Portafogli e Strategie (investimento) Sunset Boulevard: the Indian Summer of the debt (Vol. VI)

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G-20 Central Banks Delay Exit as Euro Debt Woes Rattle Markets

By Simon Kennedy and Shamim Adam

June 4 (Bloomberg) -- Group of 20 central banks are delaying their withdrawal of emergency stimulus as Europe’s debt crisis shakes financial markets and threatens to hinder the global recovery.
G-20 finance chiefs begin talks today in Busan, South Korea, after central banks from Australia to Canada identified investor reaction to Europe’s indebtedness as a hurdle to higher interest rates. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet has reversed his exit strategy to combat the euro’s biggest test, while the Federal Reserve’s Charles Evans signaled market stress will delay a rise in U.S. borrowing costs.
“Given the increase in uncertainty in the economy, it would be perfectly natural for people to be less eager to tighten,” William White, a former Bank for International Settlements chief economist who pointed to risks in financial markets before the 2008 credit crisis, said in an interview in Seoul.
The need for central bankers to keep rates lower for longer may spark tension in Busan as monetary policy makers intensify their public demands for fiscal authorities to restrain debt in return. The pressure is an echo of the 1990s, when then-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and counterparts lobbied leaders to narrow deficits that threatened a bondholder revolt.
Europe’s Rescue
Trichet, Chinese Finance Minister Xie Xuren and their G-20 counterparts convene today for the first time since a Greek-led sell-off in the bonds of the euro-area’s most indebted nations spurred the European Union to craft a 750 billion-euro ($918 billion) rescue plan and the ECB to buy the bonds of “dysfunctional” markets.
The package hasn’t been enough to pacify investors concerned sovereign debt is the biggest threat yet to the recovery from last year’s global slump.
The MSCI World Index of stocks has fallen 12 percent since mid-April and the rate banks say they pay for three-month loans in dollars last week reached the highest level since July. The market for corporate bonds closed on June 1 as concern European banks will take more writedowns and losses led investors to shun all but the safest government debt.
“Investors are going to stay cautious,” said Andrew Milligan, the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments, which manages the equivalent of $214 billion. He predicts they will seek “ballast” for their portfolios amid volatility by buying investment-grade corporate debt. Bonds from governments with lower borrowing levels will also outperform, he forecast.

Credit Crunch
Central banks are concerned the biggest threat to the recovery is banks ceasing to lend and financial markets freezing as happened in 2008, rather than weaker European demand, said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. He estimates Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain accounted for just 4 percent of world gross domestic product last year.
“They are traumatized by what happened in 2008,” said Callow, who previously worked at the Bank of England. “Investors are nervous again so central banks are picking up on that.”
Trichet’s ECB is leading the pullback, announcing May 10 it would intervene in markets to buy government bonds, renew its auctions of unlimited cash to banks for up to six months and revive a currency swap line with the Fed.

Shifting Forecast
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief European Economist Erik Nielsen now expects the ECB to wait until the second quarter of next year to raise its benchmark rate rather than during the first three months of the year as he previously anticipated.

Other G-20 central banks are also taking note of Europe’s woes. Australia kept its key rate at 4.5 percent on June 1 and signaled it may leave it there for the “near term,” noting in a statement that “investors have generally displayed a good deal more caution.”
Turkey’s central bank said on May 18 that indebtedness elsewhere in Europe means “uncertainty over external demand is likely to remain important for a long time.” Russia’s Bank Rossii cut its main interest rate for the 14th time in as many months on May 31 to support its recovery, while Indonesia yesterday kept its benchmark unchanged at a record low.
‘Extended’ Period
Fed Bank of Chicago President Evans said May 31 he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the Fed’s policy of keeping rates near zero “gets extended just a little bit.” Bank of England policy maker Adam Posen said in a May 20 interview Europe’s crisis is going to inflict “some negative drag on the U.K.”
“If you have volatility in markets and implications for the financial system then central bankers are going to be concerned about the risks to growth so may be relatively more conservative in scaling back support,” said Paul Donovan, a UBS AG economist in London.
Even central banks that have raised rates may now be slower to do so. In India, where the Reserve Bank increased borrowing costs in March and April, Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn last month said officials will be more cautious with future moves. Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney mentioned Europe and its crisis four times in a one-page statement on June 1, a signal his bank may not soon repeat its quarter-point rate rise.
The market jitters may also have given China reason to refrain so far from letting its currency rise against the dollar. G-20 members have repeatedly called for an end to the peg China adopted in July 2008 to aid its exporters. The euro’s 15 percent slide against the yuan this year already threatens to undermine Chinese shipments.

