Convexity Crowd Crazed

November 30th, 2016 10:04 am

Via TDSecurites:

§  Given the 50bp move higher in rates over the last few weeks, we analyze MBS convexity risks. Even though the structure of the mortgage market has changed significantly from the pre-crisis period due to Fed ownership and GSE conservatorship, we think that there are still some holders of MBS convexity risk that would need to hedge the duration extension of their portfolios due to the sharp move higher in rates.

§  We estimate paying needs of $46bn 10yr equivalents due to the 50bp rise in rates since the election. The peak of MBS convexity is about 50bp higher from here, and we see paying needs of $10bn in 10yr equivalents for every 10bp rise in rates until the primary mortgage rate gets to 4.5%. Any further increase in rates above 4.5% should result in less convexity selling.

§  Convexity paying should argue for higher rates led by the belly of the curve, wider 5-10yr swap spreads, higher levels of implied vol and richening of the payer skew. We suspect some of this flow has gone through, even though the move in swap spreads looks counterintuitive. Even though convexity paying should have move spreads wider, the flow was more than offset by fears of higher deficits (which should tighten spreads).

FX

November 29th, 2016 6:42 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Dollar Comes Back Mostly Firmer, but Focus is Elsewhere

  • The dollar is firmer but confined to yesterday’s ranges
  • The focus today is on OPEC, which is struggling to reach an agreement and South Korea, where the President is offering to resign to avoid impeachment
  • Despite fear of the consequences of this weekend’s Italian referendum, Italian stocks, including banks, and bonds are outperforming today

The dollar is mostly firmer, but the major currencies are within yesterday’s ranges.  What had looked like a possible deeper dollar correction is turning into a consolidative phase that may be sufficient to alleviate the over-extended technical condition. Equities are lower. Of note, the Topix  12-day advance was snapped with a minor loss of less than 0.1%.   The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index is off 0.25% to snap a three-day advance.  The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is off fractionally to extend yesterday’s decline.    The MSCI Emerging Market equity index is lower by 0.25%, after initially building on yesterday’s advance to reach a two-week high.   The South African rand is the weakest of majors, while the Chinese yuan, which was fixed higher by the PBOC for the second session, is the strongest of the emerging market currencies, gaining almost 0.3%.   European bonds firmer, led by a 6 bp decline in Italy’s 10-year yield.  French bonds are also outperforming German bunds, narrowing the premium from a two-year peak.  The US 10-year yield is firm near 2.33%.  

The US dollar correctly lowered yesterday, but most of the selling was over by the end of the Asian session, and the greenback steadied in Europe and North America.  The dollar is firm against the euro and yen but within yesterday’s broad trading ranges.  The Australian and Canadian dollar’s gains from yesterday are being pared.  

Sterling is an exception.  It is firmer, following news that mortgage approvals rose more than expected in October to stand at the highest since March, while household credit increased GBP1.6 bln.   The Bank of England noted that the effective interest rate on new mortgages fell 11 bp in October to 2.16%, the lowest since at least 2004.  However, even with the upticks sterling has been confined to yesterday’s ranges.  

German states have reported preliminary November CPI figures, and national estimate will be reported shortly.  The EU-harmonized measure is expected to rise 0.1% to lift the year-over-year rate to 0.8%.  It would match the strongest pace since June 2014.  It finished last year at 0.2%.  France reported Q3 GDP rose 0.2%, in line with Q2.  However, Q4 began on a firmer note, with October consumer spending jumping 0.9%, threefold more than the Bloomberg median, tainted a little by the downward revision to the September series to -0.4% from -0.2%.    

Sweden also reported Q3 GDP.  The 0.5% expansion matched expectations, though the year-over-year rate slowed to 2.8% from a revised 3.6%.  Exports rose 1.3%, and domestic consumption rose 0.4%.  Investment was flat.  A surge of refugees last year helped boost spending, while the Riksbank is pursuing aggressive, unorthodox monetary policy.  

Japan reported strong employment and consumption figures, suggest Q4 is also off to a firm start.  Although the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.0%, the details were encouraging.  The job-to-applicant ratio ticked up 1.40, which is a new high since 1991.  The number of unemployed slipped below two million for the first time since February 1995.  Separately, Japan reported that retail sales jumped 2.5% in October, which lifted the year-over-year rate from -1.9% in September to -0.1%.   Overall household spending improved from -2.1% in September from a year ago to -0.4% in October.   This matches the smallest contraction since April.  

However, the markets’ focus is elsewhere.  Investors are finding it difficult to get a read on OPEC.  Although a deal may be elusive, as Russia now says it won’t attend the Wednesday meeting in Vienna, Iran and Saudi Arabia do not look that far apart.  The latest reports suggest Saudi’s wanted it to freeze output at a little more than 3.7 mln barrels a day, and the Iranians wanted 3.975 mln.  A compromise has been suggested at 3.795 mln barrels.  Iran and Iraq are also disputing the methodology to determine how the cuts should be distributed.  The front-month Brent contract is off 1.5% near $47.50, while the front-month light sweet contract is off a little more at $46.25.  

