Sunday, March 31, 2013
A Corporate Bond Market Primer
According to a recent article in CFO,
about $4 trillion in corporate debt was issued in 2012, besting the
previous high of $3.89 trillion in 2009. But what may be more
interesting in the article is a primer in the workings of the bond
market. Before shelf registration was adopted in 1982, investment banks
spent considerable time and effort premarketing bond offerings,
essentially a road show for bonds sold in the primary market. After the
advent of shelf registration, investment banks had less time for
premarketing bonds so they essentially purchased an entire bond issue
off the shelf and sold the bonds, taking all of the pricing risk of the
new issue. Recently, investment banks appear to have gone back to
premarketing bond issues. The downside to this model is that investment
banks have reduced incentives to sell smaller, more complex bonds and instead
focus on larger, regular bond offerings. Additionally, there appears to
be evidence that the current method of using a syndicate to premarket
bond offerings increases the yield premium on new bonds about 10 basis
points higher than it should be.