According to data from Bloomberg, corporations have issued a stunning
$9.3 trillion in bonds since the beginning of 2009. The major
beneficiary of this debt binge has been the stock market rather than
investment in modernizing the plant, equipment or new hires to make the
company more competitive for the future. Bond proceeds frequently ended
up buying back shares or boosting dividends, thus elevating the stock
market on the back of heavier debt levels on corporate balance sheets.
Now, with commodity prices resuming their plunge and currency wars
spreading, concerns of financial contagion are back in the markets and
spreads on corporate bonds versus safer, more liquid instruments like
U.S. Treasury notes, are widening in a fashion similar to the warning
signs heading into the 2008 crash. The $2.2 trillion junk bond market
(high-yield) as well as the investment grade market have seen spreads
widen as outflows from Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and bond funds pick
up steam. (more)
No comments:
Post a Comment