
Asset-Backed Securities Update – 30th June 2020
Partners and portfolio managers Ben Hayward and Aza Teeuwen provide an update on the TwentyFour Income and TwentyFour Monument Bond Fund.

UK Credit Can Benefit From ‘Japanification’
As more government bond curves around the world join the select group trading at negative yields, we are seeing a spike in ‘Japanification’ headlines in the press.

Diverging Defaults and Cyclical Selections
Earlier this week, Moody’s published its default study for June, which showed that as expected, default rates globally have started to pick up as a result of COVID-19. The trailing 12-month global high yield default rate reached 5.4% at the end of June, up from 4.8% in May, as the gap to the long term average of 4.1% continues to grow.

Q2 Earnings Could Boost Outlook for Credit
As we enter Q2 earnings season, we will be most interested to learn how Corporate America has fared over the past three months.

Companies Unlikely to Underperform in Q2 Earnings
Ultimately, while Q2 will be a bad quarter for many companies even if they outperform expectations, in our view it is not the real driver of spreads at this stage.

Green AT1 Raises More Questions Than Answers
Today BBVA announced it would be issuing the first ever green Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bond, a perpetual non-call 5.5-year with initial price thoughts at 6.5%, and immediately sparked a spirited debate among the TwentyFour team over how green bank capital can be.

Anticipation Building for Q2 Reporting Season
Like many market participants we are looking ahead to a much anticipated Q2 reporting season, which is even more pertinent this year given the unprecedented environment we have all found ourselves in. We are particularly interested in reviewing the major banks given they are at the centre of the transmission mechanism and hence a barometer for the wider economy.

It’s Still Harvest Season For The Brexit Premium
One topic that is beginning to gather headlines again is the terms of any bilateral agreement between the UK and European Union once Brexit is finally completed at the end of this year, with the latest round of negotiations breaking up a day early this week as both sides said they were still far apart on a number of issues.

Huge Crash, Huge Rally. Now What?
After the most incredible first quarter of 2020, we have seen an almost equally incredible second quarter. It is clear to us that the market overreacted in March, but it has also overreacted in its interpretation of the recovery.

COVID-19 and European CLOs: What comes next?
Partner and Portfolio Manager Aza Teeuwen and Geoffrey Horton, CLO and Loan Strategist at Barclays discuss the impact of COVID-19 on the leveraged loan and CLO markets and how they expect this to develop in the rest of 2020.

RMBS Data Shed Light on UK Mortgage Holidays
The dust is beginning to settle in the UK economy, and we have been busy using granular RMBS data to assess the impact of mortgage payment relief (payment “holidays”), which the Financial Conduct Authority guided lenders to offer borrowers affected by COVID-19.

Central Bank Liquidity Will Dampen Default Cycle
The European high yield market has shown remarkable resilience in the face of what will likely go down as one of the sharpest and most severe recessions in history. The benchmark iTraxx Xover index (a widely used proxy for Euro HY credit risk) has tightened from an intraday high of 730bp in March to 342bp earlier this week, a retracement of almost 75% from the January lows of approximately 200bp.
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