The other development drawing attention today is in South Korea, where the beleaguered President Park Geun-hye has offered to resign apparently in an effort to derail impeachment efforts.   Part of the constitutional challenge of the succession is that Park dismissed her prime minister and finance ministers earlier this month to stem the influence-peddling scandal.  The prospect of a resolution helped steady the Korean won and local stocks.  The Kospi posted the smallest of gains, while MSCI Asia-Pacific Index snapped a three-day advance.  

On the other hand, news that South African President Zuma managed to fend off critics within the executive committee of his own party who seek his resignation, coupled with some profit-taking in the metals has seen the rand give back yesterday’s gains in full.  The rand is the weakest of the emerging market currencies, off a little more than 1.5%.  

The concern that was evident yesterday over this weekend’s Italian referendum appears to have eased.  Italian bonds are the best performing in Europe today, with 10-year yields off five bp, and Italian shares are leading the major bourses higher with a 0.75% gain, helped by a 2% rally in bank shares.  Yesterday Italian banks shares were off nearly 4% to extend their downdraft to four sessions and 10 of 11 sessions.  Increasing, it seems, that investors recognize that even if the referendum loses, as the polls universally point to, does not mean that Italy leaves the EU or the EMU.  There are many intervening steps.  

The US economic calendar picks up today following yesterday’s news of a much stronger than expected Dallas manufacturing survey (to 10.2 from -1.5), which was the strongest in more than two years as oil sector investment is thought to have bottomed out.  The US reports its second look at Q3 GDP.  It is expected to tick up to 3% from 2.9% mostly on the back of stronger consumption.  S&P CoreLogic will report house prices, and the Conference Board’s measure of November consumer confidence is expected to jump from 98.6 in October back above 100.  NY Fed President Dudley talks about the Puerto Rico economy early in the North American session, while Governor Powell speaks early afternoon.  The ADP report, October consumption and income figures, and Chicago PMI will be released tomorrow, and the Beige Book will be released ahead of the mid-December FOMC meeting.

Some Corporate Bond Stuff

November 29th, 2016 6:38 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: 3rd Highest Monday Volume on Record
2016-11-29 11:12:33.741 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $16.9b vs $1.6b Friday, $16.5b last Monday. It was the
3rd highest Monday session volume since record keeping began in
2005.

* 10-DMA $15.6b; 10-Monday moving avg $15b
* 144a trading added $2b of IG volume vs $177m Friday, $2.7b
last Monday

* Trace most active issues:
* 5 of the 6 top issues were 2017 maturities from GD, CAT,
DE, TRPCN
* MS 2.625% 2021 was 3rd with client buying 2.3x selling
* DELL 6.02% 2026 was the most active 144a issue; client
trades took 84% of volume

* Bloomberg Barclays US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS unchanged
at 130; 128, a new low for the year and the lowest level
since May 2015, was seen Nov. 15
* 2016 wide/tight: 215 (a new wide since Jan. 2012)/128
* 2015 wide/tight: 171/122
* 2014 wide/tight: 137/97
* All time wide/tight back to 1989: 555 (Dec. 2008)/54
(March 1997)

* Current markets vs early Monday:
* 2Y 1.111% vs 1.155%
* 10Y 2.330% vs 2.366%
* DOW futures +23 vs +44
* Oil $46.10 vs $47.45
* ¥en 112.53 vs 112.83

* IG issuance totaled $3.5b Monday
* November totals $69.3b; YTD $1.55T

Credit Pipeline

November 29th, 2016 6:36 am

Via Bloomberg:

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

* BPCE SA (BPCEGP) A2/A, to price $benchmark 2-part deal, via
managers GS/HSBC/MS/Natix/RBC
* 5Y, IPT +115 area
* 10Y, IPT +140 area
* Rentenbank (RENTEN) Aaa/AAA, to price $benchmark Global 5Y,
via Barc/HSBC/RBC/Sco; guidance MS +32 area

* In the 2 weeks following Thanksgiving 2015, $65b was priced.
In 2014, in the week following Thanksgiving, a whopping $54b
was priced.

LATEST UPDATES:

* Allstate (ALL) A3/A-, to buy SquareTrade for $1.4b using
cash and debt issuance; ALL has not issued since 2013
* Analog Devices (ADI) A3/BBB, to hold investor calls today,
via BAML/CS/JPM/MUFG; last seen in December, it has just 3
issues outstanding
* Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) Aaa/AAA
* Actelion Weighs Combination With Parts of J&J: FT
* Constellation Brands (STZ) Ba1/BBB-, scheduled investor
calls for Nov. 21-22, via BAML; deal may follow
* $1b share repurchase authorized Nov. 21
* Fitch expects Constellation to refi $700m of upcoming
maturities
* Dr. Pepper Snapple (DPS) Baa1/BBB+, to buy Bai Brands for
$1.7b; deal to be financed through new unsecured notes and
short term commercial paper.
* ACWA Power, hires banks for investor meetings from Nov. 23;
a 144a/Reg-S offering with IG ratings may follow
* Scentre Group (SCGAU) A1/A, to hold investor meetings Dec.
5-8, via BAML/JPM
* Avnet (AVT) Baa3/BBB-, hired BAML/JPM for investor calls to
take place today; reported acquisition of majority stake in
Hackster Nov. 14
* Adani Ports (ADSEZ) Baa3/BBB-, holding investor meetings
from Nov. 13, via BAML/Barc/C/SCB; 144a/Reg-S deal may
follow
* Puget Sound Energy (PSD) A2/A-, filed an $800m debt shelf;
utilities often follow the close of the big industry
conference
* General Electric Co (GE) A1/AA-, to combine oil and gas
business with Baker Hughes (BHI) Baa1/A; GE to borrow $7.4b
of incremental leverage to fund the deal, co. said in
conference call
* Dow Chemical (DOW) Baa2/BBB, filed debt shelf; last issued
in Sept. 2014
* Qualcomm (QCOM) A1/A+; ~$47b NXP Semiconductor (NXPI)
Ba2/BBB-, acq
* Sees funding deal with cash, $11b new debt (Oct. 27)
* Rockwell Collins (COL) A3/A-, to buy B/E Aerospace (BEAV)
Ba2/BB+, for $8.3b in cash, stock, assumption of debt
* COL sees financing cash portion of deal with debt
financing; plans to pay down $1.5b of new debt by end of
its FY19
* Moody’s and S&P said COL’s rating may be cut to the mid-
BBB range following completion of the BEAV acquisition
* AT&T (T) Baa1/BBB+ to buy Time Warner (TWX) Baa2/BBB for
$85b in cash, stock deal; cash portion will be financed with
new debt, cash on hand
* $40b bridge loan in place
* T may be cut by Moody’s; any potential downgrade would
be limited to one notch
* European Stability Mechanism (ESM) Aa1/na/AAA, mandates
Barc/C/DB/JPM to advise on its USD issuance program
* First ESM USD transaction scheduled for 2H 2017, subject
to market conditions
* ConAgra (CAG) Baa2/BBB-, could borrow up to $2.5b for
acquisitions
* Province of Nova Scotia (NS Gov) Aa2/A+ , filed Friday a
$1.25b debt shelf; last issued in USD in 2010, has $500m
maturing January
* Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power (KOHNPW) Aa2/AA, mandates BNP/C
for investor meetings Oct. 18-20
* Hyundai Capital Services (HYUCAP) Baa1/A-, to hold investor
meetings from Oct.17, via C/HSBC/Nom
* Darden Restaurants (DRI) Baa3/BBB, filed debt shelf, last
seen in 2012
* Darden announced a new $500m share buyback program in
its 1Q earnings release
* Yes Bank (YESIN) Baa3/na, plans to raise $500m by year’s end
* Republic of Namibia (REPNAM) Baa3/BBB-, to hold non-deal
investor meetings Oct. 7-13, via Barc/JPM/StanBk
* Asciano (AIOAU) Baa3/BBB-, names ANZ/BNP/Miz for investor
meetings Oct. 10-28; it is a non-deal roadshow; last priced
a USD deal in 2011
* Western Union (WU) Baa2/BBB, filed debt shelf; last issued
Nov. 2013 following Oct. 2013 filing
* Nafin (NAFIN) A3/BBB+; mandates BofAML, HSBC for investor
meetings Sept. 27-28; USD-denominated deal may follow
* Analog Devices (ADI) A3/BBB; ~$13.1b Linear Technology acq
* $5b loan received after $11.6b bridge (Sept. 26)

MANDATES/MEETINGS

* Banco Inbursa (BINBUR) –/BBB+/BBB+; mtgs Sept. 7-12
* Woolworths (WOWAU) Baa2/BBB; investor call Sept. 7
* Sydney Airport (SYDAU) Baa2/BBB; investor calls Sept. 6-7

M&A-RELATED

* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-; ~$66b Monsanto acq
* Hybrid bond sales, approx. EU5b convertible bond
planned; part of $57b bridge (Sept. 14)
* Danaher (DHR) A2/A; ~$4b Cepheid acq
* Sees financing deal via cash, debt issuance (Sept. 6)
* Couche-Tard (ATDBCN) Baa2/BBB; ~$4.4b CST Brands acq
* Expects to sell USD bonds (Aug. 22)
* Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) Baa3/BBB; ~$1b LDR acq
* Plans $750m issuance post-completion (June 7)
* Great Plains Energy (GXP) Baa2/BBB+; ~$12.1b Westar acq
* $8b committed debt secured for deal (May 31)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)

SHELF FILINGS

* Starbucks (SBUX) A2/A-; debt shelf; has $400m maturing Dec.
5 (Sept. 15)
* Brunswick (BC) Baa3/BBB-; automatic mixed shelf; last issued
in 2013 (Sept. 6)

OTHER

* Israel Electric (ISRELE) Baa2/BBB-; said to hire C, JPM for
at least $500m bond sale in 4Q (Aug. 8)
* Visa (V) A1/A+; CFO says will issue $2b debt for buybacks by
yr end (July 21)

Just Don’t Enforce It (and Best Acronym RENT-D)

November 28th, 2016 7:19 am

Via WSJ:

How to Kill the Volcker Rule? Don’t Enforce It

Big banks hoping a Trump administration will defang one of Dodd-Frank’s most-controversial pieces

News

Big banks spent years railing against the so-called Volcker rule, which bars them from making wagers with their own money. Now, with the imminent arrival of the Trump administration, some banks and lawyers are eyeing a new way to defang the rule: Simply stop enforcing it.

