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Archive for the ‘Cash and Liquidity Management’ Category

This Week in Corporate Finance

Monday, February 15th, 2010

While Washington, D.C., and most of the northeastern United States tries to get back on its feet after suffering through what has been the snowiest winter since William McKinley was president, the rest of the world was focused on events in Europe (specifically Greece), and China.

Signs that the European Union (EU) will provide some sort of support and aid to Greece was enough to create a bit of a floor for the troubled sovereign credit and the Euro itself. After the freefall of credit spreads, CDS, equities, commodities and currencies over the past couple of weeks, this week actually seems calm.

We will have to take a wait-and-see approach to developments in Europe. How the EU would response to a further deterioration of the situation is foremost on people’s minds.

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This Week in Corporate Finance

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Back in 2002, when the University of Maryland was making its run at the NCAA men’s basketball championship, the term “Fear the Turtle” became popular. It was a reference to the less-than-frightening school mascot, the Terrapin. This week, a significantly more frightening chant heard around the world, which was “Fear the PIGS”. With the “PIGS” being a reference to the countries of Portugal, Ireland and Italy, Greece and Spain.

We witnessed a great bit of uncertainty in the global markets as participants around the world were greatly concerned about the potential of a credit event in one or more of these European Community members. We watched as absolute credit spreads and credit default spreads continued to widen and as debt and equity deals were delayed and postponed.

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This Week in Corporate Finance

Monday, February 1st, 2010

To paraphrase Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, the word of the week is “Greece”. Concerns about the financial stability of the Greek economy were the focus of the global capital markets. Because Greece is a member of the European Community (EC), questions have been raised about the value of the currency, the riskiness of credit in Europe and the impact on the potential growth of the European economy.

Unlike 2009, when the general feeling was that all the economies were slowing down as a result of the financial crisis, 2010 is already shaping up as a year where individual countries’ economies will not be moving in such lockstep.

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This Week in Corporate Finance

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

As we continue to move forward in the new year, the floodgates of new corporate debt issuance continue to be wide open. After the traditional quiet time of year end, January debt issuance is usually a busy time. But this year looks to be busier than most. In fact, we may be experiencing the busiest January since the late 1990’s.

Why is this occurring? Often the factors that cause this to occur are due to alignment. Issuers have a lot of supply and investors have a lot of demand. But it goes much deeper than that.

After experiencing a once-in-generation credit event and concerns about the global economy heading towards a depression, we find ourselves in a much different place here in 2010.

After the central banks of the world provided massive amounts of liquidity to the world economy and drove interest rates down to levels not seen in 70+ years or more, we are faced with the questions of: How will all this liquidity be removed from the market? When rates start to rise, how high will they go? (more…)

This Week in Corporate Finance

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Global Capital Markets

JPMorgan sold $4 billion of 13-month extendible notes with a final maturity in December 2015

Travelers raised $500 million selling catastrophe bonds, the biggest issuance this year of securities that allow investors to bet against natural disasters.

U.S. Treasuries

Treasuries dropped, pushing 10-year yields to the highest level in four months.

The yield curve widened to a record as investors bet an accelerating recovery will fuel inflation and hurt demand for unprecedented government debt sales. (more…)

This Week in Corporate Finance

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Global Capital Markets

Abu Dhabi provided $10 billion to help Dubai World, the state-owned holding company, avoid defaulting on a $4.1 billion bond payment that roiled global financial markets during the past month.

Companies with credit ratings below investment grade have sold a record $150.6 billion of U.S. corporate bonds this year as borrowers take advantage of surging demand for debt securities after last year’s credit freeze. Sales of high-yield, high-risk junk bonds compare with $149.1 billion in all of 2006, the previous high.

Corporate bond sales in Europe are exceeding the amount raised through bank loans for the first time, with issuance by non-financial companies doubling to a record 337 billion euros this year. Syndicated loans, or debt underwritten by a group of banks which they then sell to investors, fell 46 percent to 279 billion euros

Westpac Banking Corp. raised A$2 billion ($1.8 billion) from bonds backed by home loans in the first such sale by one of Australia’s top four lenders since the financial crisis began in 2007.