Yuan Unmoved
Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards reflect bets the yuan will strengthen 0.7 percent from the spot rate of 6.83 per dollar compared with projections of a 3.2 percent appreciation at the start of May.
“China’s economic strength certainly justifies a stronger yuan and higher interest rates, but policy makers don’t want to give an impression that they are tightening at a time when exporters are suffering,” said Tomo Kinoshita, an economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong.
In return for doing more to aid expansion, central banks may demand governments work harder to outline and enact plans to narrow budget gaps, with southern Europe an example of what may happen if they fail. Citigroup Inc. economists estimate G-20 governments must tighten fiscal policy an average of 8 percent of GDP over the next decade to reduce debt burdens to 60 percent of GDP.

Trichet’s Warning
Trichet said May 31 that he will no longer tolerate a lack of budget discipline in the euro area after all but Luxembourg and Finland last year violated a rule to hold budget deficits to less than 3 percent of GDP. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said April 27 that a failure to reduce the U.S. deficit may imperil the recovery by pushing up borrowing costs.
Finance ministers headed to Busan seeking to juggle the goals of protecting growth and consolidating budgets. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said he wanted fiscal reform that was “growth-friendly,” while France’s Christine Lagarde said the G-20 was aiming to restore confidence in public borrowing, yet not “suffocate growth.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in London at [email protected]; Shamim Adam in Busan, South Korea, at [email protected]
Last Updated: June 3, 2010 11:01 EDT
 
Un'altra circostanza che potrebbe ispirare qualche riflessione è l'affollamento delle equity firm nella corsa a vendere le società acquistate in LBO negli anni scorsi.

La sequenza si succede ininterrotta a partire dall'autunno del 2009.

Mi faccio la solita domanda idiota: ma se andiamo verso un ulteriore rialzo generalizzato dei corsi azionari, che fretta c'è di vendere, spesso per valori molto inferiori rispetto al prezzo pagato a suo tempo (ma tanto, con il meccanismo del LBO, questo non conta, dato che il debito viene ricaricato sulla società acquisita) ?

Non varrebbe la pena attendere, così da lucrare - fra un anno, faccio per dire - il positivo andamento dei mercati azionari verificatosi nel mentre ?

Ed invece tutti a vendere nel mondo del private equity... e sono pochissimi, specie negli USA, gli acquirenti industriali, in altri tempi interlocutori privilegiati del private equity dopo che fossero intervenute le ristrutturazioni in cui tali società sono specializzate.

La formula con la quale si realizza la dismissione è quella dell'IPO... ci si libera delle azioni cedendole sul mercato... ;)

E' la volta del colosso del direct marketing Nielsen, comprato per 10 mld $ nel 2006 e ceduto adesso sul mercato per 1,75 mld $... ma la liste delle operazioni di questo tipo, fra quelle già fatte e quelle in cantiere, rsta piuttosto lunga... dal WSJ online


  • JUNE 3, 2010
Nielsen Files for $1.75 Billion IPO

By PETER LATTMAN

Media company Nielsen Holdings BV plans to sell up to $1.75 billion in shares in an initial public offering, the latest in a flurry of private-equity-backed IPO filings poised to hit the market in coming months.

The deal will add to the already considerable backlog of initial public offerings of companies owned by private-equity firms. The buyout firms are seeking to cash out of some of their investments, as well as raise money to pay down debt borrowed to fund the spate of buyouts struck last decade.

One of the best-known of those deals was Nielsen, a market-research giant that tracks consumer habits and measures television viewership.
The company plans to use proceeds to repay debt and for other purposes, according to its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The IPO's lead underwriters are J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley.

While television and other media ratings are Nielsen's best-known products, the company makes significant revenue analyzing the minutiae of consumer life—which products sell and how they're best marketed.

