HALISTER1: EUR Spread Tightening to Continue, Awaiting QE Details: Analysts

EUR Spread Tightening to Continue, Awaiting QE Details: Analysts

(Bloomberg) -- Spreads of EUR-denominated credit pared their tightening this week amid uncertainty about the details of the ECB’s program to buy IG non-financial corporate bonds and its likely size, analysts say.
  • Analysts from Goldman Sachs to RBC see potential for spreads to continue to grind tighter although HSBC warns price action around the ECB’s covered bond and ABS buying programs suggests they may widen again in a couple of months
  • NOTE: More companies may issue bonds, following AB InBev’s lead, as ECB prepares to add corporate bond purchases, according to Bloomberg strategist Simon Ballard
  • Goldman Sachs (Lotfi Karoui, Spencer Rogers)
    • The ECB has yet to provide details regarding the size and country allocation of the program
  • Expect a quarter of the additional EU20b of monthly QE purchases will be allocated to corporate bonds, and purchases to reflect the capital key
    • The country eligible pool sizes differ significantly depending on whether the issuer or the parent company’s domicile is used, with the Netherlands’s pool almost 3 times the size if the former applies
    • Rally in EUR credit has room to run across the board
  • BofAML (Barnaby Martin, Ioannis Angelakis and Souheir Asba)
    • The biggest credits the ECB will likely have to focus on are EDF, Total, BMW, Engie, Enel, ENI, Shell and Orange
      • That said, price action since the announcement shows that a name being heavily represented within the ECB’s eligible universe doesn’t guarantee it will be the best performer
    • Estimate purchases will be between EU3b-EU5b per month with ~EU2b of secondary buying; much depends on whether ECB action will convince firms to sell bonds, given risk to ratings and recent trend to deleverage
    • One dilemma is how ECB will manage early tenders; if it chose to refrain from buying short-dated bonds to mitigate the risk, the universe of eligible bonds would drop to EU361b vs EU554b
  • HSBC (Analysts led by Jamie Stuttard)
    • Expect more details from the ECB in around four weeks’ time
    • Possible eligibility restrictions could include a ruling out of hybrids and subordinated bonds, a focus on quality to cut risk of owning fallen angels, a precise definition of IG ratings -- 62% of all non-financial EUR IG bonds with euro-zone country of risk have at least one BBB rating -- as well as issuer and maturity limits
    • Further details may include how the ECB will treat fallen angels, the primary, secondary market split of purchases and minimum issue size
    • There’s no guarantee eligible bonds will outperform rest of market
    • Corporate spreads may widen in a few months’ time, should the quantity of the program disappoint or if it encourages issuance
  • RBC
    • Calculate EU610b of corporate bonds are realistically purchasable and expect ECB to buy ~EU5b per month
      • Includes issues with more than EU250m outstanding and assumes no maturity bracket
    • North Europe corporates to benefit the most with France attracting more than its GDP share on high outstanding volume
    • Recommend spread tighteners as the ECB buying a significant chunk of the market should lead to a further grind tighter
  • ABN Amro (Hyung-ja de Zeeuw)
    • The size of the assets eligible for CSPP could range between EU300b to EU530b depending on whether the ECB excludes financial corporations other than credit institutions included in the IG9 classification
      • If floating rate notes, bonds with a less than 1 year maturity and/or less than EU500m outstanding were eligible that could add EU220b of assets
    • Could buy up to 14% of the total pool of outstanding bonds, although risk is to the downside
    • The ECB could buy up to EU10b per month if it is allowed to hold up to 70% of an issue in the primary market; estimate will buy ~EU6b of iBoxx non-financials in the primary and secondary market combined, although again the risk is clearly to the downside
    • Spreads could tighten another 10bps-15bps before June
  • Commerzbank (Marco Stoeckle, Bernhard Gruenaeugl)
    • Credit markets are only starting to price in CSPP; how much further they can tighten depends on the scheme’s final structure
    • Market response capped; may reflect uncertainty about what further restrictions the ECB may impose on the scheme
    • Could impose restrictions on more sectors, based on residency and incorporation as well as ISIN, tenor and rating limits
    • May also need to take steps to mitigate impact on market liquidity such as repo facilities
    • ECB would struggle to establish a monthly run rate above EU3b-EU5b, given expected eligible issuance in 2016 is only only ~EU83b; would still be enough to push spreads tighter
    • The right time to buy corporate hybrids and HY, at the cost of seniors, is before the ECB starts purchases
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
2539Z GR (European Central Bank)

People
Barnaby Martin (Merrill Lynch International)
Bernhard Gruenaeugl (Commerzbank AG)
Hyung-Ja De Zeeuw (ABN AMRO Group NV)
Ioannis Angelakis (Merrill Lynch International)
Jamie Stuttard (HSBC Bank PLC)

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HALISTER1: Odebrecht Used Commerzbank, Julius Baer to Launder Money: Welt

Odebrecht Used Commerzbank, Julius Baer to Launder Money: Welt

(Bloomberg) -- Marcelo Odebrecht used accounts at Commerzbank and Julius Baer to mask Petrobras transactions, Welt am Sonntag reports, citing verdict against Odebrecht it obtained.
  • Commerzbank account in Vienna belonged to Belize-based shell co. Arcadex
  • Money flowed from another account in Lugano, Switzerland, via Vienna to account with Julius Baer in Monaco belonging to shell co. Milzart
  • Unclear how much money flowed via Commerzbank account
  • In 2009 alone $2m flowed from Lugano to Vienna
  • Julius Baer and Commerzbank declined to comment, Welt says
  • Spokespeople for Commerzbank, Julius Baer didn’t immediately return calls from Bloomberg outside of business hours
  • NOTE: March 8: Odebrecht was sentenced to 19 yrs and four months in jail for crimes including corruption and money laundering
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
BAER VX (Julius Baer Group Ltd)
CBK GR (Commerzbank AG)
PETR4 BZ (Petroleo Brasileiro SA)

