Monday, August 23, 2010

Warning about Low Interest Rates: IBM Gets 3 year Money For 1% / Year


Beware of the Bond Bandwagon

Recent data shows that investors are flocking to bonds and bond mutual funds in overwhelming numbers. The image of the thundering herd comes to mind as economic fears and stock market volatility has instilled fear amongst investors. Recent comments from PIMCO, which runs the world’s largest bond mutual fund, indicate that they are taking in over a billion dollars of capital from investors looking to invest in bonds.

The rout in interest rates has allowed corporations to borrow money from the bond market at some of the lowest interest rates on record. Recently, IBM was able to sell 3 year bonds paying only 1% in interest and Johnson and Johnson was able to issue ten year bonds that only cost the company 3.1% in interest annually.

For corporate America, things have seldom been better. It is estimated that US businesses have nearly $1.5 trillion in cash on their balance sheets and are able to borrow at the most attractive interest rates in decades.

The chart above compares the current dividend yield being earned by shareholders of IBM, McDonald’s and Johnson and Johnson. By looking at the comparison, we can see that the shareholders (owners) are getting paid almost as much or more as the lenders (bond owners). It should be kept in mind that these companies have annual dividend growth rates that that are 16.80%, 28%, and 14% respectively.

If these companies were to continue to grow their respective dividends over the next ten years at the same rate as the last ten years, then the income earned by shareholders would far exceed the income received by the bond holders of these companies. For example, in the case of Johnson and Johnson, if the company could continue to increase its dividend for the next ten years as it did for the last 10 years, its current dividend yield would rise to almost 14% while the bond holders who just purchased the recent bond issue highlighted below would continue to receive a fixed 3.10% interest rate for 10 years.


IBM raised $1.5 billion at the lowest interest rate on record as the credit rally that began in June extended into August on investor confidence the economy won’t slip back into recession.

The 1 percent, 3-year notes from IBM, the world’s biggest computer-services company, have the lowest coupon of the more than 3,400 securities in the Barclays Capital U.S. Corporate Index of investment-grade company debt. Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford Motor Co.’s credit rating was lifted two steps by Standard & Poor’s.

Investors are wagering on corporate America’s debt with 75 percent of S&P 500 index companies reporting profits that exceeded analyst estimates. U.S. manufacturing growth slowed less than economists estimated and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the central bank is “maintaining strong monetary policy support” for the economy.

“Even though the economy isn’t working to its fullest capacity, a lot of investors are feeling that if companies are capable of turning in decent earnings, then they’re able to manage themselves to this low-growth environment,” said Arthur Tetyevsky, chief U.S. credit strategist at Gleacher & Co. in New York.

Borrowers sold $12.9 billion of U.S. corporate bonds yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Citigroup Inc. issued $3 billion of notes, following July sales by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Credit-Default Swaps

The extra yield investors demand to own company debt instead of government bonds fell 1 basis point to 176 basis points, or 1.76 percentage point, the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Broad Market Corporate index shows. Average yields rose 1.6 basis points to 3.767 percent.

Credit markets rallied as the gap narrowed from 201 basis points on June 11 amid growing confidence Europe’s sovereign- debt crisis was under control.

Elsewhere in credit markets, the cost of protecting corporate debt in the U.S. rose, with the Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index, which investors use to hedge against losses on company debt or speculate on creditworthiness, climbing 0.48 basis point to a mid-price of 99.62 basis points as of 11:44 a.m. in New York, according to Markit Group Ltd. In London, the Markit iTraxx Europe Index of swaps on 125 companies with investment-grade ratings dropped 3.3 to 96.59.

Both indexes, which are at the lowest since May 13, typically rise as investor confidence deteriorates and fall as it improves. Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower fails to meet its obligations, less the value of the defaulted debt. A basis point equals $1,000 annually on a swap protecting $10 million of bonds and loans.

Household Spending

Rising wages will probably spur household spending in the next few quarters, even as weak job gains drag down consumer confidence, Bernanke said yesterday in a speech in Charleston, South Carolina.

“We are maintaining strong monetary policy support for the recovery,” Bernanke said in response to an audience question, without discussing further action the Fed could take to aid growth.

U.S. employers cut 60,000 jobs in July, the second straight drop in non-farm payrolls this year, according to the median estimate of 77 economists in a Bloomberg survey before the Labor Department reports the data Aug. 6.

The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing gauge dropped to 55.5 last month, exceeding the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, from 56.2 in June. Readings greater than 50 indicate growth. The group’s bookings gauge, considered a leading indicator, fell to a one-year low.

Bond Issuance

Companies sold $90.1 billion of U.S. corporate bonds last month, the most for July since at least 1999. Average yields on the securities fell to 5.01 percent on July 31, the lowest since April 2004, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data.

Sales yesterday were the busiest since July 21, when the total reached $12.9 billion, Bloomberg data show.

