Thursday20 February 2020 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES 19
MARKETS & INVESTING
J O E R E N N I S O N
Macy’s owngrade to junk status byd
S&P Global has taken the total number
of US “fallen angels” — companies that
have lost their coveted top-quality
ratings — to six so far this year, almost
halfofthetotalforthewholeof2019.
Policymakers have longraised concerns
about the growing mass of bonds rated
triple B, one notch above junk, as com-
panies have loaded up on cheap debt in
recentyears.
Market-watchers warn that a rush of
downgrades into junk territory could
triggersalesbyinvestorsboundbystrict
requirements to own only higher rated
debt. Such selling pressure could
ricochet through the market, sending
pricestumbling.
The six fallen angels of 2020 compare
with13fortheentiretyof2019.
Kraft Heinz, with $32.5bn of total
debt, was also downgraded this week in
thewakeofApollo nvestmentCorpora-I
tion,Spirit AeroSystems a supplier— ot
theBoeing 37 Max — and energy 7
companiesEQT orporation andC EQM
Midstream Partners, according to S&P
GlobalRatings.
The total debt affected by the own-d
grades comes to $41.9bn, not far off the
$52.8bntotaloflastyear.
The trajectory is “concerning,” said
Matt Mish, a credit analyst at UBS in
Chicago, while noting that the market
had been expecting most of the down-
grades.
Many big companies on the bottom
rung of the so-called investment grade
spectrum, including AT&T nda
Anheuser-Busch InBev, have embarked
on deleveraging xercises to cut theire
debt loads and to preserve their pre-
miumratings.
As a result, analysts do not expect the
number of fallen angels to rise materi-
ally from last year. S&P Global Ratings
has 44 potential fallers on a watchlist,
upfrom41ayearagobutbelowthefive-
yearaverageof51.
“There are clearly some risks and
uncertainties out there but the broad
picture is fairly steady,” said Alex Her-
bert,asenioranalystatthefirm.
Corporate bond markets ontinue toc
trade strongly. Borrowing costs for top-
quality companies dropped yesterday
to a record low of 2.62 per cent, accord-
ing to an investment grade bond index
run by Ice Data Services, which has data
goingback20years.
Junk bond markets have also suffered
little impact. The yield on a widely
watched high-yield bond index run by
Ice stood at 5.22 per cent yesterday,
close to a five-year low set earlier in
2020of5.14percent.
That came a day after S&P lowered its
rating for Macy’s, the department store
chain, to BB+ — one notch below invest-
ment grade — from BBB. The agency
said it approved of the urnround plant
but judged its “competitive advantage”
hadfalleninthefaceofconsumers’pref-
erenceforshoppingonline.
Fixed income
Wall Street’s ‘fallen angels’ rise after
Macy’s joins Kraft in junk bond parade
O RT E N C A A L I A J— N E W YO R K
David Tepper’sAppaloosa Manage-
ment as taken a 7 per cent equityh
stake inIntelsat, becoming the latest
hedge fund tojoin the high-stakes bat-
tle over the satellite operator’s
valuablewirelessspectrum.
Mr Tepper on Tuesday urged Intelsat to
reject a plan put forward by US
regulators to auction off its airwaves for
use by phone companies for new 5G
mobilenetworks.
If it cannot be renegotiated, Mr Tep-
per said, the company should seek
bankruptcy protection and launch a
legalchallenge.
Under the plan put forward by the
Federal Communications Commission,
Intelsat stands to make as much as
$4.85bn for giving up airwaves that can
be sold to cellular operators such as
Verizon nda T-Mobile.
Butmanyinvestorslastyearexpected
it could make much more and numer-
ous hedge funds had taken positions in
thecompany’ssharesandbondsandare
sittingonsignificantlosses.
“The token compensation offered to
Intelsat is an affront when compared to
the values achieved in auctions of
comparable spectrum across the globe
over the past decade,” Mr Tepper wrote
in a letter to the company’s board on
Tuesday.
Appaloosa disclosed a 7.4 per cent
stake in Intelsat in a securities filing,
making it the company’s third-largest
shareholder.
Luxembourg-based Intelsat asw
among a consortium of satellite compa-
niesthat had pushed for permission to
sell parts of their spectrum privately to
wireless operators but the plan was
opposedbymembersoftheUSCongress
who said a public auction would allow a
fairerdistributionofassets.
Ajit Pai, FCC chairman, announced in
November that the government would
auction off a portion of the “C-band”
spectrumusedbythesatelliteoperators
forvideoandradiotransmission.