The rule, named for former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, was one of the most controversial pieces of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial-overhaul law, passed in the wake of the financial crisis. The provision was intended to rein in reckless risk-taking by big banks, but critics complain that it is unduly burdensome to comply with and deprives them of a lucrative money-making opportunity.

The election of Donald Trump as president poses a threat to the rule, as his campaign promised to dismantle the Dodd-Frank law.

Getting rid of the Volcker rule would require an act of Congress. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R., Tex.) proposed to repeal the rule this year as part of a package of changes to Dodd-Frank. But repealing the rule could be difficult, likely encountering a roadblock in the Senate, where the support of some Democrats would be necessary to ensure passage.

But neutering the Volcker rule, which took effect in July 2015, would be comparatively easy.

While the rule is enshrined in the Dodd-Frank law, the provision instructed regulators to write the rule’s fine print. That process required several years of negotiations among five independent regulatory agencies.

Even so, enforcing the rule remains subject to considerable interpretation. Financial firms are allowed to trade in stocks and bonds so long as their holdings do not exceed the “reasonably expected near-term demand” of their customers. But just how so-called RENT-D is calculated is subjective; there isn’t one single formula.

That subjectivity has some industry officials optimistic that regulators appointed by the new Trump administration will change their agencies’ interpretations of the rule or tell the officials charged with enforcing it to hold back.

 

“Once you have the heads of the executive agencies in place, at that point they can change enforcement priorities and guidance,” said David Freeman, the head of the financial services practice at law firm Arnold & Porter. “A lot can be undone or rethought once you have fresh eyes looking at the issue.”

Further complicating matters—and empowering regulators to soften their approaches—a hodgepodge of federal agencies are responsible for overseeing different trading desks within the same banks.

For example, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which is part of the Treasury Department, oversees trading within national banks. The Securities and Exchange Commission looks after broker-dealers. And the Commodity Futures Trading Commission monitors swaps dealers. A single bank holding company—say, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. or Citigroup Inc.—could have all three of those financial entities as subsidiaries.

Regulators have only begun to examine how banks are complying with the rule. Supporters and critics of the rule alike question whether, in practice, the agencies will agree about issues such as whether a particular trade violated the rule. The diffuse responsibility for enforcing the rule creates an opening for the Trump administration to hit the “pause” button.

“I would think that the administration might rein in the staff while they go in and kick the tires and decide what parts of Volcker need to be changed,” said a person who has consulted with the Trump transition team.

A representative of the transition team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Even under the Obama administration, “we have our doubts about what’s going on behind the scenes,” said Marcus Stanley, policy director for Americans for Financial Reform, a coalition of progressive groups that supports the rule and has pushed regulators to disclose more about how they enforce it. “If you appoint people who don’t believe in the Volcker rule, it would be pretty easy for them to turn it into a kind of rubber stamp.”

There is already evidence that the election result is affecting the debate around the Volcker rule. Some supporters of the rule in Washington, including within the Treasury Department, have questioned whether Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s recent $100 million-plus profit on a distressed debt trade complied with the trading ban, according to people familiar with the matter. Now there is little time before Mr. Trump’s inauguration to probe the issue, and it is not clear whether Mr. Trump’s Treasury Department appointees would make it a priority.

A Goldman spokesman didn’t respond to a request for comment. The bank previously said the firm is focused on meeting the needs of its clients.

Big banks’ Washington trade groups initially lobbied against the rule, arguing in part that it would be difficult to enforce. J.P. Morgan Chief Executive James Dimon once quipped that in order to enforce the rule, regulators would need a lawyer and a psychiatrist assessing every trader’s intent.

Banks have since given up trying to change the law and instead focused on trying to shape the rule’s fine print. Earlier this year they successfully pushed regulators for extra time to divest certain investment funds.

It is possible, of course, that Mr. Trump will nominate regulators who favor the Volcker rule, such as Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Vice Chairman Thomas Hoenig. Mr. Trump himself has endorsed a modern version of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall law, which is similar to the Volcker rule in that it is designed to keep traditional banks from engaging in risky trading.

Many big banks have also shed proprietary trading businesses since 2008, which could make it difficult for them to get back into the business. “Once it’s gone into effect, it’s hard to turn back the clock,” said Oliver Ireland, partner at Morrison & Foerster LLP.

Cautious View on Bank Stocks

November 28th, 2016 7:12 am

Via Bloomberg:

Whiff of Danger in Bank Stocks Returning $300 Billion in 25 Days

  • Group’s market value on course for record monthly increase
  • Little sign of fear in bank ETF’s options, short interest

Optimism is higher than ever on a group of stocks that have specialized in disappointment.

Already in November, the value of American financial firms has been inflated by more than $300 billion, the most ever for the group as it benefits from optimism over Donald Trump’s presidential plans. Dealers are charging next to nothing for protective options and short sales are being covered in droves — all for stocks that have punished bulls every time comparable bouts of euphoria took hold since 1990.

The catalyst is Trump, whose election, according to Macquarie Group Ltd. analyst David Konrad, will usher in a “new world order” for the industry, raising trading, dismantling regulation and boosting rates. With investors gripped by what Evercore ISI’s Glenn Schorr called a return of “animal spirits,” skeptics wonder who’s left to buy.

“You have to become more cautious,” said Daniel Genter, who oversees about $4.2 billion as chief executive officer at Los Angeles-based RNC Genter Capital Management. “Don’t buy into excess strength.”

