Thursday, August 27, 2009

Daily Commentary

Spreads are largely unchanged this morning in light volume. On the new issue front, only 1 deal from Praxair seems to be queued up. The recent P&G benchmark deal, which can be used as proxy for the health of the new issue market, remains a few basis points tighter than where it was issued. While secondary volume is off a bit, the breadth of the market remains healthy.

JPMorgan credit research recently noted that EBITDA margins in Q2 were actually above the average of the last decade.

Diageo's CEO was on the tape this morning making comments about his eagerness to make acquisitions; spreads in Diageo CDS were about 5bps wider to the low 70bps area. I note this as it's been quite some time since I've seen any M&A chatter affecting spreads.

The long awaited FDIC rules (39 pages of them) regarding private equity firms buying failed banks have been released (here). As expected, the capital requirement was lowered from the proposed 15% to a more palatable 10%. However, this Reuters Blog astutely notes that it's no longer pure Tier 1 capital (reserve) but rather Tier 1 Common Equity.

Fed governor Lacker made comments (here) that concluded with his intention to revisit whether the Fed should complete it's entire targetted purchase of $1.25T of mortgage backed securities. This is likely to raise many eyebrows amongst the mortgage crowd. In theory, most investors disapprove of any government intervention in the markets....while in practice, everyone privately likes it when the government artificially inflates the price of securities you own.

Given the lack of credit focused news items to write about this morning, I'll delve into mortgages for the second time today. The NYTimes has an article about the enormity of pending mortgage rate resets coming in the next few years that could easily threaten any real estate recovery. BusinessInsider's Henry Blodget also has some graphs on the same matter (here).

Buttonwood from The Economist has a short posting here about the debate whether private equity owned firms outperform public firms.

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