ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Donald R. Van Deventer, Ph.D.

Don founded Kamakura Corporation in April 1990 and currently serves as Co-Chair, Center for Applied Quantitative Finance, Risk Research and Quantitative Solutions at SAS. Don’s focus at SAS is quantitative finance, credit risk, asset and liability management, and portfolio management for the most sophisticated financial services firms in the world.

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Best Value Long Maturity Bond Trades on January 24, 2014

01/27/2014 12:40 PM

On January 24 in the U.S. bond market, there were 30,175 bond trades in 4,976 non-call fixed rate corporate bond issues representing $10,175,041,704 in notional principal.  Which 20 trades were the best trades of the day, and how do we decide the answer to that question?  We answered those questions in our analysis of the best value bond trades for maturities of one year or more on January 23. Today, we answer the same questions for bonds with maturities of 10 years or longer.

Conclusion: We find the best-value non-call fixed rate long maturity bond trades on January 24, 2014 were issues by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (KMP), Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC), Citigroup Inc. (C), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Northern Trust Corporation (NTRS), Norfolk Southern Corporation (NSC), Virginia Electric and Power (D), XTO Energy (XTO), ConocoPhillips (COP), Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan Inc. (POT),  MetLife Inc. (MET), Fedex Corporation (FDX), Southern Copper Corporation (SCCO), and BHP Billiton Finance (USA) Ltd. (BHP).

Best Value Long Maturity Bond Trades for January 24, 2014

In analyzing the best trades of the day, we used these criteria:

Bond type: Fixed rate
Callability: Non-call
Seniority: Senior debt
Trade Volume: $5 million or more
Maturity: 10 years or more
Ratings: Ignored

We ignored legacy ratings in making today’s selection, but all of the best trades had an investment grade rating by the pre-Dodd Frank Act definition.  We used the same criterion for “best” that we have used in recent analyses of bonds issued by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT), Apple Inc. (AAPL), Ford Motor Company (F), Sprint Communications Inc. (S), Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ), and General Electric Capital Corporation (GE).  That criterion is the reward to risk ratio, calculated as the ratio of credit spread to matched-maturity default probability. The default probabilities used are described in detail in the daily default probability analysis posted by Kamakura Corporation. Both the credit spreads and default probabilities are reported as percent figures. The full text of the Dodd-Frank legislation as it concerns the definition of “investment grade” is summarized at the end of our analysis of Citigroup (C) bonds published December 9, 2013.  Here are the results, with a Goldman Sachs bond issue again the winner at a reward to risk ratio of 47.96 times:

Background on the Calculations

Assuming the recovery rate in the event of default would be the same on all bond issues, a sophisticated investor who has moved beyond legacy ratings seeks to maximize revenue per basis point of default risk from each incremental investment, subject to risk limits on macro-factor exposure on a fully default-adjusted basis.

Maximizing the ratio of credit spread to matched-maturity default probabilities requires that default probabilities be available at a wide range of maturities. We used the default probabilities supplied by Kamakura Corporation’s KRIS default probability service, interpolated to a matched-maturity basis to the exact day of bond maturity. For maturities longer than ten years, we assume that the ten year default probability is a good estimate of default risk.

Bond yields are secured from TRACE. The National Association of Securities Dealers launched the TRACE (Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine) system in July 2002 in order to increase price transparency in the U.S. corporate debt market. The system captures information on secondary market transactions in publicly traded securities (investment grade, high yield and convertible corporate debt) representing all over-the-counter market activity in these bonds.

We used the trade-weighted average yield reported by TRACE for each of the bond issues analyzed. We calculated the credit spread using the matched-maturity yield on U.S. Treasury bonds, interpolated from the Federal Reserve H15 statistical release for the trade date. The source of the information on the H15 release is the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Forward-Looking Best Value Bond Selection

Today’s analysis looks back at yesterday’s trades.  A forward-looking bond selection based on today’s prices at this instant is done in the same way, with slight differences in the data sources.

Author’s Note

Regular readers of these notes are aware that we generally do not list the major news headlines relevant to the firms in question. We believe that other authors on SeekingAlpha, Yahoo, at The New York Times, The Financial Times, and the Wall Street Journal do a fine job of this.  Our omission of those headlines is intentional.  Similarly, to argue that a specific news event is more important than all other news events in the outlook for the firm is something we again believe is inappropriate for this author.  Our focus is on current bond prices, credit spreads, and default probabilities, key statistics that we feel are critical for both fixed income and equity investors.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Donald R. Van Deventer, Ph.D.

Don founded Kamakura Corporation in April 1990 and currently serves as Co-Chair, Center for Applied Quantitative Finance, Risk Research and Quantitative Solutions at SAS. Don’s focus at SAS is quantitative finance, credit risk, asset and liability management, and portfolio management for the most sophisticated financial services firms in the world.

Read More

ARCHIVES