Right now, that’s not advice anyone is heeding. In options, the price of puts for the biggest financial ETF has collapsed relative to calls this month, with a spread known as skew reaching a one-year low, three-month contracts compiled by Bloomberg show. Short interest on the ETF slumped to about 1 percent from almost 5 percent.

In the past, returns in bank shares have been poor when demand was this elevated. Three times since 1990 when the market cap of the S&P 500 Financials Index increased by more than $200 billion, the result was pain, with the gauge down about 8 percent three months later, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The latest reversal was in January. After embracing financial stocks in the last months of 2015 with bets that higher interest rates would stoke an earnings renaissance, bank bulls found themselves saddled with losses as the Federal Reserve’s first hike in almost a decade sparked concern over an economic recession. The financial gauge jumped 5.4 percent in the fourth quarter, only to slide a similar amount three months later.

Banks and insurers have jumped 12 percent since Trump’s victory, almost double the next best performer in the S&P 500. At 1.3 times book value, the group was valued at a multiple that’s 60 percent above its five-year average.

Fear of missing out reigns. The Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund, the largest exchange-traded fund tracking the industry, has lured more than $5 billion in November, poised for the biggest inflow since its inception.

Italian Referendum and the Euro

November 28th, 2016 7:08 am

Via Bloomberg:

The political intention alone would face a market backlash, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. economists. “Any credible noise about euro exit would induce capital flight and severe market turmoil, so that market pressure might force parties that campaigned for euro exit to quickly revise their plans,” London-based economists Gianluca Salford and Marco Protopapa said in a note. Markets are showing stresses even ahead of the Dec. 4 referendum because of what it might unleash. In addition to the euro’s more than 3 percent slide this month to the lowest level since March 2015, heightened risk is also signaled by Italy’s 10-year bond yield climbing above 2 percent for the first time in more than a year.

6. Do Italians want to leave the euro?

Apparently not. A poll published Nov. 21 by La Stampa, and carried out by Community Media Research and Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, found that only 15.2 percent of the population were in favor of leaving the single currency, with 67.4 percent declaring themselves true single-currency believers.

7. So there’s nothing to worry about?

These are just the known unknowns. What is certain is that Renzi losing next month’s referendum would mean political and economic turmoil. Just how much is your call.

The Reference Shelf

Credit Pipeline

November 28th, 2016 7:03 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: Dealers Expect Over $20b of Issuance
2016-11-28 10:26:24.814 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — 69% of dealers and clients, in a Bloomberg
survey, expect IG issuance to exceed $20b this week; 33% expect
more than $25b, 10% over $30b.

* $65b priced in the 2 weeks following Thanksgiving last year;
in the week following Thanksgiving in 2014 a whopping $54b
priced

LATEST UPDATES:

* Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) Aaa/AAA, said to make takeover bid
for Actelion (ALIOY); a potential takeover of the $17
billion Swiss drugmaker
* Constellation Brands (STZ) Ba1/BBB-, scheduled investor
calls for Nov. 21-22, via BAML; deal may follow
* $1b share repurchase authorized Nov. 21
* Fitch expects Constellation to refi $700m of upcoming
maturities
* Dr. Pepper Snapple (DPS) Baa1/BBB+, to buy Bai Brands for
$1.7b; deal to be financed through new unsecured notes and
short term commercial paper.
* ACWA Power, hires banks for investor meetings from Nov. 23;
a 144a/Reg-S offering with IG ratings may follow
* Scentre Group (SCGAU) A1/A, to hold investor meetings Dec.
5-8, via BAML/JPM
* Avnet (AVT) Baa3/BBB-, hired BAML/JPM for investor calls to
take place today; reported acquisition of majority stake in
Hackster Nov. 14
* Adani Ports (ADSEZ) Baa3/BBB-, holding investor meetings
from Nov. 13, via BAML/Barc/C/SCB; 144a/Reg-S deal may
follow
* Puget Sound Energy (PSD) A2/A-, filed an $800m debt shelf;
utilities often follow the close of the big industry
conference
* General Electric Co (GE) A1/AA-, to combine oil and gas
business with Baker Hughes (BHI) Baa1/A; GE to borrow $7.4b
of incremental leverage to fund the deal, co. said in
conference call
* Dow Chemical (DOW) Baa2/BBB, filed debt shelf; last issued
in Sept. 2014
* Qualcomm (QCOM) A1/A+; ~$47b NXP Semiconductor (NXPI)
Ba2/BBB-, acq
* Sees funding deal with cash, $11b new debt (Oct. 27)
* Rockwell Collins (COL) A3/A-, to buy B/E Aerospace (BEAV)
Ba2/BB+, for $8.3b in cash, stock, assumption of debt
* COL sees financing cash portion of deal with debt
financing; plans to pay down $1.5b of new debt by end of
its FY19
* Moody’s and S&P said COL’s rating may be cut to the mid-
BBB range following completion of the BEAV acquisition
* AT&T (T) Baa1/BBB+ to buy Time Warner (TWX) Baa2/BBB for
$85b in cash, stock deal; cash portion will be financed with
new debt, cash on hand
* $40b bridge loan in place
* T may be cut by Moody’s; any potential downgrade would
be limited to one notch
* European Stability Mechanism (ESM) Aa1/na/AAA, mandates
Barc/C/DB/JPM to advise on its USD issuance program
* First ESM USD transaction scheduled for 2H 2017, subject
to market conditions
* ConAgra (CAG) Baa2/BBB-, could borrow up to $2.5b for
acquisitions
* Province of Nova Scotia (NS Gov) Aa2/A+ , filed Friday a
$1.25b debt shelf; last issued in USD in 2010, has $500m
maturing January
* Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power (KOHNPW) Aa2/AA, mandates BNP/C
for investor meetings Oct. 18-20
* Hyundai Capital Services (HYUCAP) Baa1/A-, to hold investor
meetings from Oct.17, via C/HSBC/Nom
* Darden Restaurants (DRI) Baa3/BBB, filed debt shelf, last
seen in 2012
* Darden announced a new $500m share buyback program in
its 1Q earnings release
* Yes Bank (YESIN) Baa3/na, plans to raise $500m by year’s end
* Republic of Namibia (REPNAM) Baa3/BBB-, to hold non-deal
investor meetings Oct. 7-13, via Barc/JPM/StanBk
* Asciano (AIOAU) Baa3/BBB-, names ANZ/BNP/Miz for investor
meetings Oct. 10-28; it is a non-deal roadshow; last priced
a USD deal in 2011
* Western Union (WU) Baa2/BBB, filed debt shelf; last issued
Nov. 2013 following Oct. 2013 filing
* Nafin (NAFIN) A3/BBB+; mandates BofAML, HSBC for investor
meetings Sept. 27-28; USD-denominated deal may follow
* Analog Devices (ADI) A3/BBB; ~$13.1b Linear Technology acq
* $5b loan received after $11.6b bridge (Sept. 26)

