
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, May 10, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: If GM's investment-grade rating sheds its mortal coil, the entire corporate bond market may suffer a near-death experience, especially the junk-bond sector
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------------------------- VEHICULAR BOND SLAUGHTER By Eric J. Fry Now that GM's credit rating clings for its life, millions of bond investors are holding a candle for the auto titan - hoping for a miraculous recovery. If GM's investment-grade rating sheds its mortal coil, the entire corporate bond market may suffer a near-death experience, especially that portion of the bond market that already faces life and death situations every day
the junk-bond sector. Now more than ever, therefore, junk bonds - known in polite company as "high-yield" bonds - might not be suitable for widows and orphans
or for married couples and their children
or for divorcees
or for same-sex partners
or for almost any other sort of investor who favors return OF capital over return ON capital. Last week, an intellectually honest credit analyst at Standard & Poor's named Scott Sprinzen, plunged the credit ratings of both General Motors and Ford into the ranks of junk borrowers. In so doing, he seemed to plunge many junk- bond investors into a state of extreme denial. To be sure, many GM bondholders panicked immediately upon learning of the downgrade and dumped their holdings. Likewise, many other high-yield investors reacted swiftly and decisively to the news by dumping an array of high- yield bonds. A few steps removed from the fray, however, the owners of closed-end funds that invest in high-yield securities steadfastly held their ground. They responded as if GM's travails posed no risk whatsoever to the rest of the high- yield market.  RMK High Income Fund (NYSE: RMH), for example, continues to hold near its recent highs, even though GMs bonds are plummeting toward all-time lows. Are RMH shareholders courageous or naïve? (Or maybe they're courageous AND naïve). Let the reader decide.
We would readily concede that GM bonds and the rest of the high-yield market are not one and the same. But neither are they as different as RMH's resilient share price would seem to imply. The chart below presents the recent yield histories of a GM bond maturing in 2015 and an index of BB-rated bonds (GM's new peer group). A close correlation between the two is readily apparent, as is the recent spike in GM's yield to distressed levels.
If GM's bonds - the newest and largest members of the junk- bond ranks - are reflecting extreme distress, shouldn't the prices of closed-end funds that specialize in junk bonds be reflecting at least mild concern? A few of them are, but many are not. Last week's twin-downgrade of Ford and GM was not an every- day event. To the contrary, both automakers are massive borrowers. "GM, with about $300 billion in notes, bonds, loans and asset-backed securities as of Dec. 31, and Ford, with about $151 billion, are the biggest companies [ever] cut to junk," Bloomberg News reports. "The former biggest so-called fallen angel was WorldCom, which had $30 billion of bonds cut to speculative grade on May 10, 2002. GM's cut affects about $200 billion of debt." For perspective, GM's debt alone would account for about 15% of all U.S. high-yield bonds outstanding. In other words, junk-bond buyers might find themselves with much more junk than they wish to buy. And a dollar spent buying a bond issued by GM or Ford bonds would be a dollar NOT spent buying some other sort of junk bond. Net-net, we suspect GM and Ford will be about as welcome in the junk- bond market as a windstorm at an origami festival
and just as disruptive. "When Standard & Poor's shunted General Motors and Ford into the credit junkyard on Thursday," the Times of London remarked, "there was no groan of bending steel, no screech of torn metal." Very true. But a car that is hurtling off a cliff makes no sound whatsoever
for a while. "The cliffhanger is whether another ratings agency, such as Moody's or Fitch, follows S&P's lead," the Times continues. Such a decision would push GM out of Lehman's Global Aggregate index and into the world of fixed-income "untouchables." Many pension funds and other institutional investors may not own junk-rated bonds. If/As/When these institutional investors must disgorge their GM and Ford bonds, traditional high-yield investors might choke on the supply. As for the prospect of a meaningful financial recovery at GM, we are dubious. Nothing short of the miraculous will enable GM to recover any semblance of its past glory. The automaker's share of the U.S. auto market during the first four months of the year tumbled to an 80-year low of 25.6 percent - down from 27.3 percent in the same period of 2004. "Although GM has substantial cash reserves," Sprinzen ominously concludes, "its ability to withstand persistent poor financial performance is not unlimited." Maybe the worst is over already for the high-yield market, but we doubt it. And even if we wanted to believe it, we would not bet on that outcome with any of our own money. Hold a candle for GM's credit rating if you wish, but don't hold your breath. [Ed. Note: Dan Denning has been predicting GM's demise for a long time. Hark! Another prediction of Dan's comes true. The good news is, there are still a few dominoes left to fall, and the fattest profits are still to come
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Eric J. Fry "Bond yields in all major countries are falling toward all- time lows," bond-fund guru Bill Gross observed last Friday. "So it looks like these bond markets are telling us that the global economy is slowing down." Who are we to disagree?
The bond markets must also be telling us that inflation is less of a problem than many of us had feared. The bond market might change its mind, of course. But it has been holding the identical opinion for several months now
Eventually, we might be forced to hold the same opinion. [Ed. Note: Protect your family's wealth no matter what happens in the bond market, with this no-downside, beautifully contrarian investment
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http://www1.youreletters.com/t/136732/4873192/775416/0 ------------------------- And the Markets
| Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,384 | 10,345 | 39 | -3.7% | S&P | 1,179 | 1,171 | 7 | -2.7% | NASDAQ | 1,980 | 1,967 | 12 | -9.0% | 10-year Treasury | 4.28% | 4.27% | 0.02 | 0.07 | 30-year Treasury | 4.62% | 4.63% | -0.01 | -0.20 | Russell 2000 | 603 | 597 | 6 | -7.5% | Gold | $426.12 | $426.20 | -$0.08 | -2.6% | Silver | $7.06 | $6.93 | $0.13 | 3.7% | CRB | 300.82 | 300.46 | 0.36 | 5.9% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $52.03 | $50.90 | $1.13 | 19.7% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 105.64 | JPY 105.03 | -0.61 | -3.0% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2843 | $1.2815 | -28 | 5.2% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8835 | $1.8900 | 65 | 1.8% |
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