Search
00
GBAF Logo
trophy
Top StoriesInterviewsBusinessFinanceBankingTechnologyInvestingTradingVideosAwardsMagazinesHeadlinesTrends

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get the latest news and updates from our team.

Global Banking and Finance Review

Global Banking & Finance Review

Company

    GBAF Logo
    • About Us
    • Profile
    • Privacy & Cookie Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit Post
    • Latest News
    • Research Reports
    • Press Release
    • Awards▾
      • About the Awards
      • Awards TimeTable
      • Submit Nominations
      • Testimonials
      • Media Room
      • Award Winners
      • FAQ
    • Magazines▾
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 79
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 78
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 77
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 76
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 75
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 73
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 71
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 70
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 69
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 66
    Top StoriesInterviewsBusinessFinanceBankingTechnologyInvestingTradingVideosAwardsMagazinesHeadlinesTrends

    Global Banking & Finance Review® is a leading financial portal and online magazine offering News, Analysis, Opinion, Reviews, Interviews & Videos from the world of Banking, Finance, Business, Trading, Technology, Investing, Brokerage, Foreign Exchange, Tax & Legal, Islamic Finance, Asset & Wealth Management.
    Copyright © 2010-2025 GBAF Publications Ltd - All Rights Reserved.

    Editorial & Advertiser disclosure

    Global Banking and Finance Review is an online platform offering news, analysis, and opinion on the latest trends, developments, and innovations in the banking and finance industry worldwide. The platform covers a diverse range of topics, including banking, insurance, investment, wealth management, fintech, and regulatory issues. The website publishes news, press releases, opinion and advertorials on various financial organizations, products and services which are commissioned from various Companies, Organizations, PR agencies, Bloggers etc. These commissioned articles are commercial in nature. This is not to be considered as financial advice and should be considered only for information purposes. It does not reflect the views or opinion of our website and is not to be considered an endorsement or a recommendation. We cannot guarantee the accuracy or applicability of any information provided with respect to your individual or personal circumstances. Please seek Professional advice from a qualified professional before making any financial decisions. We link to various third-party websites, affiliate sales networks, and to our advertising partners websites. When you view or click on certain links available on our articles, our partners may compensate us for displaying the content to you or make a purchase or fill a form. This will not incur any additional charges to you. To make things simpler for you to identity or distinguish advertised or sponsored articles or links, you may consider all articles or links hosted on our site as a commercial article placement. We will not be responsible for any loss you may suffer as a result of any omission or inaccuracy on the website.

    Home > Top Stories > Why a $1.5 trillion source of corporate financing is choking on higher rates
    Top Stories

    Why a $1.5 trillion source of corporate financing is choking on higher rates

    Why a $1.5 trillion source of corporate financing is choking on higher rates

    Published by Wanda Rich

    Posted on July 5, 2023

    Featured image for article about Top Stories

    Why a $1.5 trillion source of corporate financing is choking on higher rates

    By Naomi Rovnick and Chiara Elisei

    LONDON (Reuters) – A financial stream that helped fund the world’s riskiest companies and grew into a market estimated at $1.5 trillion in the low interest rate years is drying up, as aggressive rate hikes bring tougher borrowing conditions and uncertainty.

    The pace of issuance of so-called collateralised loan obligations (CLOs), which bundle loans of the weakest corporates and repackage them as bonds, has stalled.

    Specialist asset managers minted CLOs worth more than half a trillion dollars in 2021, a year of heavy post-pandemic monetary stimulus. Almost $69 billion worth were launched or refinanced during the first half of this year, down 41% on the same period in 2022, JP Morgan data shows.

    These vehicles, popular with hedge funds, insurers and asset managers when borrowing costs are low and investors hunt for yield, account for up to 60% of demand for the junk loans rated single B or below, according to S&P Global Ratings.

    But the market has sputtered just as companies whose debt is considered a speculative investment face a mountain of refinancing needs in coming years.

    The sharpest rise in global interest rates in decades, an anticipated global recession and fewer new CLOs to support junk rated borrowers potentially create a toxic cocktail of corporate distress.

    “There haven’t been large credit losses yet, but the expectation is that bankruptcy rates [for corporate loans] will go up,” said Rob Shrekgast, a director at KopenTech, an electronic trading and analytics platform for CLOs.

