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Head of U.S. Securitized Products John Kerschner and Associate Portfolio Manager Jessica Shill explain why investment-grade collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) may offer an attractive floating-rate option for fixed-income investors expecting interest rates to rise.
With bond yields low and inflation high, investors are right to ask where they can find higher yields and less sensitivity to rising interest rates but still get diversity from their equity holdings. One sensible answer is to consider the often overlooked floating-rate segment of the so-called “fixed” income universe. While most investors instinctually feel that rising interest rates are bad for bonds, the opposite is generally/often true with floating-rate bonds. These securities do not have a “fixed” interest rate like traditional Treasury bonds or most corporate bonds. Instead, the yield they pay “floats” on top of a benchmark, such as the U.S. Federal Reserve’s (Fed) short-term policy rate. As such, when the Fed raises their benchmark rate, the interest paid on a floating-rate security linked to it goes up.
In an environment like today, where yields are low, inflation is high, and interest rates are expected to rise, investors need to be a little more thoughtful about how, not if, they should take bond exposure. Floating-rate securities, lower-duration asset classes (like MBS), or securities with higher yields are all viable options. And there are a variety of established markets that can provide some or all of these characteristics. For example, many commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) are issued with floating-rate coupons. But the rapid growth of the floating-rate bank loan market and its more structured corollary, the collateralized loan obligation (CLO) market, deserve a closer look given their low interest-rate sensitivity, attractive yields, and diversity benefits.
While governments and large corporations typically borrow by issuing bonds, there is a parallel – and rapidly growing – market of loans (not bonds) issued by U.S. banks to smaller companies seeking funding. These loans, originating from banks that fund themselves through the volatile interest rate markets, are mostly issued with floating-rate interest to help protect the bank from losses should interest rates rise. For the corporate borrowers, the floating-rate structure means their interest payments could rise or fall, making financial planning a little more complicated. But for investors, the floating-rate nature can sometimes be just what is needed: A security that pays more income if interest rates rise and is less sensitive to losses if fears of inflation push longer-maturity government or corporate bond yields higher.
The bank loan market goes by a few names but is often referred to as the “leveraged loan” market – a name which originates from its role in financing mergers or acquisitions, including leveraged buyouts. The credit ratings of these loans typically track this usage: They are overwhelmingly “high-yield” loans, with sub investment-grade credit ratings and thus yields which tend to look more like the high-yield corporate bond market.
For investors who are not comfortable with sub-investment grade credit risk but still seek floating-rate exposure, the CLO market offers exposures over the range of investment-grade credit ratings, including AAA and BBB. As the bank loan market has grown, so has the U.S. CLO market (nearly tripling in the last decade to over $800 billion) as CLOs are, in essence, portfolios of bank loans.3 They are also actively managed by a CLO manager who pools together different loans to create a portfolio in an attempt to produce a more diverse offering. Nevertheless, BBB rated CLOs have historically offered yields closer to the bank loan and high-yield corporate bond markets, as illustrated in the chart below.
Source: J.P. Morgan BBB CLO Index, JPMorgan Leveraged Loan Index, and Bloomberg U.S. High Yield Corporate Bond Index, as of October 2021.
The relative attractiveness of investment-grade CLO yields is maintained as you move up the rating spectrum. As shown in the figure below, CLOs with A to AAA ratings offer a substantial premium over similarly rated corporate bonds: Over the last five years, AAA CLOs have offered nearly two times the spread over Treasuries that similarly rated corporates bonds have, and in the single A rating category they have paid over 2.5 times the spread.
Source: Bloomberg rating-category subindices for corporate bonds, JPMorgan discount margin indices for CLOs. Bloomberg, as of 29 October 2021. Note: spread is the additional yield provided over comparable U.S. Treasuries.
CLOs in both the highest investment-grade rating category (AAA) and the lowest (BBB) are currently trading near the tighter end of their recent range but are not yet near the lows seen in the last cycle, in the first quarter of 2018. Like other credit markets, they widened substantially as COVID-19 struck, then steadily recovered from the 2020 lows. For much of this year, spreads have been stable and thus, given their yield, offered an attractive risk-adjusted return in a period when Treasuries were relatively volatile.
In our view, the current mix of high inflation and expectations for rising policy rates has created demand for floating rate securities that has helped the stability of their spreads. And as long as the Fed is expected to raise interest rates – or the outlook for inflation remains uncertain – we expect this demand to be sustained. While spreads could tighten further (as of the end of October, AAA spreads were still 0.27% wider than their 2018 lows), we think both AAA and BBB rated securities are compelling even if they remain stable at current spreads given the yields they offer.
Source: J.P. Morgan AAA and BBB CLO Indices, as of 29 October 2021.
However, it is worth noting that the lows in CLO spreads were achieved during a time when the Fed was raising policy rates – as they are expected to in the year ahead. While positive capital appreciation during times of rising interest rates may seem counter-intuitive, such is the nature of floating-rate securities. Between December 2017 and the end of November 2018, when the Fed raised interest rates 1.25%, the Agg lost 1.62%, the shorter-duration Bloomberg 1-3-year U.S. Government/Credit Index gained 0.82%, and the J.P. Morgan AAA CLO index rose 2.55%4. Over the course of the longer tightening cycle, from December 2015 to through November 2018, the Fed raised rates 2.25% and the AAA CLO index rose 8.63%, more than three times the return of the 1-3-year U.S. Government/Credit index5.
Nevertheless, when absolute yield levels across many fixed income markets are low, the yields on CLOs can look attractive regardless of their potential to see higher prices. Currently, the J.P. Morgan AAA CLO Index has an average yield near 2.2% and the BBB Index, which is still investment grade, is yielding nearly 5%.6 Relative to the Agg, an investment-grade benchmark, which currently offers a yield of 1.69%7, CLOs look attractive at both the lowest and the highest investment-grade ratings.
1 Bloomberg, as of 15 November 2021.