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Southwest Airlines Adds to the Surge in Convertible Bond Deals

Southwest Airlines Adds to the Surge in Convertible Bond Deals

(Bloomberg) -- Southwest Airlines Co. launched a billion-dollar convertible offering Tuesday morning, adding to the massive pile of paper sold in 2020.

Some $25 billion in bonds with embedded stock options have been issued this year, more than any other January through April period over the last 13 years. The rush of activity shows companies are prioritizing cash needs, topping up in capital markets in the wake of a trillion-dollar stimulus bill.

At the current pace of convertible issuance, the 2020 haul could hit $75 billion on an annualized basis, says Steven Halperin, Barclays head of Americas equity-linked and hybrid solutions. That would not only top last year’s record, but also touch levels unseen since at least 2008, when some $86 billion in deals were closed.

Southwest Airlines is the latest to launch a convertible offering, a piece of an overall financing package that includes straight debt and equity, following deals from Carnival Corp., and Booking Holdings Inc.

Read More: Southwest Is Said in Discussions to Raise New Equity, Debt

Pricing has been favorable, so far. Convertible offering terms on the table have become “materially wider” than average pre-pandemic terms, says Santosh Sreenivasan, JPMorgan’s head of equity-linked products, but strong demand from buyers helped many companies secure better terms than what they first shopped.

Southwest Airlines Adds to the Surge in Convertible Bond Deals

“That demonstrates the convertible market is open and ready,” Sreenivasan said.

The investment-grade crowd has been drawn to straight debt markets since the financial crisis when an era of uber-low interest rates was ushered in. At most, annual convertible deals have totaled $56 billion since 2009. But as the S&P 500 swooned on pandemic fears and credit spreads in investment-grade debt widened, the promise of tighter spreads in convertibles is now attracting industries it hasn’t serviced in a decade.

Retailers Burlington Stores Inc., Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc., and American Eagle Outfitters Inc. have closed deals that were at least $400 million, apiece. Meanwhile, the typical customers for convertibles from the technology and health care sectors are also feverishly raising capital: Slack Technologies Inc., Cree Inc., and Snap Inc. put out $500 million-plus offerings, while Coherus Biosciences Inc. and Nevro Corp. posted smaller ones.

Of the 18 convertible bonds issued since April, the vast majority of them have priced at the mid-point of where they were marketed, or better, showing the demand for convertible notes. A few companies, untouched by coronavirus, have even secured pre-pandemic terms -- 2% coupons and conversion premiums, the price at which the embedded stock options come into play, in excess of 25%.

Equity investors could be drawn into buying convertible bonds, especially among those who expect shares to pivot. Recovery-type trades -- if the company in question does recover -- offers more upside as the stock option within the convertible becomes more valuable, says Eli Pars, Calamos Advisors co-CIO, and head of alternative strategies.

Carnival’s stock didn’t have to move much for it to hit its convertible price of $10. Meanwhile, Southwest’s convertibles is said to be marketed with a conversion premium of 30%-35%. Its shares are trading at $29, but hit a high of $58 as recently as mid-February.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.