MANDATES/MEETINGS

* Banco Inbursa (BINBUR) –/BBB+/BBB+; mtgs Sept. 7-12
* Woolworths (WOWAU) Baa2/BBB; investor call Sept. 7
* Sydney Airport (SYDAU) Baa2/BBB; investor calls Sept. 6-7

M&A-RELATED

* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-; ~$66b Monsanto acq
* Hybrid bond sales, approx. EU5b convertible bond
planned; part of $57b bridge (Sept. 14)
* Danaher (DHR) A2/A; ~$4b Cepheid acq
* Sees financing deal via cash, debt issuance (Sept. 6)
* Couche-Tard (ATDBCN) Baa2/BBB; ~$4.4b CST Brands acq
* Expects to sell USD bonds (Aug. 22)
* Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) Baa3/BBB; ~$1b LDR acq
* Plans $750m issuance post-completion (June 7)
* Great Plains Energy (GXP) Baa2/BBB+; ~$12.1b Westar acq
* $8b committed debt secured for deal (May 31)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)

SHELF FILINGS

* Starbucks (SBUX) A2/A-; debt shelf; has $400m maturing Dec.
5 (Sept. 15)
* Brunswick (BC) Baa3/BBB-; automatic mixed shelf; last issued
in 2013 (Sept. 6)

OTHER

* Israel Electric (ISRELE) Baa2/BBB-; said to hire C, JPM for
at least $500m bond sale in 4Q (Aug. 8)
* Visa (V) A1/A+; CFO says will issue $2b debt for buybacks by
yr end (July 21)

Some Corporate Bond Stuff

November 28th, 2016 7:00 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Lowest Trading Volume Since Christmas Eve
2016-11-28 10:43:15.144 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $1.6b Friday vs $8.4b Wednesday, $15.6b the previous
Friday. It was the lowest volume session since $990m on Dec. 24.

* 10-DMA $15.8b; 10-Friday moving avg $12b
* 144a trading added $177m of IG volume Friday vs $1.2b on
Wednesday, $3b last Friday; it was lowest since $83m
Christmas Eve

* Trace most active issues over 2Y:
* MON 4.40% 2044 was 1st with client flows accounting for
100% of volume
* HSBC 4.375% 2026 was next with client affiliate trades
taking 100% of volume; selling near 10x buying
* WBA 4.80% 2044 was 3rd trades with client buying and
affiliate selling taking 100% of volume
* DBS 2.246% 2019 was the most active 144a issue; one large
client sales ticket took 100% of volume

* Bloomberg Barclays US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS again
unchanged at 130; 128, a new low for the year and the lowest
level since May 2015, was seen Nov. 15
* 2016 wide/tight: 215 (a new wide since Jan. 2012)/128
* 2015 wide/tight: 171/122
* 2014 wide/tight: 137/97
* All time wide/tight back to 1989: 555 (Dec. 2008)/54
(March 1997)

* Current markets vs early Friday, Wednesday:
* 2Y 1.119% vs 1.155% vs 1.091%
* 10Y 2.330% vs 2.366% vs 2.310%
* DOW futures -51 vs +44 vs flat
* Oil $46.16 vs $47.45 vs $48.26
* ¥en 112.33 vs 112.83 vs 111.03

* No IG issuance Friday or Wednesday vs $1.5b Tuesday, $6.5b
Monday
* November totals $65.8b; YTD $1.55T

* Pipeline – Dealers Expect Over $20b of Issuance

More FX

November 28th, 2016 6:55 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Drivers for the Week Ahead

