by winston » Fri Dec 18, 2015 6:31 am
Junk Bond Crisis or Opportunity? by Sean Brodrick
[quote]There are 35 U.S.-based high-yield ETFs with $43 billion under management. That's way up from three ETFs with $1.3 billion in 2008.
The total amount of money in junk bond mutual funds was recently as high as $326 billion, up from $126 billion in 2008.
Now for the really bad news. There is the potential for this crisis to get much worse.
There are currently $27.2 billion in mutual fund assets that have suffered peak-to-valley losses over the last year greater than 10%. That's according to Yahoo Finance data. And that amount is 35 times greater than the size of the Third Avenue Fund.
Amazingly, Third Avenue, which lost 34.5% over the last year before it went belly-up, is not the worst fund on Yahoo's list of bad bond funds.
The two worst losers both belong to Credit Suisse. The Credit Suisse Emerging Market Fund Advisor (WPEAX) lost 35.1% over the same time period. And the Credit Suisse Commodity Access Fund (CRCCX) lost 35.2%.
Waiting on Commodity Prices
There's that word again: commodities. If commodity prices rally in 2016, this crisis could go away as quickly as it started.
The problem is no one expects commodity prices to rally in the first half of 2016.
Emerging Market Risk
Here's the thing: Corporate debt in emerging markets has more than quadrupled in the last decade.
In fact, the 15 biggest emerging market bond funds took in a combined $65.7 billion in net inflows between 2009 and 2014. That's according to fund tracker Morningstar. Now, those funds are seeing outflows. Their net fund outflows through November totaled $4.9 billion. That's before the current crisis hit.
In the past month, global emerging market bonds saw their values fall by about 2%. That's a big move in the bond markets.
So there's the potential for a debt-default cascade in emerging markets as well.
Now that I've scared you, let me leave you with this ray of hope.
Wall Street Isn't Pricing in Worst-Case Scenarios
For what it's worth, Wall Street is not panicking. Sure, bond default rates are rising. The trailing 12-month default rate rose to 2.8% in November. That's the highest level in three years. Standard & Poor's expects the rate to hit 3.3% by September 2016.
Let's say it's a bit worse. A 4.5% default rate would mean $66 billion worth of bonds would default. That would be below the record $119 billion posted in 2009.
Source: The Non-Dollar Report
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"