    STORM CLOUDS

    CLOs have grown into a market worth about $1.5 trillion, KopenTech said.

    Looking ahead, demand for the bonds issued by these vehicles will “decline meaningfully,” Bank of America (BofA) credit strategist Neha Khoda noted, with potential for higher default rates.

    While low now, debt defaults are rising. A restructuring at French retailer Casino and the bankruptcy of U.S. retailer Bed Bath & Beyond expose cracks in business models that were previously insulated by abundant money supply and low rates, analysts said.

    S&P Global estimates that more than one in 25 U.S. businesses and almost one in 25 European companies will default by March 2024.

    It’s going to be a slow burn of rising distress, said Marta Stojanova, leveraged finance director at S&P, of junk-rated borrowers.

    A “downside risk,” she said, would be “the lack of funding at an affordable level,” for weak cashflow borrowers whose existing loans are due for refinancing.

    Weak cashflow companies, whose debt is considered junk, are already paying the highest average interest rate on floating rate debts in 13 years, S&P added.

    U.S. companies with speculative credit ratings, who dominate global CLO loan pools, need to refinance around $354 billion of debts by end-2024, then a further $813 billion in 2025 to 2026, S&P estimates.

    OBSTACLES

    The CLO market has slowed because investors want higher payouts as compensation for the risk of lending to weaker borrowers.

    “You’ve got more risk now and you want to be compensated for that risk,” said Aza Teeuwen, portfolio manager at fixed income specialist asset manager TwentyFour.

    When forming CLOs, the managers of these vehicles use the loans as backing for bonds with varying prices and different degrees of safety. Investors in the tranches considered safest get the lowest returns, while those in the riskiest equity portion receive excess cashflows after other investors are paid out.

    Now, fund managers who buy the highest rated tranches are demanding higher yields. That has squeezed equity returns, and without equity investors, CLOs cannot be put together.

    S&P calculates that while CLO equity investors were able to get a 15% annual return before 2022, deals priced now would offer about 7%.

    “You can no longer put together a (new) portfolio,” said Laila Kollmorgen, a managing director and CLO specialist at PineBridge Investments.

    Kollmorgen said she was still finding good opportunities in highly rated CLO tranches sold in the secondary market.

    “We know there will be (loan) defaults at some stage,” said Teeuwen. “The (CLO) equity doesn’t make enough money to justify buying it.”

    CLOs have a reinvestment period of up to five years, after which they cannot buy new loans. According to BoFA, 38% of CLOs in existence will reach that expiry date by end-2023.

    That’s another source of shrinking demand for junk debt, and a factor BofA’s Khoda defines as “a red-flag for issuers with near-term maturities.”

    PineBridge’s Kollmorgen sees uncertain times for high- risk borrowers ahead.

    “Increases in interest rates will have an impact on companies and their balance sheets, its just simply a question of when this actually comes through.”

    (Reporting by Naomi Rovnick and Chiara Elisei; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Alexandra Hudson)

    Related Posts
    Inside the World’s First Collection Industry Conglomerate: PCA Global’s Platform Strategy
    Inside the World’s First Collection Industry Conglomerate: PCA Global’s Platform Strategy
    Chase Buchanan Private Wealth Management Highlights Key Autumn 2025 Budget Takeaways for Expats
    Chase Buchanan Private Wealth Management Highlights Key Autumn 2025 Budget Takeaways for Expats
    PayLaju Strengthens Its Position as Malaysia’s Trusted Interest-Free Sharia-Compliant Loan Provider
    PayLaju Strengthens Its Position as Malaysia’s Trusted Interest-Free Sharia-Compliant Loan Provider
    A Notable Update for Employee Health Benefits:
    A Notable Update for Employee Health Benefits:
    Creating Equity Between Walls: How Mohak Chauhan is Using Engineering, Finance, and Community Vision to Reengineer Affordable Housing
    Creating Equity Between Walls: How Mohak Chauhan is Using Engineering, Finance, and Community Vision to Reengineer Affordable Housing
    Upcoming Book on Real Estate Investing: Harvard Grace Capital Founder Stewart Heath’s Puts Lessons in Print
    Upcoming Book on Real Estate Investing: Harvard Grace Capital Founder Stewart Heath’s Puts Lessons in Print
    ELECTIVA MARKS A LANDMARK FIRST YEAR WITH MAJOR SENIOR APPOINTMENTS AND EXPANSION MILESTONES
    ELECTIVA MARKS A LANDMARK FIRST YEAR WITH MAJOR SENIOR APPOINTMENTS AND EXPANSION MILESTONES
    Hebbia Processes One Billion Pages as Financial Institutions Deploy AI Infrastructure at Unprecedented Scale
    Hebbia Processes One Billion Pages as Financial Institutions Deploy AI Infrastructure at Unprecedented Scale
    Beyond Governance Fatigue: Making ESG Integration Work in Financial Markets
    Beyond Governance Fatigue: Making ESG Integration Work in Financial Markets
    Why I-9 Verification Matters for Financial Institutions: Building a Culture of Compliance and Trust
    Why I-9 Verification Matters for Financial Institutions: Building a Culture of Compliance and Trust
    Curvestone AI partners with The White Rose Finance Group to enhance compliance file reviews
    Curvestone AI partners with The White Rose Finance Group to enhance compliance file reviews
    LinkedIn Influence in 2025: Insights from Stevo Jokic on Building Authority and Trust
    LinkedIn Influence in 2025: Insights from Stevo Jokic on Building Authority and Trust