A sextet of private-equity firms took Nielsen private in a $10 billion leveraged buyout in 2006. Thomas H. Lee Partners LP and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. approached the company about a takeover and put together a group that included Blackstone Group LP, Alpinvest Partners, Carlyle Group LP and Hellman & Friedman LLC.

Nielsen, formerly known as VNU NV, is headed by David Calhoun, a former vice chairman at General Electric Co.

Last month's weak stock-market performance has weakened the market for IPOs and threatens to derail some of the larger private equity-backed deals that have been filed in recent months. Those include IPOs for hospital chain HCA Inc., retailer Toys "R" Us Inc. and technology company NXP Semiconductors NV.

Nielsen generated roughly $1.3 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization in 2009 on $4.8 billion in revenue.
 
Caro Antonio, non ti ho ancora fatto i complimenti per lo splendido thread... lucido, ficcante e preciso come sempre :clap:
Non avendo alcunché da aggiungere alle vostre splendide disamine, rimango lettore silenzioso... ;)

Grazie Marco...

Intanto, continuiamo a fare il punto della situazione: altra settimana di chiusura del mercato dei corporate bond HY USA... anche questo è un fattore tipico nella nostra analisi e tradizionale delle fasi di inversione del ciclo della liquidità con il ritorno al flight to quality.

E siamo alla terza settimana di fila in cui il mercato primario USA non vede quasi nessuna emissione HY, mentre quelle di corporate bonds IG risultano ridimensionate rispetto al mese scorso.

Dei 5,15 mld $ di emissioni corporate sul mercato USA giunte in settimana, ben 2 mld $ sono costituiti da covered bonds di una delle prime banche canadesi (le banche canadesi sono peraltro note per essere rimaste fuori dai problemi della finanza strutturata USA e per essere soggette ad una vigilanza piuttosto occhiuta ad opera delle locali autorità di controllo).

Il totale delle emissioni corporate è vicino ai minimi del 2010 (la terza peggior settimana del 2010 quale controvalore di titoli emessi). Lo spread corporate bonds IG USA - Treasuries è tornato ai livelli di inizio dicembre 2009 (livello non allarmante, va precisato: anche il rialzo dei rendimenti è stato contenuto), mentre quello HY - Treasuries è pure cresciuto leggermente...

La chiusura del mercato HY per questa settimana è stata totale, mentre nelle due settimane precedenti la gran parte delle emissioni era stata posposta, ma alcune erano riuscite ad approdare sul mercato.

Nel complesso, i 6,8 mld $ di emissioni corporate HY di maggio (sempre USA) costituiscono un calo dell'80% sul dato di aprile e dell'83% su quello di marzo... ;)

"Spreads on high-yield, high-risk bonds widened 3 basis points to 693 basis points, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. They have expanded 151 basis points since touching 542 on April 26, the data show. Yields rose to 9.3 percent from 9.17 percent. High-yield bonds are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and BBB- by Standard & Poor’s.


High-yield bond sales froze for the first time since the week ended Jan. 1, as investors avoided riskier assets. Issuers sold only $6.8 billion of the securities in May, an 80 percent decline from April, and 83 percent drop from March."


U.S. Corporate Bond Sales Fall on Sustained Europe Debt Concern - BusinessWeek
 
Articolo importante, anche nell'indicare alcune scadenze chiave: a fine mese scade l'ultimo maxirepo annuale della BCE... intanto i depositi bancari presso la BCE tornano ad innalzarsi, come nelle fasi di turbolenza dei mercati...


  • JUNE 7, 2010, 4:33 A.M. ET
ECB WATCH: Banks Park Record Funds At ECB On Default Fears

By Terence Roth Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES The euro currency system opened the week under fresh strain after concerns about bank liquidity and Hungarian finances heightened investor aversion to risk.

The open lack of official concern about the plunging euro, Hungarian debt warnings, fear of bank defaults and uncertainty about economic recovery have added to the level of toxicity. The European Central Bank, in a clear sign of shaken nerves in the euro-zone banking system, said early Monday that banks parked a record EUR350.9 billion in cash at the ECB's low-yielding but safe overnight deposit facility.

If markets are functioning properly, banks use the ECB facility to the tune of only a few hundred million euros. Despite massive injections of ECB funding into the banking system, banks appear increasingly unwilling to lend to each other in money markets, where banks lend to each other at higher rates.

