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Apple Cuts Back on Bond Buying in Advance of Bringing Cash Home

Apple Inc. is pulling back on buying corporate bonds with its overseas cash.

Apple Cuts Back on Bond Buying in Advance of Bringing Cash Home
Apple Inc. iPhone X smartphones are displayed during the sales launch at a store in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. is pulling back on buying corporate bonds with its overseas cash as it prepares to bring the money home to the U.S., according to people with knowledge of the matter.

About $157 billion of Apple’s $285 billion in cash, mostly held overseas, is invested in corporate debt, making it a leading lender. The cutback in buying, echoed by other tech firms with sizable overseas holdings, such as Alphabet Inc. and Oracle Corp., could have an impact on corporate borrowing costs.

The tech companies have started sitting out bond deals this year as they look to trim their holdings, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public. U.S. companies with savings held offshore will likely move them home or use them by 2020, Credit Suisse analyst Zoltan Pozsar wrote in a Jan. 29 report.

Investors in investment-grade corporate bonds have been bracing for a market with fewer buyers since the new U.S. tax law was enacted late last year. It gives companies incentive to repatriate their overseas money. Companies such as Apple have been buying bonds with offshore funds rather than simply holding cash.

A representative for Apple declined to comment.

Underlying Weakness

“The pullback of a big investor like the tech companies adds to the underlying weakness” in the investment-grade corporate-bond market, said David Knutson, the head of Americas credit research at Schroder Investment Management, which oversees more than $500 billion.

The firms have their money in high-quality, short-duration paper -- the easily traded part of the market -- so other investors should pick up the slack, Knutson said.

Apple Cuts Back on Bond Buying in Advance of Bringing Cash Home

Corporate-bond sales, which typically attract an average of 3.5 times as many orders as there are securities available, have seen that oversubscription rate fall this year partly because cash-rich companies are buying less, according to one banker who has brought deals to market this year.

In one bond offering, participation by tech companies fell to one-sixth of what used to be their typical involvement, according to a syndicate head at another bank.

Two things concern bankers about the pullback. The tech companies aren’t only big buyers of high-grade corporate bonds, they’re also issuers.

U.S. companies have an estimated $3.1 trillion of corporate cash offshore, most of it in government and corporate bonds. The Trump administration’s tax bill slashes the tax rate on repatriated cash and liquid securities from 35 percent to 15.5 percent.

Last week, Apple said it plans to bring its net cash position down to zero, meaning cash levels would equal debt outstanding. Apple held net cash of $163 billion at the end of 2017.

--With assistance from Mark Gurman

To contact the reporters on this story: Nabila Ahmed in New York at nahmed54@bloomberg.net, Sally Bakewell in New York at sbakewell1@bloomberg.net, Sridhar Natarajan in New York at snatarajan15@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shannon D. Harrington at sharrington6@bloomberg.net, Bob Ivry, Dan Wilchins

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.