Some US firms wait to issue bonds in a bet rates will come down

Published Fri, Sep 23, 2022 · 07:04 PM
    • To fund its acquisition of Cerner, Oracle drew down US$15.7 billion from a 1-year bridge loan and took out term loans worth US$4.4 billion with 3-year and 5-year maturities that could be prepaid early to refinance the bridge loan.
    • To fund its acquisition of Cerner, Oracle drew down US$15.7 billion from a 1-year bridge loan and took out term loans worth US$4.4 billion with 3-year and 5-year maturities that could be prepaid early to refinance the bridge loan. PHOTO: AFP

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    SOME US companies with the best credit ratings are looking at shorter-term debt solutions as a bridge to a better funding environment in a year or two, slowing new bond issuance despite demand from investors.

    The shorter-term debt solutions include getting bank term loans, drawing down on bridge loans and issuing bonds with maturities of 5 years or less, debt capital market bankers and credit investors said. While loans can be cheaper than issuing bonds, shorter-term debt is currently more expensive than longer tenors.

    With the move, these companies are effectively betting that aggressive interest rate increases by central banks that have raised funding costs will cause recessionary headwinds, which would eventually lead to lower Treasury yields.

    So instead of locking themselves into longer-term debt with higher all-in funding costs now, they plan to wait out the surge in interest rates.

    “We have seen evidence of issuers relying on shorter-term debt solutions as an alternative to long-dated bond financing in an effort to bridge to a better funding environment in the future,” said Maureen O’Connor, global head of high-grade debt syndicate at Wells Fargo.

    “It is hard to argue against the rationale.”

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    The trend, which is coming into focus now, shows how companies are navigating an unprecedented monetary policy tightening and uncertainty in global markets.

    Some bankers said the approach could be a risky one. The US Federal Reserve has not only been raising interest rates quickly but also warning markets that it would hold them high for longer.

    “Companies looking to wait for more sustained stability may have to be patient for a long time,” said Meghan Graper, global co-head of investment grade syndicate at Barclays.

    Even so, the supply of new high-grade bonds has shrunk, with September issuance volumes so far on track to make it the lowest for the month in a decade, said data provider Informa Global Markets.

    That has hit the supply of good quality assets just when investors need more safe places to hide. It would also eat into fees for Wall Street banks.

    Natalie Trevithick, head of investment grade credit at Payden & Rygel, a fund manager, said investors were looking for higher quality issuers even as “a number of issuers have been standing down from the markets”.

    “What we have seen is a shift to shorter-dated financing,” Trevithick said.

    Earlier this year, Oracle, for example, was widely expected by bankers, analysts and strategists to issue US$20 billion worth of bonds to fund its acquisition of healthcare IT firm Cerner.

    The US$28.2 billion deal closed in June. Typically, companies take a bridge loan to fund mergers but then pay it down with a long-dated bond issue before closing.

    Oracle instead drew down US$15.7 billion from a 1-year bridge loan and took out term loans worth US$4.4 billion with 3-year and 5-year maturities that could be prepaid early to refinance the bridge loan.

    The tech giant also doubled the size of its commercial paper programme to $6 billion and said that it could expand the size of the term loan to $6 billion.

    More recently, Adobe said it will fund its US$20 billion acquisition of cloud-based designer platform Figma with stock and cash on hand, throwing in a term loan if necessary.

    Reuters could not determine Oracle’s and Adobe’s rationale behind their funding decisions, but bankers said their actions were evidence of the broader trend.

    An Adobe spokesperson said the company was able to finance the deal, given its cash flow. “If a term loan is necessary due to timing of the deal closing, we expect to pay it back quickly,” the company said.

    Oracle did not respond to requests for comment.

    Bond syndicate desks had estimated, based on their visibility of the issuance pipeline, that September would see as much as US$150 billion of new bond supply, but as at Wednesday (Sep 21) only US$73.65 billion had made it to the primary markets, data from business intelligence group Informa showed.

    Of those, nearly 43 per cent of all new high-grade bonds priced in September carried maturities up to 5 years compared to around 32 per cent in August and 28 per cent in September last year, the data showed. This has happened even as 2-year and 5-year Treasury yields jumped during the month, raising the cost of short-term debt.

    To be sure, not all companies can afford to wait for better funding conditions. In the market for junk bonds, for example, some companies are paying higher rates to raise funds.

    Stronger companies, however, have more choice and are coming off a period of bingeing on debt.

    “So they have the option in the current environment of higher absolute coupons, compared to that of the last decade, to wait or look at other near-term funding options,” said Brian Cogliandro, international head of syndicate at MUFG. REUTERS

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