"The environment remains rather tense, with banks extremely keen on staying liquid," say analysts at UniCredit Bank. Not helping was last week's ECB financial stability report that banks face around EUR200 billion in loan losses this year and next, they observed.

Although not a member of the 16-nation euro zone, the new Hungarian government's warnings about the state of the country's finances raised fear of default risk for euro-zone banks. Budapest's attempts to downplay the warnings didn't fully reassure markets.

The Hungarian default talk weakened government bond markets along Europe's fiscally-week periphery.

On Monday, the cost of insuring most European government debt against default continued rising, with Portugal and Belgium showing the largest gains.

Market analysts at Danske Bank detected that the ECB had to step up use of its controversial bond purchasing program as a result.

The ECB tried letting the government bond markets of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece and Ireland stand own their own two feet last week by scaling back is purchases.

"However, markets did not function well and the ECB began buying once more Friday," Danske said. The ECB remains the only bidder in many of these markets, they said.

There also is a lot of competition for bunds. Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Portugal, Spain and Italy will issue up to EUR26 billion of bonds this week. The absorption of this amount will be cushioned by around EUR16 billion of German redemption and coupon payments.

Markets could face another liquidity crunch at the end of this month, when the ECB's mammoth EUR442 billion tender of 12-month funds expires.

That total equates to almost half of the liquidity provided by the ECB and the 16 national central banks that currently provide around EUR846 billion in temporary funds to banks in the region.

Investors also have remarked on the apparent unconcern among euro-zone officials with the euro's precipitous decline against the dollar.

Trading under $1.2000 early Monday, the shared European currency is down 21% from a December peak.

The ECB has made no sign of intervening, verbally or materially with actual euro purchases.

Nor are senior EU officials likely to push for it, with the weak currency offering an edge for an export-led economic recovery.

Euro Group Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker Sunday said the current level of the euro isn't a concern, but called for improved government cooperation between countries using the currency.

Juncker said the euro's recent volatility is due to a perceived weakness of the common European currency that makes it vulnerable to rumor and badly thought out statements from policymakers. "There have been imprudent statements from some Hungarian officials that have made financial markets think that Hungary is the future domino," he said.
 
Articolo importante, anche nell'indicare alcune scadenze chiave: a fine mese scade l'ultimo maxirepo annuale della BCE... intanto i depositi bancari presso la BCE tornano ad innalzarsi, come nelle fasi di turbolenza dei mercati...

Ciao Mark
Un anno fa quel repo spinse il rally dei Tds ... sino ai massimi registrati pochi mesi fa...Il meccanismo è ben noto.
Ora sono curioso di sapere se ne faranno un altro o basterà quello recente a sei mesi ? I Tds potrebbero seguire a ruota...
 
Ciao Mark
Un anno fa quel repo spinse il rally dei Tds ... sino ai massimi registrati pochi mesi fa...Il meccanismo è ben noto.
Ora sono curioso di sapere se ne faranno un altro o basterà quello recente a sei mesi ? I Tds potrebbero seguire a ruota...

Ciao Londinese, secondo me, se la situazione dell'equity dovesse deteriorarsi pesantemente nelle prossime settimane (e francamente sulla direzione penso si andrà verso il basso, ma sull'angolo di inclinazione non ho idea, almeno da qui a fine mese), la BCE potrebbe valutare l'ipotesi di riaprire ancora un repo a 12 mesi, così da generare ancora un bel "rimbalzone" delle borse...

Però la valutazione da fare è difficile, perché se poi le cose andassero male, e si arrivasse alla conclusione che una ristrutturazione del debito greco, magari soft, è più utile a calmare i mercati che il rinviare la faccenda, specie se dalla Grecia dovesse venire un "non ce la facciamo", che si fa con i Tds greci "in carico" alla BCE ?

Allora magari si tiene ferma la situazione attuale, che non vincola nessuno, perché già decisa autonomamente quando la Grecia non era nell'agenda delle emergenze... e a novembre, dopo le elezioni USA, dopo il repo semestrale della BCE, e valutato nel mentre quanto accade in Grecia, si decide il da farsi... ;)
 
Ancora una volta merita mettere a confronto l'HY e le subordinate bancarie con l'equity per comprendere direzione ed intensità dei movimenti... darò poi un'occhiata agli indici Merrill Lynch e Itraxx Crossover per una valutazione non spannometrica, ma - guardando alle chiusure OTC dell'HY che ho sotto monitoraggio - ieri è stata giornati di cali robusti anche sui temi di relativa migliore qualità...

