‘The corporate credit markets also are
performing well, but we believe this is where the great value will be
found in the next downturn. We are positioning ourselves to capitalize
on this – both through our Brookfield funds,
and through Oaktree.'
Bruce Flatt, CEO of Brookfield Asset Mangement, Feb 13, 2020
LONDON
— To grasp why the most important central banks — from the Fed to the Bank of England to the
Bank of Japan — are now leaping into action as if the world were on fire, it
helps to examine the subject of corporate debt.
For
years, wonks bearing spreadsheets have warned that corporations around the
planet were developing a dangerous addiction to debt. Interest rates were so
low that borrowing money was essentially free, enticing companies to avail
themselves with abandon. Something bad was bound to happen eventually, leaving
borrowers struggling to make their debt payments. Lenders would grow agitated,
tightening credit for everyone. The world would confront a fresh crisis.
Something
bad is now happening. As the coronavirus outbreak spreads, halting factories
from China to Italy, sending stock markets
plunging and prompting fears of a worldwide recession, historic
levels of corporate debt threaten to intensify the economic damage. Companies
facing grave debt burdens may be forced to cut costs, laying off workers and
scrapping investments, as they seek to avoid default.
“We
have been always saying that we are sitting on top of an unexploded bomb, but
we don’t know what is going to trigger it,” said Emre Tiftik, director of
Research for Global Policy Initiatives at the Institute of International
Finance , a Washington-based financial industry
trade group. “Can the coronavirus be a trigger? We don’t know. Maybe.”
By
the end of 2019, total outstanding debt among corporations other than financial
institutions had surged to a record $13.5 trillion worldwide, according to a
recent report by
Serdar Çelik and Mats Isaksson for the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, the Paris-based research institution. That number has swelled
as many companies have sold riskier bonds to finance expansions.
Worries
about corporate debt appear to be enhancing the panic that has captured world markets,
as investors have dumped riskier assets like stocks in favor of safer holdings
like United States government
bonds.
This
was especially vivid on Monday, as markets plunged in reaction to word
that Saudi Arabia was driving oil prices lower.
Many energy companies are dependent on riskier bonds. For them, lower oil
prices translate into lower earnings. They may be forced to cut costs through
layoffs or diminished investments to find cash to make their debt payments.
Concern
about corporate borrowing also helps explain why the U.S. Federal Reserve last
week opted to drop interest rates, and why the European
Central Bank is expected to follow suit on Thursday. Lower interest rates limit
debt payments for companies that might otherwise fall into trouble.
The
concern about the magnitude of corporate debt is an outgrowth of how the world
reacted to the financial crisis in 2008. Central banks from the United States to Europe to Japan pushed
interest rates to zero and below, spurring companies to borrow and invest.
That approach ended the emergency, but also
removed a source of market discipline: It diminished the risk of relying on
debt.
Since
2008, corporations worldwide have issued about $1.8 trillion in new bonds each
year, a pace roughly double the previous seven years, according to the O.E.C.D.
Bond sales slowed in the latter half of 2018, as central banks lifted rates.
But as central banks last year lowered rates anew, the debt binge resumed.
The International Monetary Fund last
year examined the situation in eight countries including the United States , Japan , China and
several European nations. It warned that a shock only half as severe as the
global financial crisis would put nearly 40 percent of total corporate debt at
risk, meaning that companies would not be able cover their payments with
earnings alone.
Not
everyone is sounding the alarm. “The prophets of doom who thought that more
debt was more risk have generally been wrong for the last 12 years,” said
Nicolas Véron, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics in Washington .
“More debt has enabled more growth, and even if you have a bit more volatility,
it’s still net positive for the economy.”
In
contrast to the financial crisis of 2008, few today are worried about the
banking system, which holds capital to cover bad loans. The best-financed
companies like Apple, Google and Facebook have hundreds of billions of dollars
in cash, making them essentially immune to whatever reckoning may lie ahead.
But
even some who praise central banks for rescuing the world from catastrophe
argue that easy money has outlived its usefulness. Years of loose credit have
enabled weak companies to stave off extinction.