Brazil sold $500 million of 10-year bonds in the country’s fifth international dollar bond offering this year.

Denmark’s record $115 billion mortgage-bond auction drew yields at the lowest level since adjustable interest-rate loans were started 13 years ago

Panama scrapped a plan to sell $760 million of bonds through a state development fund after the offer sparked a rout in the country’s debt.

Leveraged-loan returns surpassed 50 percent this week as new bank debt, sold by companies seeking to pay for buyouts, issue dividends or refinance borrowings, rose in the secondary market.

U.S. Treasuries

Treasuries headed for a weekly gain, trimming this year’s loss, as stocks fell around the world on concern the global economic recovery will slow. (more…)

This Week in Corporate Finance

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Global Capital Markets

Bank of America raised $19.3 billion selling securities at $15 apiece in the biggest sale of stock or preferred shares by a U.S. public company since at least 2000.

Nomura Holdings Inc. sold 1 billion euros ($1.5 billion) of bonds in what Japan’s biggest brokerage described as its debut international benchmark offering that pays a fixed rate, as it seeks to diversify its funding.

U.S. Treasuries

Treasury two-year notes fell the most since August as the U.S. economy lost the fewest jobs last month since the recession began and a Federal Reserve report said economic conditions had improved “modestly.” (more…)

This Week in Corporate Finance

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Global Capital Markets

Cisco Systems and U.S. wireless carrier Clearwire led $96.9 billion of bond sales this month, the busiest November since 2006, as companies took advantage of near-zero interest rates.

U.S. corporate bond sales reached an annual record of $1.171 trillion as borrowers took advantage of low interest rates and surging demand for debt securities following last year’s credit freeze. Sales of investment-grade and high-yield, high risk debt compare with the more than $1.167 trillion that companies sold in all of 2007, the previous record. Last year, the total was $874 billion.

Companies sold a record $385.9 billion in the first quarter of this year as borrowers accessed the thawing credit markets. Corporate issuance was $331.9 billion in the second quarter and $268.4 billion in the third quarter.

Volkswagen and Vivendi led a more than three-fold increase in non-financial bond sales this week as companies rushed to take advantage of the lowest yields in four years.

China’s finance ministry completed its first sale of 50-year debt at a lower-than-expected yield as brokerages said life insurers purchased the securities.

U.S. Treasuries

Treasuries advanced the most this month after a proposal from Dubai to delay debt payments set off a slide in stocks and higher-yielding assets worldwide.

The Treasury sold $44 billion of two-year notes at a yield of 0.802 percent, the lowest on record, as demand for the safety of U.S. government securities surges going into year-end.

Swaps

Interest-rate swap spreads widened after Dubai’s attempt to reschedule its debt payments rattled investors and reduced demand for higher-yielding assets.

The difference between the rate to exchange floating- for fixed-interest payments and U.S. Treasury yields for two years, known as the two-year swap spread, widened 3.94 basis points to 33.19 basis points. Swap spreads are based in part on expectations for the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and are used as a gauge of investor perceptions of credit risk.

Commercial Paper Update

The U.S. CP market contracted in the latest week, Federal Reserve data showed on Friday. It was the third weekly contraction in four weeks. For the week ended Wednesday Nov. 25, the size of the U.S. CP market fell by $10.7 billion to $1.257 trillion outstanding.

LIBOR

The cost of borrowing between banks fell. The British Bankers’ Association said the rate on three-month loans in dollars, the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, fell to 0.2556 percent from 0.2606 percent

Money Market Funds

A group of investors including Ameriprise Financial Inc. won a victory when a federal judge ordered the Reserve Primary Fund to distribute its assets equally among all shareholders. 

Central Banks

Russia’s central bank cut its key interest rates to a record low in the ninth reduction since April.

Hungary’s central bank cut its benchmark interest rate to the lowest in more than three years today to speed the country’s recovery from its worst recession in 18 years, which helped slow inflation.

Vietnam raised the benchmark interest rate to 8 percent, the first increase since January, and narrowed the dong’s trading band to 3 percent from 5 percent.

Banking

U.S. “problem” lenders climbed to the most in 16 years and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s fund protecting customers against bank failures slipped into a deficit in the third quarter, the agency said.

