Deutsche Bank sees US leveraged loan defaults near record highs in 2024

    • Deutsche Bank expects default rates to be kept in check given the lack of near-term maturities.
    • Deutsche Bank expects default rates to be kept in check given the lack of near-term maturities. photo: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Nov 21, 2022 · 09:24 PM

    DEFAULT rates on US leveraged loans will hit a near-record high of 11.3 per cent in 2024, while defaults on euro leveraged loans will hit 7.1 per cent, as the global economic outlook deteriorates, Deutsche Bank said on Monday (Nov 21).

    For 2023, however, Deutsche Bank expects default rates to be kept in check given the lack of near-term maturities.

    The bank said in a research note it expects a 5.6 per cent default rate in the United States and 3.7 per cent rate in the euro market respectively in 2023.

    But it expects default rates to rise from then onwards.

    Leveraged loans are usually taken out by companies with already high levels of debt and with below-investment grade credit ratings.

    Deutsche Bank analysts said companies with a high total debt-to-earnings ratio will face a significant hit to their profit margins, with the US economy likely to slip into a recession in the second half of next year.

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    This will lead to more distressed exchanges and missed interest payments, triggering an increase in default rates in 2024.

    The expected increase in defaults will be accompanied by lower recovery rates, meaning that creditors may only recoup 50-60 per cent of face value if the loans default in the upcoming recession.

    On a brighter note for European issuers, leverage, despite being high, has not increased as much as in the US credit markets, while the euro high-yield bond market has higher credit ratings than its US counterpart, Deutsche Bank said.

    The bank also suggested that European credits should fare better in the upcoming downturn than their US counterparts, as there is scope for the European Central Bank’s Transmission Protection Instrument backstop and additional fiscal spending across the euro area to prevent a larger wave of defaults.

    In contrast, Deutsche Bank was less confident about the prospects for renewed quantitative easing by the US Federal Reserve or US fiscal stimulus during the US recession next year due to a deeply divided US Congress and electorate.

    Also, because US inflation is expected to remain above 2 per cent when defaults start to rise, the scope for monetary stimulus could be limited.

    High-yield bond markets were expected to be more resilient on both sides of the Atlantic, with Deutsche Bank expecting default rates of 2.2 per cent in 2023 and 4.3 per cent in 2024 for the euro market, and 4.5 per cent and 9 per cent respectively for the US market. REUTERS

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