“There
are whole sectors that survived that should have gone into restructuring,” said
Alberto Gallo, head of macro strategies at Algebris Investments, an asset
management firm in London .
“Retailers in a world of online retail, energy companies with high production
costs, small banks in Europe that
are not efficient. The availability of funding at very cheap rates has kept
zombie companies alive. This means we have an accumulated level of fragility in
the economy which can be exposed very easily to real shocks.”
As
the coronavirus has spread from Asia to Europe to North
America , it has threatened the earnings of companies that have
financed their businesses by selling riskier bonds.
The
world of bonds can be roughly divided into two realms — those that gain the
stamp of approval from credit rating agencies as investment grade, and those
deemed to be less secure, bearing so-called junk status. Since 2010, about
one-fifth of new corporate bond issuances have been below investment grade,
according to the O.E.C.D. Last year, that proportion grew to one-fourth.
“Default rates in a future downturn are likely to be higher than in previous
credit cycles,” the report said.
Even
within the sturdier category, bond markets have taken a pronounced turn toward
risk: Last year, 51 percent of all outstanding investment-grade bonds were
rated at BBB, the lowest level to qualify for that status, according to the
O.E.C.D. That was up from 39 percent before the financial crisis.
That
trend is troubling to financial experts because it leaves companies — and the
world economy — especially vulnerable to a change in fortunes.
The world’s largest pools of money — asset
managers that control pension funds, mutual fund operators, and insurance
companies — are typically restricted in where they can invest. Many are
obligated to hold the safest bonds.
When
corporate bottom lines are threatened, credit ratings can be downgraded. Given
that more than half of all investment-grade bonds now occupy the lowest rung of
that classification, downgrades could render trillions of dollars’ worth of
such holdings effectively radioactive. Money managers would be forced to unload
them while buying safer assets. That would make credit tighter for many
companies, threatening some with insolvency and constraining economic growth.
This
was the situation before the coronavirus began its lethal, wealth-destroying
wander around the globe. The widespread disruption to factories across Asia and
in Europe, the effective quarantining of all of Italy, and the spread of the
outbreak to the United
States have threatened the earnings of
thousands of companies.
Last
month, Kraft Heinz, the maker of ketchup and other processed foods, had its
debt slashed to junk status. Macy’s, the department store giant, as well as the
carmakers Ford and Renault, have also suffered downgrades.
Fitch Ratings, the credit rating agency, last
week said that one-fourth of the corporate bonds it tracks in Europe have been
issued by companies impeded by government actions meant to limit the spread of
the virus, like travel restrictions and bans on public gatherings.
Companies
dependent on Italy appear
especially vulnerable.
Poste
Italiana oversees mail delivery while also selling financial, insurance and
telecommunications services. The company’s debt is rated BBB. No great powers
of imagination are required to grasp that the sequestration of the nation is
going to stop customers from reaching post offices.
“We’re
going to look at all cost-reduction measures,” the company’s chief executive,
Matteo Del Fante, said in a recent presentation to analysts.
Before
the outbreak arrived in Europe, CNH Industrial, which makes machinery for
construction and agriculture, was cutting expectations for earnings, citing
weak demand in North and South America .
As of the end of 2019, it carried debt of nearly $25 billion. Its bonds are
mostly rated BBB, and Italy is
the source of one-tenth of it sales. Those facts seemed unlikely to bolster
confidence.
History
shows that perilous pressures can build for years inside major economies
without disaster unfolding. Danger signs frequently turn out to be benign.
Perhaps the wave of corporate borrowing will subside without a traumatic event
to right the balance.
But
if a nasty reassessment of risk lies ahead, bringing an economic crisis, the
coronavirus outbreak could be the event that sets it in motion.
“This
is exactly the type of thing that can trigger a chain reaction,” said Sonja
Gibbs, managing director of Global Policy Initiatives at the Institute of International Finance . “The
vulnerability in the corporate debt market has been building up for a very long
time.”
Peter
S. Goodman, The New York Times, reporting from London , England
Peter
S. Goodman is a London-based European economics correspondent. He was
previously a national economic correspondent in New York . He has also worked at The Washington Post as a China correspondent, and was
global editor in chief of the International Business Times. @petersgoodman
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