Meglio le perpetuals e subordinate bancarie, sulle quali il mercato sembra essersi mosso un po' in ordine sparso... teniamo d'occhio... ;)
 
Ancora una volta merita mettere a confronto l'HY e le subordinate bancarie con l'equity per comprendere direzione ed intensità dei movimenti... darò poi un'occhiata agli indici Merrill Lynch e Itraxx Crossover per una valutazione non spannometrica, ma - guardando alle chiusure OTC dell'HY che ho sotto monitoraggio - ieri è stata giornati di cali robusti anche sui temi di relativa migliore qualità...

Meglio le perpetuals e subordinate bancarie, sulle quali il mercato sembra essersi mosso un po' in ordine sparso... teniamo d'occhio... ;)

Qui i corsi di ieri per l'iTraxx Europe Crossover... effettivamente l'andamento (qui la salita dello spread esprime un calo dei prezzi dei bond HY sottostanti) eccede quello in negativo dell'equity... vedremo poi oggi cosa succede...

Per gli USA, credo meriterà attendere l'apertura dei mercati...

Markit CDS
 
Ieri prima giornata di rimbalzo vero per l'HY, dopo che i due giorni precedenti, nonostante il buon andamento dell'equity, non avevano visto alcun apprezzamento dei titoli speculativi, ed anzi un tendenziale declino dei prezzi.

Intanto arriva il dato mensile di Moody's sul default rate. Rammenterete che - lo avevo fatto notare - nei due ultimi dispacci di stampa mensili continuava ad essere presente il forecast del default rate per fine anno, ma non più quello previsto a 12 mesi, sebbene poi alcune indicazioni indirette facessero supporre che a fine anno si sarebbe fatto il bottom di ciclo dei default, per poi risalire a partire dai primi mesi del 2011.

Ebbene, la novità segnata dal dispaccio del mese di giugno consiste in un parziale ritorno della previsione a 12 mesi, che peraltro viene esposta sotto due distinti scenari.

Intanto, ho parlato di parziale ritorno perché viene offerto il forecast a 12 mesi per il solo default rate globale, non anche per quello US e Europa.

E poi c'è l'interessante discorso dei due scenari e delle considerazioni al riguardo.

Il primo è un "baseline scenario", nel quale Moody's prevede che nel prossimo anno il tasso di disoccupazione a livello globale "salga solo leggermente" rispetto ai livello attuali, con gli spread del debito speculativo rispetto ai TdS che si contraggono ulteriormente rispetto a quanto visto nel 2010 ed il default rate che continua a calare anche nel 2011.

In questo eventuale contesto, il default rate globale passerebbe dal 6,8% di maggio 2010 al 2,4% di dicembre ed all'1,9% di maggio 2011 (vi rammento che la media storica si attesta poco sopra quota 4% sia per il globale che per US ed Europa) mentre per US e Europa il forecast per dicembre 2010 si attesterebbe rispettivamente al 2,4% ed all'1,5%.

Il fatto che per US ed Europa continui a mancare una indicazione per i 12 mesi mi induce a ritenere che il dato di dicembre 2010 possa in ogni caso rappresentare il bottom di ciclo per US ed Europa, mentre il defaul rate globale avrebbe ancora chance di discesa in quanto risentirebbe di una migliore performance delle economie emergenti rispetto a quelle "occidentali"

C'è poi un "pessimistic scenario" sotto il quale, in conseguenza di un "second economic downturn", ossia di un ritorno ad una fase recessiva, quantomeno nelle economie avanzate, e di "escalating debt problems in Europe", ossia di una degenerazione dei problemi del debito sovrano in Europa, vi sia un'accellerazione dei livelli di disoccupazione, una risalita dello spread dei bond HY sui TdS ed insieme "problemi di liquidità" per gli emittenti speculativi (leggasi: fasi di chiusura del mercato primario alle emissioni agli issuer HY).