  • There is growing confidence that the Federal Reserve will hike rates next month, and more next year
  • This week’s US data is unlikely to alter views but may strengthen the appreciation of the solid economic performance since struggling in Q4 15 through Q2 16
  • Preliminary Eurozone CPI will be the last look at inflation before the ECB meets December 8
  • Rising political anxiety may have contributed to the pressure on German yields
  • Elsewhere, OPEC is a wildcard this week

The dollar is mostly softer against the majors in consolidative trading.  The yen and the Kiwi are outperforming, while the Norwegian krone and sterling are underperforming.  EM currencies are mostly firmer.  ZAR, TRY, and BRL are outperforming, while INR, IDR, and MYR are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was up 0.6%, even with the Nikkei falling 0.1%.  MSCI EM is up 0.7%, with Chinese markets rising 0.4%.  Euro Stoxx 600 is down 0.6% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a lower open.  The 10-year UST yield is down 3 bp at 2.33%.  Commodity prices are mostly higher, with Brent oil up 0.1%, copper up 0.9%, and gold up 0.6%.

There are powerful moves underway in the capital markets.  Some are new, and others have accelerated in recent weeks.  The moves have stretched technical readings, but key drivers not only remain intact but may strengthen over the next week.  

We argue that there are two main forces driving the shifting portfolio allocations.  The first emanates from the US and the second from Europe.  

There is growing confidence that the Federal Reserve will hike rates next month, and more next year.  Nevertheless, the market does not have two Fed hikes priced in for next year, which suggests scope for additional adjustment.  Two hikes next year will likely be the base case for many forecasts.  The dramatic rise in long-term Treasury yields is the direct consequence of anticipation of fiscal stimulus when the economy is already growing toward trend.  Both US presidential candidates’ programs call for fiscal stimulus.  Trump’s was larger and included significant tax cuts as well.  

While many of the comparisons between Trump and Reagan are superficial and faddish, one kernel of truth may be found in the policy mix.  An expanding fiscal policy and a monetary policy that was becoming less accommodative characterized Reagan’s first term and coincided with the first dollar rally post-Bretton Woods.  Of course, Trump has not assumed office yet, and he will have to negotiate with a more austere Republican leadership in Congress.  A deft negotiator may secure Democrat support for spending increases and Republican support for tax cuts.  

However, the economy that Trump will inherit is significantly different from what Reagan received.  Presently, the US economy is growing near-trend, and unemployment has slipped below 5%.  Many investors suspect that this may prove to be inflationary.  Four months ago, the US 10-year yield was just above 1.30%.  It finished last month a little above 1.80% and closed last week near 2.35%. Ironically, despite the continued expansion of the US economy and rising price pressures, the 10-year bond yield is still below last year’s high seen in July near 2.50%.  

Long-term interest rates remain lower than what used to be associated with the current economic conditions and price pressures.  The US 10-year yield peaked near 16% in Q3 1981. One does not have to assume that secular downtrend in interest rates is over.  There have been other significant counter-trend moves.  However, the trend could be over as deflationary forces have been arrested and global growth appears to be stabilizing.  

This week’s data is unlikely to alter views but may strengthen the appreciation of the solid economic performance since struggling in Q4 15 through Q2 16.  Growth in Q3 is expected to be tweaked up to 3.0% in this week’s revision.  The US economic data continues to be mostly reported stronger than expected.  The NY Fed estimates that US economy is tracking 2.5% growth here in Q4, while as of the middle of last week, the Atlanta’s Fed model was more optimistic; tracking 3.6%.

At the same time, investors will be reminded of the proximity of the Fed’s objectives.  The core PCE deflator is expected to have remained steady in October at 1.7%.  The Fed’s target is 2%.   At the end of the week, the US reports the November jobs data.  It is expected to show solid, even if not spectacular job growth of 175k-185k.  The unemployment rate is expected to be unchanged at 4.9%, and hourly earnings are forecast to be steady at the 2.8% year-over-year, the highest rate in seven years reached in October.  The bond market and the dollar, given the recent tight link, may be particularly sensitive to a downside surprise in the unemployment rate or an upside surprise in earnings.  

Many are concerned about the protectionist signals sent by candidate Trump.  The widening of the trade deficit in the coming months as a result of growth differentials may make for fertile ground for the rhetoric to be operationalized.  The implication of less commitment to free trade while the US is a net international debtor (the world owns more US assets than American own foreign assets) is not clear.  Those issues seem to be a medium term challenge, and by the time they are salient the world could look a lot different.  

That brings us to the second driver of the shift in the investment climate:  Europe.  It is not the European economy per se.  Eurozone growth is near trend, and the flash November PMIs raise the hope of some modest improvement.  However, unemployment has been slow to improve.  After finishing last year at 10.5%, it has been stuck at 10.0% since July.  October will be reported on Thursday.  Money supply growth had stabilized near 5% since the middle of last year, but it was just reported as slowing to 4.4% y/y in October.  This is the slowest since March 2015.  

Those at the ECB who want to extend the asset purchases anchor their arguments in the weak price pressures.  The preliminary CPI will be the last look at inflation before the ECB meets on December 8.  The headline rate may tick up slightly to 0.6% from 0.5% in October.  It would be a two-year high, but the increase since the 0.1% rise in July is largely a function of oil prices, as the core rate has been steady at 0.8% in recent months and is expected to remain there in November.  

