In finance, a high-yield bond (non-investment grade bond or junk bond) is a bond that is rated below investment grade. These bonds have a higher risk of defaulting, but typically pay high yields in order to make them attractive to investors. These types of bonds are also known as junk bonds.
Bonds rated BBB and higher are called investment grade bonds. Bonds rated lower than investment grade are colloquially referred to as "junk" bonds. The lower-rated debt typically offers a higher yield, making junk bonds attractive investment vehicles for certain types of financial portfolios and strategies. Many pension funds and other investors, however, are prohibited in their by-laws from investing in bonds which have ratings below a particular level. As a result, the lower-rated securities may be harder to sell. In some cases the limited market for junk bonds can lead to a dismal cycle in which a company with financial difficulties will have its bond rating lowered, and that makes it harder to raise money, thereby deepening the company's financial troubles.
This cycle was one (but not the only) factor that accounts for the sudden collapse of several high profile companies such as Enron and WorldCom, whose bonds were not initially rated junk. Bonds that decline from investment grade status to high yield are referred to as "fallen angels", while high yield bonds with credit metrics that improve may receive investment grade ratings and be referred to as "rising stars." Investors in high yield bonds expect credit quality to typically improve over time, and when the perceived risk of a credit decreases, then the return (interest rate) demanded by investors will also decrease, and the price of the bond will increase (lowering the effective interest rate received by the person who buys the bond at that point). Through this mechanism, investors in high yield bonds may enjoy yields above treasury rates, and then further capital appreciation as the credit quality of a bond improves.
The value of junk bonds is affected to a higher degree than investment grade bonds by the possibility of default. For example, in a recession interest rates tend to drop, and the drop in interest rates tends to increase the value of investment grade bonds; however, a recession increases the possibility of default in junk bonds.
When analyzing the risk of a high-yield bond, it is important to keep in mind that the expected return from a basket of high yield bonds should approximate that of a similarly diversified list of high grade bonds. The low-rated bonds offer higher promised returns but have a higher expected probability of default, which means that a greater proportion of their expected return comes from interest payments rather than principal. As a result, they are less sensitive to interest rate swings, allowing high-risk companies to more easily refinance its debt even if interest rates have increased. The analysis of high-yield debt has much in common with equity analysis, because the viability of the company and its future cash flows determine whether it will be able to repay the debt. The value of a company's equity is considered a cushion beneath the debt of the company, as a company with highly valued equity is likely to have the operational and financial ability to repay debt, and can issue more of its stock for additional financing.
Junk bonds became ubiquitous in the 1980s, through the efforts of investment bankers like Michael Milken, as a financing mechanism in mergers and acquisitions. In a leveraged buyout (LBO) an acquirer would issue junk bonds to help pay for an acquisition and then use the target's cash flow to help pay the debt over time.
Junk bonds are still used to finance capital intensive industries such as telecommunications and oil and gas sectors. Interestingly the bonds of companies such as Enron and Worldcom were not initially rated as junk — Enron, because they hid much of their debt in off balance-sheet transactions, and WorldCom, because they understated their operating expenses while inflating capital expenditures — so that the financial instability of the company was not known to credit rating groups. Credit default swaps, which are essentially a bet that a given company will go bankrupt, did trade at a premium for Enron — an irony, given that the Houston company was an early pioneer in trading them.
Bonds | Banking | Banking terms and equipment | Junk Bonds | Junk bond | Obligacje śmieciowe
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