TwentyFour
The BoE Should Wait and See
A rate cut now makes very little sense to us, and wastes one of the few bullets the BoE has left in its armoury. If they do decide to cut next week, we think it will be reversed within 12 months.
TwentyFour
Margin For Error in Credit Selection Narrows
We have talked regularly about avoiding ‘next year’s skeletons’, and this is now more pertinent given the strength of the current technical backdrop, combined with spread levels that are significantly tighter relative to this time last year.
TwentyFour
ABS Primary Slips Into Gear
We have already highlighted the blistering pace of bond sales in both Europe and the US, and this being met with apparently insatiable demand from fixed income investors. Since European ABS markets tend to lag broader fixed income, it seems fitting that we have had to wait another week before seeing that primary machine start to accelerate.
TwentyFour
Record Inflows Give New Energy to US Bond Market
While the European bond market was setting records last week, the US market has also begun 2020 with a flurry of transactions backed up by record inflows.
TwentyFour
Heavy Supply Meets Heavy Demand
Kicking off the new year, we expected the new issue market to be very active and we certainly haven’t been disappointed, with the good momentum created at the end of last year – thanks to the US and China reaching a ‘phase one’ agreement and the resounding victory by the Conservatives paving the way for Brexit negotiations to move forward – allowing pent-up borrowing demand to hit the market.
TwentyFour
Newell: Fallen Angel to Rising Star?
Fixed income investors are well versed in the risks of ‘fallen angels’, investment grade companies whose bonds tumble in value once they are downgraded to high yield.
TwentyFour
Carney to Leave UK Banks on Solid Ground
The Bank of England (BoE) on Monday published its latest financial stability report and the results of its 2019 bank stress tests, and declared that the UK financial system is well prepared for even a worst-case Brexit and consequent trade war.
TwentyFour
CoreCivic Shows ESG Will Take No Prisoners
"One group of issuers that appears vulnerable to us as we move into a new decade is those facing increased investor scrutiny due to Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) factors. The case of CoreCivic, a listed REIT in the US, is a good example"
TwentyFour
What Next For Sterling Bonds?
Overnight markets have had significant news to digest, with two of the major geopolitical hurdles that had been worrying investors being removed.
TwentyFour
European HY Default Rates Doubling No Reason to Panic
"Where defaults get to exactly depends on a few things, but we can certainly analyse where we think the problem areas could be, whether cracks are already starting to appear, and what investors might do to protect themselves."
TwentyFour
Trade war volatility maintains grip on bonds
By now investors should be getting used to the ever more frequent hiccups in the trade negotiations between the US and the rest of the world.
TwentyFour
Data decline eases for Germany and US
"In some parts of the global economy, we might be seeing a bottom in terms of low activity levels." TwentyFour's Felipe Villarroel discusses the factors behind these improving trends.