Article content
“Late cycle, securitized debt tends to seem attractive,” State Street’s Nest said.
Article content
There are risks to the trade of favoring mortgage bonds and other securitized debt over corporate debt. The moment the war in Iran ends, or the Trump administration pulls back from the conflict, high-grade credit spreads could snap back quickly, narrowing 0.2 percentage point, said Tony Trzcinka, portfolio manager at Impax Asset Management.
Article content
“If we’ve learned anything from the past year, it’s that this administration will do everything in its power to provide a floor on markets,” Trzcinka said.
Article content
On top of that, many markets in the coming months may end up being driven by oil prices. As long as energy prices create inflationary pressure, and doubt about the future direction of rates, both corporates and mortgage bonds could be hit, said Brian Quigley, senior portfolio manager and head of MBS and agency debt at Vanguard.
Article content
“I think you need to be really careful with what correlation you’re assuming between MBS and corporate bonds at the moment,” Quigley said. While over a long period of time the two tend to have a low but positive correlation, the connection between them may be closer than usual in the near term, he said.
Article content
Article content
But credit faces other pressure too, including artificial intelligence disrupting software companies, and private credit potentially facing growing losses. Those factors had been weighing on corporate bonds even before the US and Israel first attacked Iran.
Article content
Given those risks, it might make sense to favor MBS and other securitized debt over corporate bonds, said David Goodson, managing director and head of MBS at Voya Investment Management.
Article content
“In a world like we have today, MBS offers an appealing source of diversification,” Goodson said.
Article content
Click here for a podcast on how a bank retreat from private credit is pressuring BDCs
Article content
Week In Review
Article content
- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. says investors should turn to high-yield debt from the energy sector, mortgage bonds and credit derivatives as turmoil in the Middle East disrupts global oil supply and stokes fears of global inflation. But the Iran war-induced credit market selloff is prompting some money managers to buy oversold investment-grade bonds, in a bet that solid fundamentals will help them withstand the conflict and economic uncertainties. Dealers have accumulated US high-grade corporate notes at the fastest pace in at least 10 years, according to Bank of America Corp., due to a near-record week of issuance.
- Read more: Algebris Ramps Up Cash, Warning of Further Disruptions From War
- Wall Street lending giants would get relaxed capital requirements under proposals unveiled by the Federal Reserve on Thursday, in a move that could potentially unleash billions of dollars for lending, share buybacks and dividends.
- If finalized, the plans — along with moves to ease the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio and overhaul stress tests — would amount to some of the biggest bank-capital rule changes since those enacted after the 2008 global financial crisis.
- Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are among investment banks offering hedge fund clients ways to bet against the private credit market, by assembling baskets of listed companies with exposure to the space. Meanwhile, Pimco is staying away from loans being put up for sale amid the private credit tumult as they’re “pretty bad,” according to its president Christian Stracke.
- The industry may need years to work through the “intense yet warranted reset” that caused a wave of redemptions from some of the market’s biggest funds, according to Sixth Street Partners. Redemption pressures may cause certain retail-oriented structures to be “frozen,” Park Square Capital’s Robin Doumar said.
- Read more: Pimco Sees Private Credit Risks Spurring Liquidity Wake-Up Call
- Morgan Stanley expects that default rates in direct lending will climb to 8% as advances in AI continually disrupt the software industry.
- Read more: Oaktree’s Howard Marks Says Investors Are Underestimating AI
- Still, top executives from Deutsche Bank AG, UBS Group AG and Societe Generale SA touted the quality of their exposures to private credit amid the concerns over underwriting standards and AI’s impact. TCW Group’s Katie Koch sees buying opportunities and says the firm is looking to deploy capital across fresh loans and rescue financing. Sumitomo Life Insurance Co. is considering allocating about ¥300 billion ($1.9 billion) in private credit in the fiscal year starting April. Oak Hill Advisors is courting retail investors who have grown more skeptical of private credit with the launch of a fund that will deploy capital across public and private debt.
- Read more: Goldman Sachs AM Seeks to Raise $10 Billion Private Credit Fund
- The industry may need years to work through the “intense yet warranted reset” that caused a wave of redemptions from some of the market’s biggest funds, according to Sixth Street Partners. Redemption pressures may cause certain retail-oriented structures to be “frozen,” Park Square Capital’s Robin Doumar said.
- Banks led by JPMorgan attracted enough demand for the nearly $15 billion of debt it is selling to back the leveraged buyout of video game maker Electronic Arts Inc., the largest of its kind. In a reversal of fortunes, another group of banks led by JPMorgan halted a $5.3 billion debt deal for software firm Qualtrics International Inc. after failing to win over investors amid deepening anxiety around AI disruption.
- JPMorgan is also leading a $2 billion debt sale to finance the purchase of Janus Henderson Group Plc by Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management and General Catalyst, which are locked in a bidding war to buy the asset manager with Victory Capital.
- Nexstar Media Group Inc. amended the financing tied to its acquisition of fellow TV-station owner Tegna Inc. as demand for risky debt comes under strain amid a flood of loan and bond sales tied to buyouts.
- China Evergrande liquidators’ lawsuit to claw back funds from the builder’s auditors will finally reach its first public court hearing in May, about two years after being filed.
- Market Financial Solutions Ltd. faces an investigation by the UK financial regulator, marking the first publicly disclosed action by authorities into the mortgage lender that collapsed owing billions to Wall Street lenders.
- Meta Platforms Inc., Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp. joining an index of high-grade firms’ credit default swaps is another sign of investors increasingly hedging hyperscalers’ debt amid surging bond sales.
- Spandex maker The Lycra Company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to implement a restructuring that will see most of its debt written off after creditors took control.
- Billionaire Wes Edens reached a deal with creditors to restructure New Fortress Energy Inc., in a transaction that will cut the company’s debt by 90%.
Article content
Article content
On the Move
Article content
- David Rogal, previously a managing director and fixed income portfolio manager at BlackRock, joined hedge fund Millennium Management as a senior portfolio manager in the fixed income group.
- Justin Polselli, a leveraged finance banker at Jefferies Financial Group Inc., is leaving the lender to join Moelis & Co. as part of its debt capital markets team.
- Derby Lane Partners LP, a real estate credit investment firm formed last year, tapped former Citigroup Inc. banker Nishant Nadella to lead its public investments including commercial mortgage-backed securities.
- Deutsche Bank AG named Panos Stergiou global head of large corporate coverage, a newly created group across the corporate bank and the fixed income desk. Meanwhile Jan-Philipp Gillmann is leaving after working on corporate client coverage over the past six years.
Article content

2 hours ago
4
English (US)