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Greg Hopper,Greg Hopper,

Registered Rep. spoke with Greg Hopper about how the liquidity crisis has affected high-yield issues. RR: There has been a flight to safety, and the spreads between risky corporate debt and Treasury yields have widened. Do you expect this to continue? GH: The measure I look at is a few basis points shy of 500 right now. In other words, you are being paid 5 percent above a riskless Treasury rate to

David Geracioti, Editor in Chief

December 1, 2007

2 Min Read
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David A. Geracioti

Registered Rep. spoke with Greg Hopper about how the liquidity crisis has affected high-yield issues.

RR: There has been a flight to safety, and the spreads between risky corporate debt and Treasury yields have widened. Do you expect this to continue?

GH: The measure I look at is a few basis points shy of 500 right now. In other words, you are being paid 5 percent above a riskless Treasury rate to take on high-yield corporate risk, on average. While there is much to be concerned about, between sub-prime woes and a weaker U.S. consumer, there is also much to take solace from in today's global economy. And 500 basis points is beginning to overcompensate for the risks.

RR: Is that spread about average?

GH: Over long periods of time, yes. But it's the old “median versus average” problem. High-yield spreads have a tendency to spike to 1,000 basis points or more for short periods of time, but live most of the time in the 250- to 400-bps area, so the median is more like low 400s. And lets not forget, we don't eat spread — we eat total return. So, while spread changes can impact the principal of your high-yield bond or portfolio, there is a reason they call it high yield (rather than junk!). The yield, which today is almost 9 percent, can cover a lot of sins. In fact, at current yields, spreads could spike out to 700 basis points — and treasuries stay flat — over a year's time; you would still break even, since the coupon would roughly cover principal volatility.

RR: Aren't high-yield bond holders higher up the food chain than equity holders?

GH: That's right. If the environment were challenging enough to widen high-yield spreads an additional 200 basis points, matters [would] be far worse in equities, which are subordinate to high-yield bonds. Historically, the worst rolling 12-month total return in high yield, using Merrill Lynch indexes, is -8.36 percent versus -26.59 percent for the S&P 500. The best rolling 12-month period for high yield has been 37.34 percent versus 52.11 percent in equities. So the real wild-west ride is over in the equity park.

RR: How have you sheltered your fund from the recent turmoil?

GH: We take a broad approach, and diversify both geographically and up and down the balance sheet. Even before this summer, we added a significant percentage of senior loans to the portfolio, which should be less volatile. Our positions outside the U.S. have also proven less vulnerable.

About the Author

David Geracioti

Editor in Chief, REP. Magazine