Wall Street Sees Junk Bond Collapse, Prepares to Profit from it

“Maybe this isn’t a great indication of the state of the economy.”

When something collapses, new opportunities open up. Hedge funds, private equity firms, and other asset managers specialize in this. And now there are signs of hope for these folks, that opportunities are approaching, that the credit bubble is about to implode, offering untold riches to those able to pick up the right scraps.

How do we know? Wall Street firms are staffing up for the coming era of “distressed debt.”

This is an ad I ran into on S&P Capital IQ LCD’s highyieldbond.com:

Taplin, Canida & Habacht is looking for a High Yield/Distressed Debt Corporate Analyst. The analyst will be a generalist, looking for opportunities across sectors and issuer capital structures.

And the first of the “Key Accountabilities” is this:

Monitor and analyze credit risk and recovery value of high yield and distressed debt sectors through sector analysis, bottom-up fundamental research and bond covenant analysis.

The firm, which manages fixed income portfolios for institutional investors, may look to profit from other funds’ misery by buying up distressed debt for cents on the dollar, hoping to score some big gains when the dust settles.

It’s not the only firm looking for the right people. According to efinancialcareers, the Number 2 of the 10 most sought-after specialists in New York’s financial services sector for “the remainder of 2015” is – after “Healthcare-focused investment bankers” –  well… “Distressed debt analysts.”

So the report:

Maybe this isn’t a great indication of the state of the economy, but hedge funds with a distressed debt focus are looking to staff up. Primarily, they’re looking for experienced analysts with 8-15 years in the industry, suggests Robin Judson, managing partner and group founder at headhunters Robin Judson Partners in New York.

“This is in anticipation of more credits running into problems over the next 18 months,” she says.

“Distressed debt” is one of the few growth industries in the US. More and more junk bonds are falling into this category, and their prices are deteriorating.

These distressed bonds are tracked in special indices, including the S&P US Distressed High-Yield Corporate Bond Index. It’s a market-weighted index of junk bonds with an option-adjusted spread of at least 1,000 basis points (10 percentage points). This massive spread indicates that investors believe that these bonds are in a heap of trouble.

August has been rough for distressed bonds. Month-to-date, the index has dropped 5.4% to 72.89. Since mid-May, the peak of the false-hope energy-bond rally, the index has lost 19%. A year ago, the index was at 101. It has since lost 28%. The chart shows the brutality of the decline:

US-Distressed-high-yield-corporate-bond-index-SP

Note the energy-driven panic last fall, followed by the false-hope energy-bond rally in the spring until May 11. But it wasn’t just energy bonds. Many troubled companies – opportunities or nightmares, depending where you sit – ply their trade outside energy. Example du jour: American Apparel.

The company’s shares have been in the penny-stock range since 2010. It has a stellar record of losing money. Tuesday afterhours, it warned in an SEC filing that it didn’t have enough cash to get through the next 12 months, and that it might not find any investors stupid enough to lend it more money to burn through. Well, OK, it didn’t phrase it exactly that way.

Its shares crashed 50% in early trading on Wednesday, but then recovered some to end the day down 37%, having fallen from almost nothing ($0.20 a share) to even less ($0.13 a share).

To stay afloat over the years, it piled on new debt to make up for the money it was losing. Then there was corporate turmoil, including the termination for cause of its CEO and founder Dov Charney.

For shareholders, this company has been hopeless for years. But some of its debt still has value. Standard & Poor’s graciously rates the company CCC- with negative outlook. And it rates the 13% senior secured notes due 2020 at CC, with a recovery rating of 5. Moody’s rates the company Caa2, also with negative outlook.

If the company, which had $271 million in assets and $415 million in liabilities as of March 31, runs out of cash, defaults on its debt, and restructures in bankruptcy court, its shares will be worthless, and its unsecured creditors will get shafted too. But its secured debt still has some value. The fund managers that own it might want to get rid of it before it’s too late. And that’s where hedge funds and private equity firms with some “distressed debt analysts” under their roof might see an opportunity, for cents on the dollar.

It already happened this year. After the energy-junk-bond rout last fall that had the feel of a panic, the smart money jumped in and picked up these bonds, thinking that the oil rout was over. Now these folks are sitting in their offices, licking their burned fingers.

Looking for opportunities in distressed debt can be a very painful experience. But a hedge fund with some luck, lots of patience, some good analysts combing through the details, and a willingness to get its fingers burned off can make some real moolah after enough hot air has hissed out of the credit bubble. And they’re already staffing up for this process.

A scary thought for those souls deluding themselves into thinking that there aren’t big problems in the bond market.

It’s already happening. Samson Resources is planning to file for bankruptcy by August 15, when interest comes due on $2.25 billion of senior unsecured junk bonds, which have become worthless. Stockholders are getting wiped out too. Secured creditors will gain control over the company. So who’s making the money? Read… Big Natural Gas Driller Bites Dust, ‘Smart Money’ Gets Crushed

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  7 comments for “Wall Street Sees Junk Bond Collapse, Prepares to Profit from it

  1. Vespa P200E says:

    Investment bankers will always make money especially in underwriting junkiest bonds, commission from peddling them, trade against the muppet clients and advise the bond issuer client by hold their hands while headed to default and BK.

    • CrazyCooter says:

      Don’t forget that at one time, Detroit was the *wealthiest* city in the US. New York City, the heart of US banking, may not be in such great shape in the future if banking doesn’t continue to operate in the same manner as today.

      There is a deflation coming. A big one. And bankers, just like everyone else, are going to get shown the door when mortgage flows collapse, retirement fund streams collapse, and companies – along with their need to issue debt for expansion (or buybacks) collapse. What happens when the retail investor is wiped out and doesn’t have savings left? New York City is one of the LAST places in the US I would want to be, even if I was rich, and even more so if I was working class. The taxes are already bad and I don’t see how it improves from here.

      Sure, some bankers will stay rich and all that, but many will not. Is life roses for Dick Fuld? Don’t underestimate the possibility that after they burn the house down (again) that there may actually be consequences.

      If I was in finance/banking, I would have planned my exit and found a different industry a couple years ago.

      Regards,

      Cooter

      • Petunia says:

        I think the Trump candidacy is proof, the economy is so bad, even billionaires can’t make money anymore.

  2. Gee says:

    that chart maps to the oil price, which just so happens to be where the distressed debt is and will be coming from in the boatloads. What would be interesting to see is where ELSE it is coming from.

  3. NotSoSure says:

    What a great racket. Hats off to the bankers. Earn money on the way up, earn money on the way down.

    Say what you want about “evil” people, but they always have their sh**ts together.

  4. Julian the Apostate says:

    Usually when fear strikes from the latest disaster we have an influx of insulting comments from the fiat money people. This time seems different…just our normal traffic. If they don’t even have time to shoot the messenger, what are they doing with their time, hmm? Is it possible that all this negative news is getting too up close and personal? Just wondering.

  5. Christoph Weise says:

    If vultures could profit depends on the general sustainability of the fracking business model and this is currently not really clear. Protagonists and opponents present fundamentally different data and one of the two sides needs to be wrong. I have seen many financial institutions getting involved in really stupid deals and I would not be totally surprised if the Wall Street engagement into fracking would turn into a complete disaster.

Comments are closed.