Financial Times 09Apr2020

(WallPaper) #1

Thursday9 April 2020 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES 9


CO M PA N I E S & M A R K E T S


L AU R E N C E F L E TC H E R


Covalis Capital, the London-based
investment firm, plans to raise $500m
for a new portfolio to take advantage
of sharp stock market moves, the
latest fund to spot opportunities in the
coronavirus-driven turmoil.


The equity-focused company, which
manages about $1.5bn in assets, believes
large-scale selling by investors cutting
exposures in recent weeks, as well as the
impact of lockdowns on companies’
earnings, is throwing up trades for
managers who can act quickly.
“We see a lot of dislocations right
now,” said Zach Mecelis, the founder,
whose company specialises in utilities,
commodities and infrastructure stocks.
“We’re our most excited on a five-year
view,” added the former trader at GLG
Partners, the hedge fund.
The fundraising follows simi-
lar moves y a number of larger manag-b
ers that have been closed to new inves-
tors for long periods.
DE Shaw s raising $2bn for its firsti
fundraising in its flagship fund in seven
years and Baupost has been approach-
ing investors while Christopher Hohn’s


TCI has been looking at further fund-
raising after being approached by inves-
tors.
Covalis’s two hedge funds have been
shut to new money for years. However,
it has occasionally done co-investments
in which a client invests alongside a
hedge fund in a specific trade.
But such arrangements can take time
to put together. And because of the
sharp daily swings in stocks over recent
weeks, some disparities in share prices
have opened for only a matter of days.
For the new vehicle, investors will

reserve a portion of the $500m capacity
and, if an investment that Covalis spots
meets their criteria, then it can put the
money into the market rapidly.
Mr Mecelis said he had noted steep
falls in some stocks hit by investors
slashing risk, even though other stocks
in the same industry and with similar
characteristics were less affected.
He also pointed to sectors such as
airports and toll roads where the global
impact of the lockdown is hurting com-
panies’ earnings. Big changes in profits,
which have been lacking in recent years,
can create opportunities for traders to
bet on one stock against another.
“We’ve lived in a world where
dispersion is very low, which is depress-
ing,” he said, referring to the spread of
profits of individual companies. “We
now see enormous dispersion and vola-
tility of earnings.”
Covalis’s main fund has made an aver-
age annual return of about 14 per cent,
including double-digit gains in 2015,
2016 and 2017.
Pecora Capital, a US-based hedge
fund, has raised $30m for a new
Recovery Opportunity fund to exploit
short-term price falls in assets.

Equities


Covalis targets $500m fund to exploit


opportunities in lockdown ‘dislocations’


K A D H I M S H U B B E R— WA S H I N GTO N
P H I L I P STA F F O R D— LO N D O N

US regulators have expressed
relief that the plumbing underpinning
capital markets withstood the whipsaw
volatility in prices produced by the
coronavirus pandemic in the past
month.

In interviews with the Financial Times,
officials at the two federal agencies in
charge of maintaining orderly markets
said they had seen minimal problems
even as equities and futures were
buffeted in record trading.
“The story thus far has been a very
good story, a story of resilience,” said
Heath Tarbert, chairman of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commis-
sion, which has oversight of the US
derivatives markets.
“That wouldn’t have been necessarily
what we would have expected in 2013 or
2015,” said Brett Redfearn, director of
trading and markets at the Securities
and Exchange Commission, the equity
markets regulator.
“Only five or six years ago, we saw a lot
more system glitches,” he said, referenc-
ing past trading outages at major equity

exchanges. Investors’ fears over a global
economic slowdown lead to record
demands for funds to backstop futures
deals, according to figures shared with
the FT, as well as repeated trading halts,
putting the nation’s exchanges and
clearing houses under their most sus-
tained pressure since 2008.
The result has been a dramatic stress
test for the post-2008 crisis market

infrastructure reforms that US
regulators have spent the past decade
implementing.
Former regulators, too, have joined in
praise of the system’s performance to
date, though cautioning there could still
be months of trouble on Wall Street if
pain in the broader economy shakes up
the markets and drives down asset
values.
“People ought to draw some comfort
with how well the system has held up,”

