Good morning. US stocks have been flattish over the past week;
is the Santa rally losing momentum? If so, the reason may be
that investors are already uniformly bullish, leaving the market
with nowhere to go. We discuss this notion below. As for
ourselves, we can always find something to be worried about,
especially during the holidays. Let us know your mood: robert.armstrong@ft.com and ethan.wu@ft.com.
From a story on Bloomberg yesterday, by
Sagarika Jaisinghani and Thyagaraju Adinarayan:
Overstretched technicals and the belief that the Federal
Reserve won’t cut interest rates as quickly as markets
expect are driving a sudden pessimistic turn from equity
specialists at JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley. As Goldman
Sachs Group managing director Scott Rubner put it in a
report, there are “no longer any bears left”.
Sentiment is a solid contrary indicator, for the simple reason
that when everyone is feeling maximally optimistic, the only
possible change in sentiment is for the worse. Similarly, when
everyone feels pessimistic, stocks can “climb a wall of worry”
as sentiment reverts to normal. And in support of the article,
most of the sentiment indicators we follow suggest that — since
late October, when the latest rally started — investors have
become a touch giddy:
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The AAII’s sentiment survey bull-bear spread, on a
four-week rolling average, is at the high end of its
historical range (has been in a rising trend for more
than a year, but has risen sharply recently).
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Market breadth, as measured by the number of S&P 500
stocks trading above their 300-day average, has broken
above its long-term average.
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Small caps have outperformed large caps in the
rally.
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Among the best-performing sectors in the rally are
cyclical sectors such as finance and industrials, along
with the usual risk-on sectors such as tech.
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High-risk trading vehicles like the Ark Innovation ETF,
bitcoin and Robinhood have shot up.
All that said, however, all of this happened in a great burst in
the past five weeks or so, as yields have started to fall. This
hasn’t gone on long enough to convince us that we are seeing
irrational exuberance and all the dangers that come with it.
This may be just a rates-driven relief rally.
And anecdotally, we are just not hearing that much positive
sentiment expressed. Asked about his clients’ mood this week,
one sell-sider told us that “If they own the Magnificent Seven,
they feel pretty good. Otherwise, they don’t feel that great.” A
strong November has not made up for a bruising couple of years
for bonds and non-Mag 7 shares.
Blackstone’s private credit CLO,
explained
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Private credit, the new darling of the asset-management world,
has grown fast. So fast that the financial mechanics of the
industry are changing on the fly. Here is one oddity, from our
colleague Eric Platt last month:
Blackstone is planning to borrow hundreds of millions of
dollars to give its flagship private credit fund added
investment firepower, as the asset manager taps a new source
of leverage that it and rivals aim to increasingly exploit
in the years to come.
The private equity behemoth is in the final stages of raising
just under $400mn through a so-called collateralised loan
obligation secured by the very loans held by its $52bn
Blackstone Private Credit Fund, known as BCRED . . .
Blackstone will sell loans that BCRED owns to the CLO as part
of the deal.
A “private credit CLO” is a rather head-spinning term that
requires some explanation.
A traditional CLO works by packaging syndicated bank loans into
risk tranches, from equity (the riskiest) to triple-A (close to
risk-free), and selling the tranches to investors. If companies
default, the CLO distributes losses in a waterfall hierarchy:
equity gets wiped out first, then junior debt, then senior. The
senior investors get safety, the juniors get better yields. In
the history of CLOs rated by Moody’s back to 1993, investors in
triple-A or double-A tranches have never borne a loss, and in
single-A tranches, it has happened just once. The CLO manager
takes fees for building and maintaining this complex vehicle.
Private credit CLOs are a different beast. They retain the
waterfall structure. But unlike a traditional CLO that uses
bank-originated loans bought in secondary markets, PC CLOs use
loans originated by a private credit firm, which also manages
the CLO. Whereas ordinary CLOs often sell the equity tranche on
to risk-taking investors such as hedge funds, PC companies
generally retain the equity in their CLOs. Since they originated
the underlying loans, they presumably have insight into, and
conviction on, the CLO equity.
To oversimplify slightly, a traditional CLO is a management-fee
business, and a PC CLO is a financing method for private credit
lenders.
This technique, using CLOs to finance private loans, began in
another obscure pocket of finance, middle-market lending. This
is what might’ve been called “private credit” a decade ago:
high-yielding loans to tiny, risky businesses too fiddly for
public markets. But as private credit grew into its golden
moment, PC CLOs emerged as a distinct category. “[PC
CLOs] is the market’s description,” says Jian Hu of Moody’s.
“That term was invented this year. We still call these
middle-market CLOs.”
“The reason why folks are using these different terms is that
the traditional middle market has changed,” says Jerry DeVito,
head of structured products at Blue Owl, a big private credit
firm. From smallest to largest, “there are traditional middle
market CLOs, then above that private credit CLOs, then above
that traditional [syndicated loan] CLOs, [with] the differences
based mostly on company and [loan] facility size”.
As a financing source for private credit, CLOs replace loans
from banks. The advantage of this is in dealing with defaults
and credit events. If a credit event is triggered (eg, a broken
loan covenant), a bank that has lent to a PC fund has the right
to mark the loan to market, and has discretion over the mark. A
bad mark lowers the loan-to-value ratio of the entire bank loan.
If the LTV falls enough, the bank could demand cash from the
private credit investor. Moreover, banks are more likely to pull
back in distressed markets — precisely when private lenders have
the most opportunities to find good investments, notes Michael
Patterson of HPS, a private credit manager that issues CLOs.
There is “an element of correlation between markets and bank
loans”, he says.
CLOs sidestep this. Losses are automatically allocated through
the waterfall structure. Private credit shops take losses on the
equity, but no cash is demanded of them. It’s far less messy.
Attentive readers will note that finding ways to not mark things
to market is something of a theme in private markets. We’ll
discuss that, and other concerns about PC CLOs, tomorrow.
(Ethan Wu)
The voters,
not the politicians, are the (fiscal) problem.
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