TwentyFour

Credit Fundamentals Set to Improve Further
Frustratingly for fixed income investors looking to buy bonds, the data seem to fully justify the high valuations we see in so many parts of our market at the moment; it really would not make sense to be able to buy bonds cheaply when conditions are so good.
TwentyFour

Fed Sales a Drop in the Bucket, but Watch the Ripples
While we don’t expect any material spread widening in the near term, we remain extremely wary of higher duration bonds given our view that the potential persistent inflation suggested by recent data isn’t priced into US Treasury yields, which currently sit around 1.58% at the 10-year point.
TwentyFour

Investors Should Fight Weakened CLO Docs
2021 looks set to become a post-financial crisis record year for European CLO issuance and refinancings, but amid the rush of activity we are seeing a concerning trend for weaker documentation in refinanced deals that in our view investors need to fight against.
TwentyFour

Central Banks Get Ready to Talk Tapering
After unleashing the strongest combined emergency package we have ever seen in 2020, central banks are now entering perhaps the most challenging phase of their COVID-19 response, trying to balance the economic recovery while at the same time having to reassure the markets they can control the threat of runaway inflation.
TwentyFour

Your Lufthansa Coupon Has Been Delayed, But Not Cancelled
Last week there was a rare occurrence in the high yield market as German airline Lufthansa announced it would be deferring the coupon on a hybrid bond issued in 2015.
TwentyFour

What Does US Wage Data Say About Inflation?
From our perspective, the potential wage pressures we see make us uncomfortable with 10-year Treasury yields at current levels, despite their significant rise since the start of the year.
TwentyFour

Reaching For The Risk Dial as Valuations Stretch
Having witnessed the most remarkable turnaround in risk markets over the last 14 months, it makes sense to take stock as fundamentals look to us to be approaching optimal levels. Credit spreads have ground into levels not far from the prior cycle’s tights, and while we remain confident in the underlying fundamentals and a good technical backdrop, recent developments mean that despite this constructive view, our risk appetite has ticked down slightly.
TwentyFour

What’s Really Going On With US Jobs?
At 8.1m, the number of job openings as of March 31 was the highest it has been since the data series began some 20 years ago.
TwentyFour

Classic Late-cycle Issuance…in Mid-cycle
Markets can often be tricky for investors in May as bond issuers take advantage of a window of opportunity following the Q1 earnings season and ahead of the typical summer lull. This often results in heavy supply in late April and early May, hence the old trader adage of “sell in May and go away”.
TwentyFour

Is Shunning Coal a Good Policy for Capital Markets?
As long as coal usage is not illegal, a private buyer of any origin will be able to purchase these assets cheaper and run them for as long as possible with no regard for ESG matters.
TwentyFour

What's Happened to the Brexit Premium?
There has been a lot of focus on the performance of the high yield markets since the start of the year, particularly in Q1 when many rates markets were selling off aggressively.
TwentyFour

Beware a Second Wave of Treasury Selling
Crucially while the Fed may wait to see the evidence, markets won’t, and we therefore expect a ‘second wave’ of Treasury selling to happen well before then.