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Falling Corporate Bond Sales Are One of the Debt’s Few Positives

Falling Corporate Bond Sales Are One of the Debt’s Few Positives

Top-rated U.S. corporations are expected to sell less debt next year, a bright spot for a high-grade market that faces a wide array of risks in 2022 as the lower supply coupled with strong demand can help sustain valuations.

Most of the biggest banks are forecasting that sales will be down about 5% to 10% from 2021’s $1.4 trillion, meaning the money that keeps pouring into the corporate bond market will have fewer new securities to buy. That could help keep risk premiums which are already low by historical standards stay about where they are, according to fund managers and syndicate professionals.

Falling issuance and strong demand will likely counter the impact of the risks remaining in the nearly $7 trillion market, such as the pandemic flaring up further and interest rates jumping. Rising bond yields could hit corporate bonds particularly hard, because their price sensitivity to these moves is close to all-time highs.  

“Technicals will probably overwhelm any kind of volatility that we see,” said Todd Mahoney, head of U.S. debt capital markets at UBS Group AG. “We expect consistent inflows, supply down, and a pretty good year for redemptions. When you put all those things together, it should be enough to hold spreads in pretty well.” 

Strategists at Bank of America Corp. and Barclays Plc also expect spreads to stay range bound next year, not straying far from where they currently stand. The average spread now is just under 1 percentage point, according to Bloomberg index data. 

Falling Corporate Bond Sales Are One of the Debt’s Few Positives

Bond sales are being met with demand that remains relatively strong. Investors have been pouring money into high-grade corporate bond funds, adding cash to them in 43 out of 50 weeks this year, according to data from Refinitiv Lipper. They’re often looking for higher yield than Treasuries. 

Central banks worldwide are taking steps to cut down on the liquidity sloshing around the financial system, with the Federal Reserve forecasting a series of interest-rate hikes over the coming years that include three in 2022. But even that could entice more foreign investors, an important source of demand this year, to buy corporate bonds in 2022.   

“Even if rates back up 50 or 100 basis points, they’re still going to be attractive on both a nominal and real basis,” said Marc Fratepietro, co-head of global investment grade debt capital markets at Deutsche Bank AG. “You have the balance sheet firepower, you have the low cost of capital, and you have companies that want to do M&A. That will drive activity in our market next year.” 

Investor Optimism

On top of that, investment-grade company balance sheets look exceptionally strong, with low leverage and high cash levels compared with historical norms. That puts companies in a strong position to weather any potential slowdown to the economy next year. 

“Companies are in really good shape,” said Matt Brill, head of North America investment-grade at $1.6 trillion asset manager Invesco Ltd. “Even if the economy were to slow down with the Fed hiking progressively, we think corporations are in much better shape to handle it. I’m pretty optimistic we should be at least range bound for spreads in 2022.”

JPMorgan Chase & Co. thinks the bonds could do better than just stay in their current range: the bank thinks spreads could head toward all-time tights. Above-trend economic growth, higher Treasury yields that will stoke demand, and the expectation for lower supply are all positives for bond spreads, strategists led by Eric Beinstein wrote. 

Not every strategist is as optimistic about the near term. Deutsche Bank strategists are calling for significant widening of as much as 30 to 40 basis points in the first half of the year. Even so, they also see a second half recovery that will bring spreads toward current levels. 

Supply Outlook

More of the bonds that companies do sell next year will likely be linked to acquisitions. Deutsche Bank says there are about $140 billion to $145 billion of bonds funding mergers and acquisitions that it can now see for 2022, more than double the level this time last year. 

Other banks are also expecting more debt linked to acquisitions. Many investment-grade companies also have high cash levels that they might look to use to buy other corporations. 

“M&A is a big theme for next year,” said Meghan Graper, head of U.S. investment grade syndicate at Barclays. “The question will be how much of the M&A forward calendar that’s yet to materialize is debt funded versus cash funded. There are a lot of war chests out there that need to be spent.”

With inflation running at the hottest pace in decades, the Fed will begin the year by weaning markets off of the exceptionally loose monetary policy they’ve grown accustomed to over the last decade. 

Central bank policy may be the biggest risk for credit markets next year, investors say. If rate hikes accelerate past what’s already been communicated in order to fight inflation, significant losses could be in store for longer-duration high-grade credit which is most sensitive to rising yields.

“It’s certainly a changing monetary environment, and this creates a lot of headwinds for the fixed income market,” said Gene Tannuzzo, global head of fixed income at Columbia Threadneedle Investments. “Waning monetary support coupled with expensive starting valuations warrants a more selective approach to fixed income in 2022.” 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.