Bonds issued by Intelsat, which has
about $15bn in debt, hit record lows at
the end of January and shares in the
company are down about 85 per cent
sinceMrPai’sannouncement.
PointState nda Solus re among thea
hedgefundstohavetakenpositions.
Under the terms of the regulator’s
proposal, the company would be
required to front up its own cash to
cover the costs of clearing the spectrum
for auction, something Mr Tepper said
couldrunintobillionsofdollars.
Intelsat will be made to bear the “full
weight of financial and execution risks”
related to the auction while the FCC and
US government reap the benefits, he
wrote.
“Forahighlyleveragedoperator,such
as Intelsat in particular, the cash
required to conduct that process
imposes a hardship that could easily
trigger an insolvency before relocation
canbeaccomplished,”MrTeppersaid.
Intelsat said in a statement that it
would “assess all options to maximise
value for the benefit of our stake-
holders” and that its focus was on
“successfully improving” the FCC’s
plans.
Equities
Tepper joins throng of hedge fund
managers to take stake in Intelsat
‘The token compensation
offered to Intelsat is an
affront when compared to
comparable spectrum’
Kraft Heinz was downgraded this
weekwith a $32.5bn debt pile
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P H I L I P G E O R G I A D I S— LO N D O N
R O B I N W I G G L E S WO RT H— O S LO
H U D S O N LO C K E T T— H O N G KO N G
Investors scrambling to quantify the
impact of thecoronavirus utbreak ono
China are turning to a string of unusual
data points to measure disruption to the
world’s second-largest economy — from
food-delivery apps to the polluted air
waftingoverHongKong.
The humanitarian crisis has caused
factories to be shut and cities to be
closed off, prompting analysts to cut
first-quarter economic growth forecasts
forbothChinaandtherestoftheworld.
The crisis has also sparked a race
among investors to gain an edge by
finding esoteric sources of information
that can be used to measure just how
bad the economic pain is — and when
therecoveryisbeginning.
Chen Mu, founder of Beijing-based
research firmBigOne Lab, said the data
provider was expanding the trackers it
provides “because our clients, mainly
institutional investors and corporates,
are enquiring more about impact and
recoveryspeedofdifferentsectors”.
Mr Chen said there was a broad
consensus about aslowdown n Chinai
“but the bigger question is how the
recoverygoes”.
BigOne’s insights show slow progress
in bringing businesses back online. In
early February, for example, 83 per cent
of about 1m restaurants tracked
onMeituan-Dianping, China’s biggest
deliveryplatform,remainedclosed.
As of February 14, services were still
suspended at 87 per cent ofroughly
5,500 outlets operated byLuckin Cof-
fee,China’srivaltoStarbucks.
Airline bookings, meanwhile, suggest
that the viral outbreak has caused the
biggest ever reduction in activity by a
single event, including Sars and the 9/
attacks, according to Eagle Alpha, a
Dublin-based provider of alternative
data.
The airline industry has lost 10m
seatsto,fromandwithinChina.
Analysts say normal economic activ-
ity should have resumed last week after
anextendedLunarNewYearholiday.
But indicators including traffic con-
gestion rates, coal consumption and
property sales are all still running well
belowregularlevels.
“All of [the indicators] paint a very
similar picture of an economy that just
grinds to a halt every time around the
new year but has barely picked up at all
since then,” said Gareth Leather, Asia
economistatCapitalEconomics.
Investors have long tried to mine
alternative data points for clues on the
health of the Chinese economy as some
set little store in the official numbers
that emerge — often after a long lag —
fromBeijing.
Such reservations have been com-
pounded by a near-total shutdown as
the government tries to contain the
spreadofthedisease.
Min Dai, an Asia-Pacific strategist at
Morgan Stanley, told clients this month
that “probably the most asked question
among investors these days” is how to
track the resumption of production in
China.
Sitting in the bank’s offices in the 118-
storey International Commerce Centre
in Hong Kong, Mr Dai’s colleagues
noticed that their views have been
improving over the past month as
mainlandfactoriespowereddown.
Using airpollution evels as a proxyl
to track the restart of industrial
production, they suggested that
activity could be running at 50 to
80 per cent below capacity. Goldman’s
economists noted a modest rebound in
some data points last week but
concluded that, “in absolute levels, all
indicators on the industrial and services
sectors that we track remained
relatively weak in the first half of
February”.