The prospect that the ECB could alter is self-imposed rules about its asset purchases (which would allow it to buy more German bunds) helped drive the German two-year yield to new record lows last week.  The yield fell to minus 76 bp ahead of the weekend before closing near minus 74 bp.  Although most of the media coverage has focused on the rise in US yields, last week, the German rate move was larger.  Its 2-year yield fell almost 8 bp, while the US 2-year yield rose less than 5 bp.

Another consideration that may have contributed to the pressure on German yields is the rising political anxiety.  At the end of the week, Austria elects a new president, and Italy holds a referendum on constitutional changes to the Senate, after earlier reforms for the Chamber of Deputies were approved.  

The Austrian election is a do-over after the May election results were voided by the courts for the improper handling of postal votes.  The populist-nationalist Hofer is polling a little ahead of the Green’s von der Bellen.  A victory would make Hofer the first far-right head of state in Europe since WWII.  The post may be largely ceremonial, but the symbolic victory may be underestimated by the focus on the Italian referendum.

Expectations that the referendum will not be approved are widespread.  The key unknown is what follows.  Although Renzi has threatened to resign if the referendum fails, his signals have been ambiguous.  If he resigns, the idea is that the PD would select a caretaker, perhaps a current minister, that would attempt to complete the political reforms and hold the parliamentary election as scheduled in 2018.

However, Renzi could force an early election.  It is a scenario he played down but it came back to the fore last week.  The most important point is that investors’ anxiety over the possibility that 5-Star Movement is swept to power is getting ahead of events.  However, a weak government or a caretaker government means that the reform efforts slow.  

Italian assets have underperformed recently as the referendum drew near.  The Italian 10-year premium to Germany widened nearly 50 bp over the past month, and at 1.85%, is the largest in more two and a half years.  The rising sovereign yield (Italy’s 10-year yield has risen 63 bp over the past month, the most in Europe) is one of the factors that have weighed on bank shares.  The Italian bank share index is back to its lowest level since early October.

Looking further down field but already shaping scenarios for next year is the French presidential election.  The prospect of a populist-nationalist victory is a source of anxiety.  Investors are demanding a higher premium to hold French paper instead of German.  On 2-year money, the French premium has risen from 3-4 bp before the US election to 16 bp before the weekend, the largest since mid-2014.  The 10-year differential widened from 31 bp to 55 bp, the most in a couple of years.  

Meanwhile, EU tensions with Turkey have escalated following last week’s European Parliament non-binding resolution to end accession talks over Erdogan’s repressive response to the coup attempt.  In response, Erdogan threatened to abandon the agreement to limit the immigration into Greece.  The decision on talks resides the foreign ministers, not the European Parliament, and they are reluctant to break off accession talks.  Should Erdogan re-open the borders, it would likely strength the appeal of the populist-right forces.  

Elsewhere, OPEC is a wildcard this week.  Since the summer, the ebb and flow of speculation about OPEC’s ability to reestablish some order to the oil market drove prices between roughly $42 and $52 a barrel (basis the front-month futures contract).  The central problem is that Saudi Arabia cannot abide by sacrificing market share to other OPEC members, especially Iran, and Iran for its part cannot accept a freeze of output until it fully recovers from the embargo.  

That issue does not appear resolved, and that appears to be the reason Saudi Arabia pulled out of the meeting with Russia that was to be held on Monday (November 28).  Meeting with Russia without a full agreement from OPEC members to cut output puts the cartel at a disadvantageous negotiating position.  Separately, the restoration of Libyan output and the expansion of Kazakhstan’s production warn that it will be difficult to reduce supply.  

More broadly, the CRB Index rallied 5.2% since November 14, but the momentum was sapped by energy and the grains.  The price of gold has fallen about 10% in its three-week drop that has left prices at nine-month lows.  Industrial metals have been the strongest part of the commodity complex, ostensibly on stronger US growth and a Chinese economy that is stabilizing.  

Amid the portfolio adjustments, emerging markets have fallen out of favor, particularly bonds. The sharp rise in US Treasury yields forces many emerging market rates higher too.  Rising rates and a stronger dollar lifts the cost for emerging market economies to borrow funds and to service their dollar-denominated debt. The MSCI Emerging Market equity index snapped a four-week, 7.5% decline last week.  The 1.3% rise was broad-based.  

In contrast, major US indices, including the Russell 3000, are at record highs.  Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 has rallied for three consecutive weeks for about 4%.  Its muted performance leaves it straddling the 100-day average, which is nearly 17.5% below the record high set in the middle of last year.  Japan’s Topix has moved higher for twelve straight sessions.  It has advanced for three consecutive weeks (~8.5%) and in six of the past eight weeks.

After ending last week on a somewhat firm note, EM FX is seeing some follow-through buying.  However, we note divergences remain in place and are being largely driven by political developments.  Last week, ZAR and KRW performed the best while TRY and BRL were the worst.        

China reports November PMI readings this week, and should show continued stabilization of the world’s second largest economy.  Brazil is likely to continue feeling the negative impact of rising political risk, making the COPOM decision Wednesday a bit trickier.  Turkey is finding that the rate hike last week is having limited impact in supporting the lira.