Wednesday, September 5, 2018
Activist Bondholders
Because bondholders have a fixed claim on assets and no vote in company
operations, they tend to be passive investors in companies. However, a
new type of investor, the net-short bondholder,
has become more prevalent. A net-short bondholder will buy a bond and
at the same time take a larger short position in the same company's
bonds. A short position benefits when the asset value decreases. Thus,
the investor will lose in the long position but gain a larger amount in
the short position. The investor will then implement a claim if the
company violates any covenant. For example, Aurelius Capital Management
took a net-short position in Windstream's corporate debt and then
claimed a violation of a covenant two years prior. Windstream had even
undertaken actions to satisfy bondholders that held the bonds when the
violation occurred. In short, companies now must be even more careful
when writing covenants for bonds.