said James Burns, a partner at Willkie
Farr who was deputy director of the
SEC’s trading and markets division from
2012 to 2014. “However, as [baseball
legend] Yogi Berra said, it ain’t over till
it’s over.”
The volatile market moves in March
created record demands for margin at
clearing houses run by CME Group,
Intercontinental Exchange and the UK’s
LCH, regulators’ figures show.
Forcing traders to set aside large
amounts of cash, known as margin, as
insurance on their trades was a key area
of post-2008 crisis reformdesigned to
reduce risk in derivatives markets that
caused havoc to the financial system.
As Saudi Arabia’s decision to provoke
anoil price war ent crude and stocks
prices tumbling on March 8, clearing
houses in the US and Europe collected
an extra $55bn of variation margin from
banks, Mr Tarbert told the FT. That far
exceeded the $31.5bn collected in the
tumultuous trading after Brexit.
The following week, as markets
reacted to the US Federal Reserve cut-
ting interest rates, one bank had to
stump up an additional $9.6bn of
margin within an hour, Mr Tarbert said.

Cross asset


US regulators express relief at lack


of glitches despite jump in volatility


‘People ought to


draw some comfort
with how well the

system has held up’


The lockdown is hurting company
earnings in sectors such as airports

B RYC E E L D E R


Investors are getting set for a flood of
emergency share sales as companies try
to secure funds to tide them through the
effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
The first wave of issuers has included
vulnerable companies such as cruise
line operator Carnival, which included
e quity as a slice of its $6.25bn
rescue financing ast week, and UKl
retailers WHSmith and SSP, which have
many outlets at airports and train
stations.
Companies such as Auto Trader, the
classified ads publisher, have also raised
funds in part to take advantage
of “opportunities” that the outbreak
may create.
European retailers and leisure busi-
nesses are seen by analysts to have the
most urgent need for funds. Pressure
has also been building on industries
already undergoing long-term struc-
tural changes, such as the car sector.
With a funding window now open,
however, the most distressed compa-
nies are not expected to be the first in
the queue.
“Stumping up new equity at a time of
pressure on fund performance and
redemptions is a difficult ask for
investors,” said Mark Irvine-Fortescue,
an analyst at Stifel who covers the travel
and leisure sector.
Investors would “more readily” sup-
port companies that had solid balance
sheets before the pandemic hit but are
now seeking to protect their cash flows
during a trading halt, he added.
“It helps when the investment case is
still intact and there is a path back to


some sort of trading normality,” said
Mr Irvine-Fortescue. “It also helps
where stakeholders are seen to be
sharing the pain collectively... [Fall]
short on any of these points and compa-
nies could struggle.”
Bankers are optimistic that investor
demand will match supply, especially if
new issues are offered at a discount to
the current share price.
Big investors including long-only
funds have about 5-10 per cent of their
assets in cash, said Fabian de Smet,
global head of equity syndicate at
Berenberg, and are ready to support
companies they are already invested in
or to use discounted placings as an entry
point.
“The market is wide open,” said Mr de
Smet. “And everything has a price.”
Authorities around the world, includ-
ing in China, Germany and Australia,
have responded to the crisis by easing
restrictions such as how much compa-
nies can raise without seeking share-
holder approval.
In the UK, the Pre-Emption Group, a
branch of the Financial Reporting Coun-
cil advising on best practices, has said it
supports equity issues of up to 20 per
cent of issued share capital on a case-by-

case basis. Previously, it capped cash
calls for general corporate purposes at
just 5 per cent.
A Berenberg client survey showed
broad support for such concessions,
although opinion was split between
long-only investors who feared dilution
of their holdings and hedge funds that
prized the extra flexibility.
While existing shareholders already
have an incentive to support a company,
new investors have bargaining power to
influence terms.
Volatility heightens the pressure. The
vast majority of cash calls over the past
two decades have been priced when the
Vix, Wall Street’s volatility index, was
below its long-term average of 20,
according to Berenberg.
With the Vix last month hitting a
record high bove 80, new investorsa
have been demanding ever deeper dis-
counts to match their risks.
One compromise is to offer what
bankers call soft pre-emption rights,
where current investors are offered first
refusal. “We have a duty to protect
existing shareholders,” said Mr de Smet
of Berenberg. “When doing allocations,
we will always favour the top 10 or top
20 investors.”

