Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Rogue Trader Cat Bonds
In the textbook, we discussed cat bonds. Cat bonds, which are often
issued by insurers or reinsurers, have a trigger based on natural
catastrophes. Credit Suisse is taking the concept of a cat bond even
further. The company has approached investors
about a cat bond like issue that has a trigger that would cover
operational losses due to events such as rogue trading or cybercrime. A
major drawback is that quantifying the costs of cybercrime is a difficult process. If the Credit Suisse operational risk cat bond succeeds, we will likely see more of these bonds in the future.
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Atlanta Braves (Stock) Sinks
The Atlanta Braves have the worst record in the National League so far
this year, and the tracking stock has mirrored the team's on field
performance. Liberty Media, the owner of the Braves, issued tracking
stock on Monday that tracks Liberty Media's Braves ownership. Tracking stock
is stock that is intended to track the performance of a particular unit
of the company. Tracking stock generally has no voting rights, but is
often used to track the performance of specific units of the company and
may occur ahead of a public offering. The Braves tracking stock was a
sinker ball as the stock dropped 40 percent on the first day of trading,
then about 10 percent the next day.
Monday, April 4, 2016
The Stock Market Wins Again
The first quarter of 2016 was the worst on record for large cap mutual funds as fewer than 1 in 5 beat
the stock market. Growth funds performed particularly poorly, as only 6
percent beat the S&P 500. About 20 percent of value funds and 29
percent of core funds beat the S&P 500. Small cap fund managers performed better, with 80 percent beating their benchmark.
Friday, April 1, 2016
Private Company Valuation
With a public company, the price per share is easy to obtain by looking
at the stock market. For private companies, stock prices are more
difficult. Although you can price a private company using multiples or
free cash flow techniques, the valuation of private companies by mutual
funds shows how much disagreement exists.
For example, cloud-based storage company Dropbox is valued at $9.40 per
share by T. Rowe Price, while Hartford Financial Services Group has a
value of $15.20 per share. The valuations on database software company
are even wider, ranging from $8.06 to $18.55. As Jeff Grabow, head of
the valuation practice at EY states, “Valuation is as much an art as it
is a science.”
Bond Yield Spreads Increase
The yield spread spread between investment grade corporate bonds and
non-investment grade, or high-yield bonds, is often viewed as a risk
premium on credit risk. So far this year, this yield spread has increased,
signalling an increased cost to credit risk. For the first quarter,
$454 billion on new investment grade corporate debt was issued, an
increase from the $446 billion sold in the first quarter of 2015.
However, high-yield issuance was only $36 billion, down dramatically
from last year's $86 billion. While low interest rates have garnered
much of the attention in the press, non-investment grade bond yields
have increased. For example, Western Digital recently sold $3.35 billion
in bonds at a 10.5 percent coupon. The credit rating on the bond's was
BB+, just one notch below investment grade.
First Quarter Returns
The S&P 500 finished up about .8 percent for the first quarter, but what were the best and worst performers?
Among all assets, gold and the Bovespa (Brazilian stock market)
performed the best, with both up about 15 percent for the quarter, while
silver prices increased about 11 percent. Among the losers were DJStoxx
600 Banks (European banks), the FTSE MIB (Italian stocks), and the
Chinese yuan renminbi.
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