In un tale scenario, il forecast del default rate globale termirebbe la sua discesa a dicembre, a quota 5,6%, per poi riportarsi a maggio 2011 a livello 10% (14,5% il precedente picco di ciclo), mentre per US ed Europa, in tale scenario si arriverebbe a dicembre rispettivamente ad un 5,8% e ad un 5,7%.

Intanto anche per Moody's il distressed index ratio (che, come già detto, è molto più utile tenere d'occhio per valutare inversioni del ciclo della liquidità) avrebbe segnato una risalita (la prima dai tempi del post Lehman) già a maggio, passando dal 14,1% di aprile al 14,9%. I dati sono differenti da quelli di fonte Merrill Lynch (in un articolo che peraltro forniva il dato al 27 maggio, nel contesto di un differente meccanismo di rilevazione), ma confermano un possibile cambiamento di tendenza.

Di solito posto solo uno dei due bollettini - in ampia misura coincidenti nei contenuti, come vedrete - con cui Moody's presenta l'andamento del default rate, ma questa volta li inserisco entrambi, in quanto nel secondo si parla di "liquidity pressures", ossia appunto di situazioni di ridotta disponibilità di liquidità per gli emittenti HY...

Questo il primo...

Moody's: European spec-grade default rate declines in May


London, 07 June 2010 -- The European speculative-grade default rate declined to 6.8% in May from 7.8% in April, says Moody's Investors Service in its monthly default report. The current European default rate is down from the peak of 11.8% reported in November 2009, but up from 6.4% in May 2009.

The U.S. speculative-grade default rate also experienced a fall to 7.9% in May from 9.5% in April. Six months ago, the U.S. default rate peaked at 14.5%, and was 10.9% in May 2009. Chem Rx Corporation, a U.S. pharmacy services provider, was the sole defaulter in May. This single default lifted the year-to-date default count up slightly, to 23. By comparison, 145 defaults were recorded from January to May 2009, 30 of which occurred in May.

The global speculative-grade default rate fell to 7.5% in May from 9.0% in April. The current default rate is 44% down from its peak of 13.5% in November last year. In May 2009, the global default rate was 9.8%.

Across regions, 21 of the defaults recorded so far this year originated among North American issuers, with the remainder coming from Europe and Asia.

Measured on a dollar-volume basis, the European speculative-grade bond default rate edged down to 3.4% in May from 3.9% in April. Last year, the European speculative-grade bond default rate was 7.6% in May.

In the U.S., the speculative-grade bond default rate ended at 7.4% in April, also down from May's level of 9.1%. The May 2009 rate was 15.0%. The global dollar-weighted speculative-grade bond default rate closed at 6.6% in May, down from 8.1% in April. Last year, the global dollar-weighted bond default rate was noticeably higher, at 14.1%.

"The pace of defaults has been slowing on par with our expectations," says Moody's Director of Credit Policy Research Albert Metz. "Still, the fundamental economies of Europe still appear soft, and there is risk of dislocation in the debt markets."

Moody's default rate forecasting model now predicts that under the baseline scenario, the global speculative-grade default rate will end this year at 2.4% before falling to 1.9%% in May 2011. This baseline scenario assumes that high yield spread will continue to tighten considerably while the unemployment rate is expected to increase only modestly in the coming year. Under the pessimistic scenario where high yield spread and unemployment rate are expected to spike up as a result of a second economic downturn and escalating debt problems in Europe, the global default rate may land at 5.6% in December 2010 and return to 10.0% by May 2011.

For U.S. and European speculative-grade issuers, Moody's forecasting model foresees the baseline default rates declining to 2.7% and 1.5% respectively, by the end of this year. However, if the pessimistic scenario unfolds, the U.S. default rate is expected to arrive at 5.8% instead and the European rate will close at 5.7%.

Over the coming year, Moody's expects default rates to be highest in the Hotel, Gaming, & Leisure sector in both Europe and the U.S.

Moody's distressed index, which measures the percentage of rated issuers that have debt trading at distressed levels, edged up to 14.9% in May from 14.1% in April. A year ago, the index was much higher, at 46.7%.

In the leveraged-loan market, a total of 13 Moody's-rated loan defaulters were recorded from year to date, all by North American issuers. The trailing 12-month US leveraged-loan default rate fell to 7.2% in May from 8.8% in April. A year ago, the loan default rate was 7.8%.
 

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