Equity markets are not the only
option for fresh funding. State guaran-
tees have backstopped banks’ credit
lines and kept the bond markets open
for companies with high credit ratings.
According to estimates from Exane
BNP Paribas, policy responses across
Europe should allow the banking sys-
tem to underwrite the existing €1.5tn of
non-financial corporate bond-market
debt, of which around €170bn matures
this year.
But some companies have already
beenstripped f their investment gradeo
ratings while lower rated bonds are
beyond the scope of central bank pur-
chasing programmes.
As to whether equity issues make a
good bet for investors, the evidence is
mixed. Research from Macquarie
suggests that building a war chest tends
to be appreciated by shareholders in the
short term — but may be a bad idea over
the longer term.
In the 2008 financial crisis, for exam-
ple, the vast majority of fundraisings in
Australia were to repay debt or to pro-
vide working capital, according to Mac-
quarie.
Companies raising money for oppor-
tunistic acquisitions, meanwhile, saw
their shares surge nearly 40 per cent on
average in the month following the issue
compared with gains of 15-20 per cent
for companies seeking to boost liquidity.
Yet the latter group held on to their
gains over the following 12 months
while returns for those that tapped the
market for acquisition funds turned
negative.
Today, early movers such as Auto
Trader and Hays, the recruiter, have
seen their share prices soften since.
“This is a tough market and the
recommendation to go early with equity
raises is not looking so smart so far,” said
one senior European banker.
Additional reporting by Arash Massoudi

Stock investors set tofavour


groups that entered the crisis


with strong balance sheets


Stumping
up new

equity at
a time of

pressure is
a difficult

ask for
investors

UK retailer
WHSmith is
among the first
wave of issuers
in the equity
market during
the pandemic
crisis period
Charlie Bibby

Equities. mergency issuanceE


Companies rush for funding


to ride out downturn


E VA SZ A L AY

Companies are scraping together what
funds they can as their revenues
collapse under the weight of corona-
virus, including by cashing in currency
hedges.
Before the virus hit, many companies
had taken out protection against big
swings in exchange rates by entering
into contracts with banks.
For UK exporters, that meant shield-
ing themselves against losses from
a rally in sterling; for importers, the
opposite.
But now that revenues for some
companies have come to a sudden stop,
they are unwinding those hedging
agreements like cash-strapped shop-
pers hunting for coins down the back of
the sofa.
“There was a general desire to build
up liquidity on the balance sheet as
much as possible, so many chose to
terminate or restructure their FX
hedging portfolios, taking out as much
cash as possible,” said Amol Dhargalkar,
managing director at financial consul-
tancy Chatham Financial.
One company that has taken this step
is JN Wine, which supplies 2,000 restau-
rants and hotels in the UK and Ireland.
“The bars and hotels are all closed. We
are selling wine online — we won’t get
new stock in until we have more cer-

tainty,” said James Nicholson, the com-
pany’s founder, from his base inNorth-
ern Ireland. Mr Nicholson has put on
hold about 10 shipments of wine from
the US, Australia and New Zealand.
That prompted him to terminate all
his hedging contracts in recent weeks.
Settling contracts early incurs a fee but
it is cheaper than following through on
agreements to buy foreign currency that
Mr Nicholson will no longer need.
Hedging contracts are agreed pri-
vately so no data is available on how
many companies are taking steps like
these. But contracts have been liqui-
dated in what one banker described as
a “bit of a fire sale,” while few companies
want to enter into new hedges until they
have more certainty.
Luca Annesanti, head of Emea FX
corporate solutions at Nomura, said
companies are typically most active in
the first few months of the year, hedging
a large proportion of their currency
needs for the foreseeable future. “This
isn't happening right now,” he said.
Historic swings in the pound’s
exchange rate have turned many UK
companies into big winners or losers
from their currency hedges.
The sharp drop in sterling last month
— when it tradedbelow 1.15 against the$
dollar for the first time since the 1980s —
proved to be an additional burden for
UK exporters, who were facing not only
cancelled orders but hefty losses on
contracts designed to protect future
revenues in foreign currencies.

Currencies


Hedging


contracts


terminated in


drive for cash


‘There was a general


desire to build up liquidity
on the balance sheet

as much as possible’


Coronavirus sparks stock falls and fundraisings
Share prices rebased















Apr  Apr

Carnival

Auto Trader

Source: Refinitiv



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APRIL 9 2020 Section:Markets Time: 4/20208/ - 17:59 User: stephen.smith Page Name:MARKETS1, Part,Page,Edition:EUR , 9, 1

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