    Why waste money on news and opinions when you can access them for free?

    Take advantage of our newsletter subscription and stay informed on the go!

    Subscribe

    Previous Top Stories PostChina’s chipmaking export curbs ‘just a start’, Beijing adviser warns before Yellen visit
    Next Top Stories PostMorgan Stanley cuts oil price forecasts, sees surplus in H1 2024

    More from Top Stories

    Explore more articles in the Top Stories category

    Should You Take the Dealer’s Bike Insurance or Buy Online Yourself? Here’s the Real Difference

    Should You Take the Dealer’s Bike Insurance or Buy Online Yourself? Here’s the Real Difference

    ID-Pal Unveils ID-Detect Enhancements to Counter Surge in Digital Manipulation and Deepfakes

    ID-Pal Unveils ID-Detect Enhancements to Counter Surge in Digital Manipulation and Deepfakes

    TRUST TAKES THE LEAD: HALF OF UK SHOPPERS HAVE ABANDONED ONLINE PURCHASES OVER SECURITY CONCERNS

    TRUST TAKES THE LEAD: HALF OF UK SHOPPERS HAVE ABANDONED ONLINE PURCHASES OVER SECURITY CONCERNS

    Why Choose Premium Driver Service in Miami Over Rideshare Apps for Business Travel and Special Events?

    Why Choose Premium Driver Service in Miami Over Rideshare Apps for Business Travel and Special Events?

    Over 30 Million Users Benefit From Ant International’s Bettr Credit Tech Solutions

    Over 30 Million Users Benefit From Ant International’s Bettr Credit Tech Solutions

    Side-Hustle Economics: How Part-Time Service Work Can Strengthen Your Financial Plan

    Side-Hustle Economics: How Part-Time Service Work Can Strengthen Your Financial Plan

    London to Host Major Summit on “New Horizons” for Islamic Economy in the UK

    London to Host Major Summit on “New Horizons” for Islamic Economy in the UK

    BLOXX Launches World’s First Home Equity Subscription, Creating a New Residential Asset Class

    BLOXX Launches World’s First Home Equity Subscription, Creating a New Residential Asset Class

    LiaFi Addresses Gap Between Business Transaction and Savings Accounts

    LiaFi Addresses Gap Between Business Transaction and Savings Accounts

    Ant Group Chairman Eric Jing Outlines Strategy for Inclusive AI, Collaboration on Tokenised Settlement

    Ant Group Chairman Eric Jing Outlines Strategy for Inclusive AI, Collaboration on Tokenised Settlement

    Deeply Cultivating the Syndicated Loan and Cross-Border Financing Fields: Empowering Chinese Banks’ Global Expansion with Professional Excellence

    Deeply Cultivating the Syndicated Loan and Cross-Border Financing Fields: Empowering Chinese Banks’ Global Expansion with Professional Excellence

    Ant International’s Antom Launches AI‑Powered MSME App for Finance and Business Operations

    Ant International’s Antom Launches AI‑Powered MSME App for Finance and Business Operations

    View All Top Stories Posts