Official data will confirm the clues
coming from the real-time numbers,
said Matt Harris, head of investment
strategy at wealth manager HighTower
inNewYork.
“We expect to start seeing weaker
datainthecomingweeks,”hesaid.
For now, said Tracy Chen, a portfolio
manager at Brandywine Global Invest-
ment Management, “it is like flying in
thedark”.
Sitting 7,000 miles away in Philadel-
phia,MsChenislookingforsignalsfrom
the vast amount of digital data that
Chinaproduces.
She has built her own dashboard
using 20 reference points including
traffic from search engineBaidu, and
daily figures for how many drivers are
on the roads via satellite navigation
companyTomTom.
The numbers are not encouraging,
she said. “It will be very ugly in the first
quarter,allthedataaretellingme.”
Traffic jams, food orders and
pollution are among signals
scoured by analytics groups
‘It will
be very
ugly in
the first
quarter,
all the
data are
telling me’
Cross asset. conomic impactE
Investors hunt for alternative
data to track virus shock
H U D S O N LO C K E T T— H O N G KO N G
A rally in China’s government bonds
prompted by the deadly coronavirus
outbreak has rewarded big US and
European investors that have bet on a
slowdown in the world’s second-biggest
economy.
Chinese bond yields have fallen to
four-year lows as investors turn to the
safety of sovereign debt due to the
spreadofthedisease nownasCovid-19.k
China’s 10-year Treasury yields,
which fall as prices rise, have sunk more
than 25 basis points to 2.87 per cent
sincethestartoftheyear.
Investors are banking on Beijing
unleashing more stimulus as it seeks to
cushion the economic blow from the
epidemic.
That rally accelerated in late January
as Chinese authorities ordered busi-
nesses to shut, stoking fears of a sharp
economic slowdown. Yields have not
beenbelow3percentsince2016.
“We’re... still very bullish on
Chinese bonds across the board,” said
Hayden Briscoe, Asia-Pacific head of
fixedincomeatUBSAssetManagement.
The Swiss bank had already forecast
China would have to ramp up stimulus
to support its slowing economy prior to
the epidemic. “Before... the virus, we
had expected yields to drop with slower
[economic]activity,”headded.
Mr Briscoe said the People’s Bank of
China would cut its key medium-term
lending facility rate bya total of 50 basis
pointsasitseekstoarresttheslowdown.
The central bank reduced the MLF
rate,abenchmarkforinterbanklending
inthecountry,by10bponMonday.
The Loan Prime Rate, a rel-
ated benchmark for commercial lend-
ing, is also set to fall by 10bp today,
accordingtoBloombergestimates.
Benefiting from the bond surge is
Switzerland-basedPictetAssetManage-
ment, which increased holdings of long-
dated Chinese government debt before
thelunarnewyearattheendofJanuary.
“The outbreak will inevitably [affect]
China’s economic growth, prompting
authorities to ease monetary condi-
tions,” said Cary Yeung, head of greater
Chinadebtatthefirm.
He noted that yields on five-year Chi-
nese government bonds aremore than
100 basis points higher than those on
equivalent US debt. Yields on similar
duration German and Japanese govern-
mentbondsarezeroornegative.
Julio Callegari, a portfolio manager at
JPMorgan Asset Management in Hong
Kong, said he expected a roughly 10 to
15 basis point move lower in Chinese
bonds,pushingyieldstoaslowas2.7per
cent — thanks in part to strong foreign
inflows.
Net foreign flows into China’s inter-
bank bond market picked up last
month, rebounding from a drop in
December.
Fixed income
Chinese
government
bonds rally on
haven buying
‘The outbreak will affect
China’s economic growth,
prompting authorities to
ease monetary conditions’
A food delivery rider rests in Beijing. About 83 per cent of 1m restaurants tracked by one research group remained closed at the beginning of the month— Wu Hong/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Road congestion across
Chinese cities
Ratio of peak to non-peak travel times,
seven-day average
Source: Capital Economics
Chinese passenger traic volume
Absolute number and change
from previous Lunar New Years
Daily property sales in big cities
-day average (’)
New YearLunar
Lunar
New Year
Coal consumption at power plants
Index (Lunar New Year)
Lunar
New Year
Jan Feb
-
-
-
-
-
Daily trips (m) change year-on-year
Weeks before Weeks after Weeks before Weeks after Weeks before Weeks after
FEBRUARY 20 2020 Section:Markets Time: 2/202019/ - 18:41 User:stephen.smith Page Name:MARKETS1, Part,Page,Edition:EUR , 19, 1