occurred in March 2014 when privately-owned Chaori Solar missed an interest payment.

The first SOE default, by power equipment manufacturer Baoding Tianwei, came last April. Now defaults are accelerating, as the sharp slowdown in Chinese manufacturing and construction decimates cash flows in industries like steel and coal.

The defaults are also creating fundraising difficulties for other would-be borrowers. In the first 12 days of April, at least 18 bond issues worth a combined Rmb17.8bn ($2.8bn) have been cancelled, according to a tally of public filings by China Business News. That follows 62 cancellations worth Rmb44.8bn in March. In total, 12 publicly issued bonds have defaulted since 2014, according to Haitong Securities.

“The sudden chill in the primary market last week and the recent outbreak of credit risk incidents are closely related,” Lian Haixia, analyst at China Chengxin International Ratings, wrote on Tuesday. “The continuous fermenting of credit risk has sparked a negative mood among investors.”

The speed with which recent defaults have emerged has surprised the market. Dongbei Special Steel Group, owned by the government of Liaoning province in China’s rust-belt northeast, defaulted on Rmb1bn in paper that matured on April 5.

Those notes were sold three months ago. Dongbei Special previously missed a Rmb852m bond payment due on March 28, days after disclosing that Yang Hua, chairman, was found dead by hanging at his home. The company has another Rmb2bn in notes due this year.

Government-owned China Railway Materials said on Monday that it had asked to suspend trading of its bonds, as it warned that its business was in decline. The company said it was working on a plan to ensure debt repayment. China Railway, which sold six-month paper as recently as January 26, has Rmb1bn in bonds maturing on May 17.

Shanxi Huayu Energy, a unit of central government-owned China National Coal Group, defaulted on Rmb638m in principal and interest due April 6 on paper sold a year ago. The company has another Rmb1.5bn in bonds maturing later this year.

Many economists say SOE defaults are healthy for the long-term development of China’s debt market because they reduce moral hazard caused by the widespread assumption of a limitless government backstop for the bond market.

“The government’s willingness to provide aid for enterprises is gradually declining. SOE operating results are broadly in decline, and the government’s aid resources are limited,” Li Qilin, head of bond research at Minsheng Securities in Beijing, wrote in late March.

Yet bailouts have not disappeared. On Tuesday, Shanxi Huayu said it would pay out on its overdue bonds this week after receiving a capital injection from its parent company. Central government-owned China National Erzhong Group received a bailout last year, days after warning of imminent default.

Additional reporting by Ma Nan

Twitter: @gabewildau

Eurozone IP

April 13th, 2016 6:03 am

Via the FT:

Today’s industrial production data for Europe fell shy of expectations, with production falling by 0.8 per cent on the month in February, a tad worse than the 0.7 per cent decline expected.

The reading was “poor”, said Pantheon Macroeconomics, but perhaps not a surprise, given the 1.9 per cent jump in January.

(Chart: Eurostat.)

Pantheon wrote:

A downbeat report, but not catastrophic given the jump in output in January. A 10.5% month-to-month crash in Ireland and a 4.4% decline in Greece weighed on the headline, but production also fell in the major economies. Across sectors, the decline was concentrated in consumer goods and energy production, while capital goods production fell only marginally and intermediate goods output was flat. The poor headline, however, does not change the story that production ex-construction likely rose strongly in the first quarter. Assuming no change in output in March—a fair bet—output rose 1% quarter-on-quarter in Q1, up from a 0.4% rise in Q4, supporting GDP growth.

More here from Eurostat.