02-12-2014, 07:48 AM
Oil slump may see wave of junk bond defaults
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES DECEMBER 02, 2014 4:45AM
Junk bonds have financed the US shale boom, and now the sharp drop in oil prices could lead to a massive wave of defaults on that high-yield debt.
Should oil prices fall below $US65 per barrel and stay there for the next three years, Tarek Hamid, a high-yield energy analyst at JP Morgan Chase, estimates that up to 40 per cent of all energy junk bonds could default over the next several years.
Energy companies, the fastest growing segment of the high-yield bond market in recent years, account for nearly 18 per cent of all outstanding high-yield bonds, up from 9 per cent in 2009, according to JP Morgan.
Mr Hamid says that the 40 per cent possible default rate is the upper limit over the next few years, and that energy companies will take steps to avoid falling into bankruptcy, including cutting spending and selling assets.
Still, even if companies make smart moves to cut costs, with oil at $US65 per barrel or below for the next three years, he estimates that default rates high-yield bonds from the energy sector could still hover around 20 per cent to 25 per cent.
"It would become a very dire scenario," Mr Hamid said.
After a steep plunge in oil prices last week, WTI crude, the US benchmark, was recently up 3 per cent to $US68.14 a barrel in Monday morning trading.
He predicts that not that many companies will default in 2015 because many companies have hedged their exposure. But he expects that energy companies will run into trouble in 2016 as even the most conservative energy companies will see most of their hedges run off.
Energy companies are the largest sector in the high-yield universe by a wide margin. The next largest sector, JP Morgan estimates, is the healthcare sector, which accounts for 7.1 per cent.
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES DECEMBER 02, 2014 4:45AM
Junk bonds have financed the US shale boom, and now the sharp drop in oil prices could lead to a massive wave of defaults on that high-yield debt.
Should oil prices fall below $US65 per barrel and stay there for the next three years, Tarek Hamid, a high-yield energy analyst at JP Morgan Chase, estimates that up to 40 per cent of all energy junk bonds could default over the next several years.
Energy companies, the fastest growing segment of the high-yield bond market in recent years, account for nearly 18 per cent of all outstanding high-yield bonds, up from 9 per cent in 2009, according to JP Morgan.
Mr Hamid says that the 40 per cent possible default rate is the upper limit over the next few years, and that energy companies will take steps to avoid falling into bankruptcy, including cutting spending and selling assets.
Still, even if companies make smart moves to cut costs, with oil at $US65 per barrel or below for the next three years, he estimates that default rates high-yield bonds from the energy sector could still hover around 20 per cent to 25 per cent.
"It would become a very dire scenario," Mr Hamid said.
After a steep plunge in oil prices last week, WTI crude, the US benchmark, was recently up 3 per cent to $US68.14 a barrel in Monday morning trading.
He predicts that not that many companies will default in 2015 because many companies have hedged their exposure. But he expects that energy companies will run into trouble in 2016 as even the most conservative energy companies will see most of their hedges run off.
Energy companies are the largest sector in the high-yield universe by a wide margin. The next largest sector, JP Morgan estimates, is the healthcare sector, which accounts for 7.1 per cent.