“It’s a very good time for companies to be issuing debt and they have excellent balance sheets that they’re leveraging as well,” John Herrmann, a senior fixed-income strategist at Boston-based State Street Global Markets LLC, said yesterday in a Bloomberg Television interview. “We have extremely low rates and yet at the same time investors are searching for yield over Treasuries.”

IBM’s bonds were priced to yield 30 basis points more than similar-maturity Treasuries, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The company, based in Armonk, New York, last sold debt in November, issuing $750 million of two-year floating-rate notes and $1.25 billion of 3.5-year fixed-rate securities.

Citigroup Bonds

Citigroup’s bonds were sold in a two-part offering, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The $2.25 billion of 10-year notes pay 255 basis points more than similar-maturity Treasuries, and the $750 million of debt sold through a reopening of its notes due in 2015 yield 4.182 percent, the data show.

The sale was Citigroup’s biggest since September when the bank sold $5 billion of notes guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in a four-part offering, Bloomberg data show.

Citigroup may sell as much as $21 billion of debt this year, up from an earlier target of $15 billion, Treasurer Eric Aboaf said in a July 22 interview with Bloomberg News. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley issued a combined $8.9 billion of bonds last month.

Ford’s credit ranking was raised by S&P to B+, four steps below investment grade, from B- on expectations the company will remain profitable and amid signs that customers have a better impression of the automaker’s vehicles, the ratings company said yesterday in a statement. The outlook is positive.

Ford has “substantial” cash balances and likely will continue to generate free operating cash flow, the ratings company said. Consumers have an “improved perception” of Ford’s vehicles and its efforts to introduce more fuel-efficient models in the next few years, S&P said.

The dreaded "W" to news & commentary by Gordon Pape

The dreaded "W" (news & commentary by Gordon Pape)

So are we or are we not going to experience a double-dip recession referred
to as a "W" in economists' shorthand?

I don't know. Neither does Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke,
although he and his fellow governors are worried about the possibility. The
statement accompanying the Aug. 10 decision by the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) to hold the line on interest rates was a classic example of
"on the one hand, on the other hand".

Here's what I mean:
On the one hand: "Household spending is increasing gradually."
On the other hand: "(It) remains constrained by high unemployment, modest
income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit."
On the one hand: "Business spending on equipment and software is rising."
On the other hand: "Investment in non-residential structures continues to be
weak and employers remain reluctant to add to payrolls."

The Fed acknowledged that the pace of economic recovery has slowed in recent
months with housing starts at a "depressed level" while bank lending "continued
to contract".

But despite this, the FMOC reached a positive, albeit woolly, conclusion: "The
Committee anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in
a context of price stability, although the pace of economic recovery is likely to
be more modest in the near term than had been anticipated."

In the meantime, interest rates will remain at historic lows for "an extended
period" and the Fed will support U.S. government bonds by continuing to invest
in longer-term Treasuries as current holdings mature.

Not that U.S. Treasuries need a lot of help รข€“ as they do every time W-fever
raises its head, investors were selling stocks and piling into bonds at a frenzied
pace for most of last week. At the close of trading on Aug. 5, U.S. Treasury
bonds with a 10-year maturity were yielding 2.9 per cent.

One week later, on Aug. 12, the yield had dropped 15 basis points to 2.75 per cent as investors fled from the stock markets. In this country, the yield on 10-year Government of
Canada bonds fell 10 basis points in the same period to 3.01 per cent.
Of course, this isn't the first time this has happened. We're going through a
period of extreme volatility in both stock and bond markets as investors react
emotionally to the news of the day. And we're likely to see more of the same
until such time as fog bank obscuring the economic future begins to lift.

To make matters worse, we're in August, a notoriously slow month in the markets. As one
broker put it: "It's like trying to sail a boat with no wind. You haven't a clue
where you're going."

Personally, I don't believe a double-dip recession is likely, although we can't
discount the possibility entirely. We weren't going to emerge from the worst
financial meltdown since the Great Depression overnight and anyone who
thought otherwise was dreaming.

But we will come out of it eventually and in the meantime, if you are feeling brave you can take advantage of some of the great bargains that are out there.

In the end, how you respond to this situation depends on what type of person
you are. It would be great if someone could tell you with absolute certainty what
will happen over the next year or two. But no one can. There are many possible
scenarios, including a continued gradual recovery, a double-dip recession, a
Japanese-style stagflation, or a genuine depression.

Conservative investors should play it safe. Weight your portfolio towards highquality
fixed-income securities and focus your stock list on Canadian banks,
utilities, and leading telecoms such as BCE Inc., which just raised its dividend by
5 per cent.

More aggressive readers should look for opportunities with unusually strong
profit potential such as energy and mining stocks. But even if you are willing to
accept a higher degree of risk, cushion your downside by including some quality
bonds or bond funds in the mix.

It is easier to invest during periods of economic stability. But to succeed over
the long term, you must have the ability to ride out the bad stretches with
minimal or no damage to your finances. The starting point is to understand what
type of investor you are and then structure your portfolio accordingly.

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