EU CONSUMER CYCLICALS: CONSUMER CYCLICALS: Best and Worst on credit governance this year
Dec-04 15:53
(€IG/HY: Consumer & Transport)
Worst:
Victoria PLC; The UK flooring provider riding high-beta to housing activity slow-down and facing 7x leverage decided to get ahead of a €500m maturity in 2026 through a tender. But it said market conditions did not allow it to complete that and instead decided to use the cash on a share buyback. It was confusing to us and apparently to Moody's who moved to negative outlook two weeks later. Downgrades since put it on the verge of CCC. Longs have managed positive returns (26s +15%, 28s +6%) - but they are abysmal numbers for the realised vol (drawdowns >5pts more than once this year).
Mobico: The parent of National Express & Spanish ALSA bus operations was trying hard to hold onto IG ratings earlier this year as earnings hit a trough. It thought 1H earnings would be a good time to announce it wouldn't call its hybrid on the first call date - a still 1.5years away. It reassured investors it had run the cash flow impact from the (then) harsh reset. Moody's wasn't having it, giving it a double notch junking and refusing to wait for a pending asset sale. The €31s are left underperforming the index (+3.1%), £28s the poster child for coupon-step ups (+7% vs. £IG +2.4%) and the perps coming from cheap levels has performed through the vol (+12%).
Avis: we imagine will make the list for many years to come. HY maturity walls were a widely shared concern late last year when rates were up to +100bps higher and BBB/B over 100bps wider. Apparently it wasn't for Avis who sent $1.3b in the FCF from its record year straight to equity holders. It came to primary this year to refi the €26s paying +225bps over it in refi costs (on €600m deal). It followed that with a €200m tap of the 30s in May at even pricier levels and capped the year off with a $700m dollar 5NC2 that needed a 35-40bp NIC to price at a harsh 8.25%/OAS+440. €30s are left with abysmal +3.2% in returns - 7.25% in carry not able to offset widening.
(honourable mentions to Auchan's 1H earnings call, Whirlpool's deleveraging "effort" and Flutter starting buybacks by effectively ignoring a €2.5 bridge loan)
Best:
Tesco: UK's largest grocer has a year of success, taking market share in some months at the fastest pace since late 2021. But equity holders apparently wanted more than just Tesco bank sale proceeds pointing to leverage at the bottom end of target. Management pushed back adding "the times we live in it's always better to have a stronger balance sheet than it is to have a weaker one". S&P moved to positive outlook in July and in a rough year for grocer sentiment it has held its own; €31s (a value view from early in the year) end +5.5% firmly outperforming French peer Carrefour.
IAG: The parent of British Airways has had a stellar year and is now on track to take pole position (from Ryanair) on European airline margins. That performance did not stop BS conservatism; it has taken net leverage down to 1.0x well below target 1.8x and waited till the tail-end to the year (when the FY outlook was more clear to it) to begin reasonably sized equity-pay-outs. Moody's rewarding it with a double-notch upgrade, S&P moving to positive outlook. It has made the top 10 equity performers, spread performers and total returns (€29s).
Carnival: riding a firm bounce back in cruise travel it has seen healthy FCF return. It has led to equity analyst asking for the return of pay-outs which have been on pause for over 4 years now. Management pushed back adding "right now our priority is generate all that free cash flow, pay down debt and re-strengthen the balance sheet...I can't wait to have those conversations, but I'd say that's premature". It has been rewarded with 2-notch upgrade at S&P, 1-notch at Moody's and a Fitch initiation on firm BB Positive rating. €29s end the year as one of the best performing HY lines in our sector - an impressive +22% return.
US TSY FUTURES: BLOCK: Large Dec'24 2Y/5Y/30Y Ultra Package - Fly
Nov-04 15:49
Latest BLOCK package deemed a 2Y5Y30Y Ultra fly (appr DV01 $425,000) posted at 1028:19ET:
11,644 TUZ4 103-00.88, through 103-00.5 post time offer
20,375 FVZ4 107-11, post time offer
2,121 WNZ4 125-26, well through 125-22 post time offer
US DATA: Durable Goods And Factory Activity Still Soft If Stable Going Into Q4
Nov-04 15:48
September's final report on Manufacturers’ Shipments, Inventories, and Orders showed continued weakness in recent demand for manufacturing orders and durable goods production, reaffirming that US industrial activity remains soft if stable.
Manufacturing orders fell for the 4th month in 5 in September, at -0.5% M/M SA as expected. With August orders revised sharply lower (-0.8% vs -0.2%), the level of orders in nominal seasonally-adjusted terms remains below year-ago levels.
In a slightly better sign, final durable goods orders data showed growth in September was actually revised up by 0.1pp (-0.7%), with the key core category (nondefense, ex-aircraft and parts) upped by 0.2pp in the final estimate to 0.7% M/M. With the revision, this was the strongest monthly growth for core capital goods orders since August 2023, for a new all-time high in the series ($74.1B).
That's a mildly positive sign for equipment business investment, which has been a strong contributor to real GDP in the last couple of quarters, but to put it in perspective, that's in nominal terms and only up 0.3% Y/Y.
Core shipments remain weak (flat/negative M/M in 7 of the last 8 months) at -0.1%, which is a factor in the quarterly GDP calculation. The upward revision from the initial -0.3% M/M estimate implies a slightly better Q3 GDP, but a still-subdued picture for business investment, with core shipments flatlining at roughly the same levels as early 2023.
In turn, that's in line with manufacturing surveys that have been steady in slight contractionary territory (ISM for example since late 2022).
In short, core durable orders have stabilized, which should mean that weakness should be limited for durables shipments. However, there are no signs of improved momentum going into Q4. And as with other areas of the economy, October activity could be somewhat difficult to read due to hurricane effects.
UK DMO UPDATE: Auctions: Mediums (4 auctions)
Nov-04 15:44
4.25% Jul-34 gilt: DMO notes final reopening. Given the syndication in February, this auction will almost certainly be at a January auction (15/29 January).
0.875% Jul-33 green gilt: One reopening penciled in by the DMO. We had largely expected this, but it wasn't certain.
4.375% Jan-40 gilt: No specific mention of this gilt. We expect 1-2 auctions of the long 15-year gilt that was launched via syndication in September and is yet to be reopened via auction.
There is no mention of any other 10-year gilt reopening at auction - and given the last medium auction of the year is 11 March it would be quite close to the medium syndication that is in February.