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U.S. Corporate Borrowers Have an Overseas Investor Problem

U.S. Corporate Borrowers Have an Overseas Investor Problem

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. companies are finding that the flow from the foreign-money spigot is slowing.

Foreigners showed signs of being net sellers of U.S. investment-grade corporate debt this week, according to Bank of America data. Any selling pressure comes after international investors bought just $38 billion of U.S. investment-grade corporate debt in the fourth quarter, according to UBS Group AG, the least since the beginning of 2016, when the corporate bond market was in a freefall.

Overseas money managers are a key pillar for the market, having bought more than $1.4 trillion of the securities since 2013, UBS said. With the dollar extending losses after plunging last year and hedging costs near decade-highs by one measure, overseas investors have fewer reasons to buy fewer U.S. company notes. The securities are on track for their worst first quarter since 1994. The weakness could translate to even higher borrowing costs for companies than they’ve already experienced in the last three months.

U.S. Corporate Borrowers Have an Overseas Investor Problem

“This problem is here to stay for the remainder of the year," said Nathaniel Rosenbaum, credit strategist at Wells Fargo, in reference to a falling dollar, rising hedging costs and declining foreign demand.

Bigger Problem

Overseas demand is a key question for U.S. fixed-income markets broadly. The Treasury, for example, is ramping up debt sales in response to a swelling federal deficit, just as foreign central banks’ appetite may be fading.

A host of other factors have hurt U.S. corporate bonds, which according to Bloomberg Barclays index data have lost 3.3 percent this year through Wednesday, a bigger loss than the 2.1 percent decline in U.S. Treasuries. The Federal Reserve hiked interest rates on Wednesday and said it was planning steeper increases in 2019 and 2020. Rising rates make fixed income investments less attractive to money managers and lift corporate borrowing costs.

New tax laws are giving cash-rich U.S. companies less reason to buy corporate bonds. And a growing risk of trade wars could translate to weaker company profits.

“The negative returns are a signal to investors that maybe this is not such a great place to be,” said Kathleen Gaffney, money manager at Eaton Vance, which managed $432.2 billion as of Dec. 31.

Painful Math

For many foreign investors, rising hedging costs are eating into or erasing the extra yield to be earned from a U.S. corporate bond. European investors must sacrifice around 2.7 percentage points in annual yield to hedge using rolling three-month forwards for a year when buying in U.S. dollars and hedging back to euros, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The Japanese have to forfeit about 2.4 percentage points when hedging back to yen, around the highest level since 2008.

For a European investor, buying U.S. investment-grade corporate debt and hedging it back to euros results in yields that are around 0.2 percentage point lower than 30-year German bunds on average now, according to UBS. That’s a big shift from a year ago, when hedged U.S. company notes yielded around 0.44 percentage point more than bunds. As the Fed keeps hiking rates, hedging is likely to get even more expensive.

“The math just doesn’t work anymore,” said Josh Lohmeier, head of U.S. investment-grade credit at Aviva Investors, which manages about $300 billion in fixed-income assets. “It’s driving away foreign investors that hedge.”

Biggest Driver

Gordon Shannon, a money manager at TwentyFour Asset Management in London, is one of them. He has reduced his holdings in dollar debt because the hedging costs are so high. With the Federal Reserve hiking rates now, the cost of hedging will only rise, he said. U.S. dollar-denominated corporate bonds only make up 7 percent of Shannon’s 1.1 billion-pound ($1.6 billion) TwentyFour Absolute Return Credit Fund, down from 15 percent at the start of 2017.

“The currency cost is the biggest driver,” Shannon said.

Many investors are more inclined to hedge when the dollar is weakening, said Wells Fargo’s Rosenbaum. The U.S. dollar fell the most in two months on Wednesday, and has plunged more than 10 percent against a basket of currencies since the start of 2017. Factors including tariffs and changing European monetary policy could weaken the currency further. When hedging was expensive last year, some investors could choose not to protect themselves against currency risk, Rosenbaum said. That’s less of an option now.

U.S. Corporate Borrowers Have an Overseas Investor Problem

Debt in Europe looks increasingly attractive to at least some investors. Japanese money managers have been selling U.S. government bonds and buying European sovereign securities for months, according to balance of payments data from Japan’s Ministry of Finance. They are likely looking to take advantage of yields that have been rising on the Continent since mid-2016.

Forecasting changes in demand is difficult, and not every foreign investor will act the same way. Nippon Life Insurance Co., for example, is focusing more of its U.S. holdings on corporate bonds as hedging costs rise, to earn higher yields said Kiyokazu Kimura, deputy general manager at the international investment department, in an interview last month.

But for many Japanese investors, rising U.S. interest rates and the weaker dollar are good reasons to be cautious when buying American corporate bonds, said Katsuyuki Tokushima, chief investment analyst at NLI Research Institute.

“Investors probably feel that they should stay on the sidelines for now,” Tokushima said. “They’ll feel uncomfortable if the dollar weakens further."

--With assistance from Katie Linsell and Takashi Nakamichi

To contact the reporters on this story: Molly Smith in New York at msmith604@bloomberg.net, Austin Weinstein in New York at aweinstein18@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nikolaj Gammeltoft at ngammeltoft@bloomberg.net, Dan Wilchins, Kenneth Pringle

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