Credit Ratings

Mexico’s investment-grade credit rating was lowered by Fitch. Fitch cut Mexico’s foreign debt rating one level to BBB, the second-lowest investment grade and in line with countries including Russia and Thailand, and changed the outlook to stable from negative. The downgrade was the first by Fitch since it gave Mexico an initial rating of BB in 1995 and the first by any ratings company since S&P cut it in the wake of the 1994 peso devaluation.

Los Angeles, the largest city in California by population, had its credit rating lowered on $2.94 billion of debt by Fitch, which said the city’s deficit next year will exceed 9 percent of revenue. Fitch said in a statement it lowered ratings to AA- from AA on $1.5 billon of general obligation bonds and to A+ from AA- on $1 billon of the city’s certificates of participation, or municipal bonds backed by the general fund, $25 million of judgment obligation bonds and $419.7 million of debt sold for the Los Angeles Convention and Exhibition Center Authority.

Rating Agencies

Connecticut plans to join Ohio in suing credit-rating companies for “negligent, reckless and incompetent work” in grading debt purchased by state pension funds.

M&A

Reliance Industries made a cash offer to buy a controlling stake in closely held LyondellBasell Industries AF, the bankrupt chemicals and fuels maker.

Windstream Corp., the rural U.S. home-phone carrier, agreed to buy Iowa Telecommunications Services Inc. for about $530 million in cash and stock to expand into Iowa and Minnesota.

CDS

Dubai’s attempts to delay debt repayments spurred an increase in the cost of insuring government and company bonds from default around the world and may curb lending throughout the Persian Gulf. The cost to protect U.S. corporate bonds from default rose to the highest in almost a month.

Currencies

The dollar dropped to a 14-year low against the yen.

Commodities

Gold climbed to the highest price ever, capping the longest rally in 27 years, as the dollar’s slump deepened and on a report that India’s central bank may add to last month’s 200 metric-ton purchase. Gold reached a record $1,189 an ounce and has rallied 13 percent since Nov. 2, after India said it bought bullion from the International Monetary Fund.

This Week in Corporate Finance

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Global Capital Markets

Borrowers sold $6.3 billion of U.S. corporate bonds that mature in 30 years or more, the biggest weekly total since January.

Banks are carrying more short-term debt on their balance sheets than at any time in at least 30 years. About $10 trillion of bank debt will come due between now and 2015, with $7 trillion maturing by 2012.

U.S. Treasuries

Treasuries headed for a weekly gain after the U.S. completed the sale of $81 billion of notes and bonds amid speculation the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates near record lows for the foreseeable future.

Commercial Paper Update

The U.S. CP market shrank for a second straight week, stalling a three-month expansion. For the week ending Nov. 11, the CP market fell $76.6 billion to $1.239 trillion outstanding from $1.315 trillion the previous week, Federal Reserve data showed.

 

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Cash and Risk Management in Asia

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

The challenge for today’s North American corporate treasury doing business along the Pacific Rim is working with a multitude of local banks and losing some transparency, according to one banking executive. Jess Villarina, senior regional sales representative – Asia Pacific, HSBC, says, “Right now, companies are worried about the sovereignty of some local banks in light of the current market conditions. They are reviewing these local banks, and looking for operational efficiencies, tighter management of working capital, leveraging of technology, and increased transparency of cash that they’re not getting now.”

Transparency is top of mind with many firms who have completed their Asia-Pacific acquisitions and are moving in to the next phase of doing business along the Pacific Rim. “They’re worried about the control of these accounts that are located at multiple banks—the challenges of getting a handle on a transactional level, that real-time of information,” says Villarina. “Right now, they’re getting a plethora of information from various banks, which may not be the most optimal situation.”

Villarina will discuss working with your banking providers on how to improve operations in the Pacific Rim and building better transparency as well as risk management and cash management in an AFP webinar, “Cash, Liquidity and Risk Management in Asia,” November 4, at 3:30 pm.

This webinar is approved for CTP/CCM and CPE credits. For more information on requirements for obtaining CE credits through AFP webinars, please view the re-certification requirements.

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