People
Marcelo Odebrecht (Odebrecht SA)

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HALISTER1: China Targets Floating Yuan Rates Under Management: PBOC’s Zhou

China Targets Floating Yuan Rates Under Management: PBOC’s Zhou

(Bloomberg) -- Yuan can’t be described as “completely free floating” as a target of foreign exchange reform, People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said at the China Development Forum in Beijing.
  • China will monitor foreign exchange related to money laundering and terrorist financing
  • Macro prudential regulations needed to guard against excessive leverage in foreign currencies and maturity mismatches: Zhou
  • Given speed of increase in capital inflows in the past, now only natural that outflows should have a high speed as well: Zhou
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

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PBCZ CH (People's Bank Of China)

People
Zhou Xiaochuan (People's Bank Of China)

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HALISTER: Axa CEO Seen as Favorite to Become HSBC Chairman: Sunday Times

Axa CEO Seen as Favorite to Become HSBC Chairman: Sunday Times

(Bloomberg) -- Henri de Castries is the front-runner to succeed Douglas Flint as chairman of HSBC, The Sunday Times reported, without saying where it got the information.
  • de Castries joined HSBC’s board last month and is expected to take over once Axa has succession plan
  • HSBC board member Paul Walsh is another contender for the role
  • NOTE: HSBC Plans to Name Successor to Chairman Flint Next Year
Alert: HALISTER
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
HSBA LN (HSBC Holdings PLC)
CS FP (AXA SA)

People
Douglas Flint (HSBC Holdings PLC)
Henri Castries (AXA SA)
Paul Walsh (Uk Dept Energy & Climate Chg)

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HALISTER: Fedex Illegal Drug Shipment Case Sharply Narrowed by U.S. Judge

Fedex Illegal Drug Shipment Case Sharply Narrowed by U.S. Judge

(Bloomberg) -- A federal judge in California tossed out many of the criminal charges against FedEx Corp. and its units in a case accusing it of knowingly shipping illegal prescription drugs.
  • U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer said prosecutors waited too long to bring the case against FedEx and two units
  • Prosecutors thought they had an agreement with FedEx providing for additional time to bring the case, but the judge said the agreement wasn’t entirely valid
  • FedEx and individuals who ran illicit pharmacies “knowingly and intentionally” schemed to launder more than $630,000 in shipping payments that were derived from drug sales, according to prosecutors.
  • FedEx and its alleged co-conspirators faced a fine of twice the gains from the illegal conduct, alleged to be at least $820 million
  • Some charges remain pending even after the March 18 ruling
  • The case is U.S. v. FedEx Corp., 14-cr-00380, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco)
Alert: HALISTER
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
FDX US (FedEx Corp)
1070L US (United States District Court for the Northern District of New York)

People
Charles Breyer ((US)Dist Court:CA-Northern)

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HALISTER: BARRON’S ROUNDUP: Bullish on FedEx, Illumina; Bearish on Twitter

BARRON’S ROUNDUP: Bullish on FedEx, Illumina; Bearish on Twitter

(Bloomberg) -- FedEx (FDX), which jumped 12% on Thursday after the company raised its full-year earnings forecast, has an additional 15%-20% upside for the rest of 2016, Barron’s said in the March 21 issue.
  • CEO Fred Smith dismisses competitive threat from Amazon (AMZN) as competitor to FDX and United Parcel (UPS); risk had been overhang for shares. “Amazon delivers, but it isn’t a transportation company,” Smith said in an interview with Barron’s. “Neither is my florist.”
  • Barron’s noted that Germany’s DHL Express gave up on the U.S. delivery market in 2009 after running up massive losses from trying to compete with FedEx and UPS.
Other highlights from this week’s Barron’s (subscription required):
  • Illumina (ILMN), the dominant player in the gene-sequencing market, could rise 50% due to a growing market for its machines, Barron’s said. The shares have slumped to about $150 since last July, from $242.37, as part of a wider collapse in health-care and biotech stocks. Illumina dropped 6.9% on March 8 following news that CEO Jay Flatley would step down in July to become executive chairman.
  • Twitter (TWTR) continues to lag, and its prospects aren’t getting better, Barron’s said. The service known for 140- character real-time messaging has dropped 27% this year and is down 65% over the previous 12 months. The big problem is that despite its popularity in the world of social media, advertisers prefer Facebook (FB) by a large margin, Barron’s said.
  • Smurfit Kappa (SKG ID) is worth 40% more than its current value, Barron’s said. The maker of paper packaging trails rivals despite rising earnings. Shifting its primary listing from Ireland to the London Stock Exchange next month should draw more investor attention and improve its prospects.
  • Guggenheim Total Return Bond Fund (GIBAX) has gained 3.1% annually since its launch in November 2011, Barron’s reports, outperforming 98% of intermediate-term bond funds tracked by Morningstar.
  • Tyson Foods (TSN) is up 66% since May, and the company has more growth in store, Barron’s said. Yet the stock valuation may be getting ahead of itself, the magazine said. Tyson now carries a price-earnings ratio of almost 19.
Alert: HALISTER
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
FDX US (FedEx Corp)

People
Fred Smith (Fred Smith Co)
Frederick Smith (FedEx Corp)
Jay Flatley (Illumina Inc)

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