Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- A “wall” of junk debt maturing in the next four years will increase the risk of corporate defaults in the U.S., according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
More than $600 billion of high-yield bonds and loans are due to be repaid between 2012 and 2014, New York-based analysts Oleg Melentyev and Mike Cho wrote in a note to clients. Almost 90 percent of loans outstanding mature in the next five years, compared with an average of 36 percent between 2005 and 2009, according to the report.
“While the wall-shaped schedule of future maturities is nothing new for the high-yield issuer universe, it is more front-loaded today,” the analysts said. “This could result in additional default pressures further down the road as issuers deal with a higher concentration of maturities than they what they have been dealing with in the past.”
The looming payments stem from companies shifting their loans to shorter maturities of three to five years, compared with five to seven years in the past, they said.
Banks stung by $1.7 trillion of writedowns and losses are more reluctant to lend to the neediest borrowers with ratings below Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and BBB- by Standard & Poor’s, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Leveraged loans to U.S. companies shrank 81 percent in 2009 from their peak of $913.5 billion in 2007, the data show.
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If this van is a rockin' ... that's because I live in it now.
ReplyDeleteand I still haven't found what I'm looking for'
ReplyDeleteMy unemployment benefits run out in 10 weeks. I sent out almost 500 resumes and no luck. What now? A tent city for me?
ReplyDeleteThis is the best one yet -
ReplyDeleteToday this "anal-ylst" from Barclays says all the negative numbers currently are weather related.
So ! Everybody cheer up ! When the sun comes out sometime in March; everything will be just
Peachy!
Weather related ha ha Hot Air
ReplyDelete