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    Corporate America faces a trillion-dollar debt reckoning

    Big American companies are living in a debt dreamland. Although cheap borrowing has fuelled the growth of corporate profits for decades, the biggest firms have been largely insulated from the effects of the Federal Reserve’s recent bout of monetary tightening. That is because many of them borrowed plentifully at low, fixed interest rates during the covid-19 pandemic. The tab must be settled eventually by refinancing debt at a much higher rate of interest. For now, though, the so-called maturity wall of debt falling due looks scalable.image: The EconomistBut not all companies are escaping the impact of the Fed’s actions. Indeed, there is trillions of dollars of floating-rate debt, with interest payments that adjust along with the market, that has suddenly become much more expensive. This pile of debt consists of leveraged loans and borrowing from private debt markets. Companies seldom hedge interest-rate risks, meaning that they now find themselves paying through the nose—the yield-to-maturity of one index of leveraged loans has leapt to almost 10% (see chart 1). Meanwhile, since American economic growth remains resilient, the Fed’s policymakers warn that interest rates will have to stay higher for longer. This will push more borrowers to breaking-point. A market that has grown vast is now asking two miserable questions. How bad will things get? And who, exactly, will lose out?Since the global financial crisis of 2007-09, companies have borrowed fast and loose. UBS, a bank, estimates the value of outstanding American leveraged loans at around $1.4trn and the assets managed by private credit lenders at more than $1.5trn. The two types of debt are more alike than they are different. Both have grown to service the private-equity buy-out boom of the past decade. Traditional leveraged loans are arranged by banks before being sold (or “syndicated”) to dozens of investors, whereas private lending involves just a handful of funds, which usually hold smaller loans to maturity, creating a less liquid and more opaque market.Increasing numbers of borrowers are now hitting the rocks. Since 2010 the average annual default rate in the leveraged-loan market has been less than 2%. According to Fitch, defaults rose to 3% in the 12 months to July, up from 1% a year earlier. The ratings agency reckons that they could shoot up to 4.5% in 2024. Restructurings and bankruptcies on this scale amount to spring cleaning rather than the deep distress felt during the financial crisis, when loan defaults exceeded 10%. But if rates stay higher for longer, as central bankers predict, the tally of troubled firms will grow. Although all companies with unhedged floating-rate debt balances are vulnerable, those loaded with debt in private-equity buy-outs at high valuations during the recent deal boom are especially at risk.image: The EconomistSlowing profit growth means that borrowers are finding it harder to afford their floating-rate debt. JPMorgan Chase, a bank, analysed 285 leveraged-loan borrowers at the end of June, before the Fed’s most recent rate rise. Firms where borrowing consisted only of leveraged loans saw their annual interest expense soar by 51% year-on-year. Their fortunes are diverging sharply from those that instead tapped high-yield bond markets for fixed-rate funds. According to the study, the interest expenses of such businesses have increased by less than 3%. Coverage ratios, which compare a firm’s profits with its interest costs, have begun an ominous decline (see chart 2).In the private debt market, where default rates tend to be higher, borrowers are confronting similar woes. According to Bank of America, interest costs now consume half of profits at firms where loans are held by the largest business-development companies, a type of investment vehicle. A big rise in distress would not only make it harder to find institutions willing to plough money into private debt funds, with investors normally attracted by the promise of smooth returns, but also spill over to the leveraged-loan market.Now that a reckoning looks imminent, attention is turning to which investors will be left holding the bag. Lenders today expect to recover less of their investment after a firm defaults than in earlier eras—and this year so-called recovery rates across junk-rated debt have been well below their long-run averages. According to Lotfi Karoui of Goldman Sachs, another bank, the rise of borrowers that rely solely on loans, rather than borrowing from bond markets too, could depress recoveries still further. This trend has concentrated the pain caused by rising interest rates. It is also likely to leave less value for leveraged-loan investors when they find themselves round a restructuring table or in a bankruptcy court, since there will be more claims secured against a firm’s assets.Other long-term trends could exacerbate the leveraged-loan market’s problems. Maintenance covenants, commitments that lenders can use as a “stick” to force a restructuring, have all but disappeared as the market has matured. In 2021 nearly 90% of new loans were “covenant-lite”. This could mean that companies take longer to reach default, and are in worse health when they get there. Excessive “add backs”, flattering adjustments to a company’s profitability measures, might also mean that leveraged borrowers are in worse shape than the market believes.The performance of private markets is also being closely scrutinised. Advocates for private debt have long argued that they are better suited to periods of higher defaults, since the co-ordination costs between a small group of lenders are lower, making the correction of vexed balance-sheets easier. If private markets do indeed fare better than leveraged loans during the forthcoming turmoil, it would bolster their attempts to attract finance in future.Problems in floating-rate debt markets are unlikely to cause a financial crisis, but the murkiness and growing size of private markets in particular mean that regulators have decided to take a closer look. In August America’s Securities and Exchange Commission announced rules to increase transparency, including demanding quarterly financial statements. The following month, the International Organisation of Securities Commissions, a global regulatory body, warned about the risks of leverage and the opacity of private debt markets. Few investors, however, think they need help predicting a coming crunch. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, finance and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter. More

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    China’s ‘Big Four’ banks rally after state wealth fund boosts stake

    Shares of Bank Of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and China Construction Bank rose in early trading.
    China’s sovereign wealth fund Central Huijin Investment expects to continue increasing holdings over the next six months.
    Central Huijin’s move is seen as a bid to renew confidence in China’s fatiguing stock market.

    Bank of China is one of the major state-owned banks in China. Pictured here is a branch in Shanghai on March 27, 2023.
    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    China’s sovereign wealth fund, Central Huijin Investment, increased its stake in four of the country’s biggest banks late Wednesday in what is seen as a move to renew confidence in its stock market.
    Bank Of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and China Construction Bank shares rose between 2.43% and 4.73% in early trading on Thursday, while the broader CSI 300 index gained 0.69%.

    Central Huijin boosted its stake in each lender by 0.01 percentage point for the first time since 2015. It said it would continue to increase holdings over the next six months, according to filings.
    “Huijin’s buying sends strong signal of the topdown view, and tends to help to shore up market confidence,” said Hao Hong, chief economist of Grow Investment Group.
    Investor confidence in China’s stock markets has been shaken by turmoil in its real estate sector as property giants such as Evergrande and Country Garden struggled to repay debt. So far this year, the CSI 300 is down nearly 5%.
    All eyes will now be on China’s third-quarter GDP data, which is due to be released next week. More

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    Chipotle plans price increases after pausing hikes this year

    Chipotle will raise menu prices again, citing inflation.
    The burrito chain had paused price hikes for more than a year after three rounds of raising menu prices in 13 months.
    Inflation has cooled, but prices for many goods and services are still rising, just at a slower rate.

    Customers order from a Chipotle restaurant at the King of Prussia Mall in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.
    Mark Makela | Reuters

    Chipotle Mexican Grill is planning to raise prices again.
    “For the first time in over a year, we will be taking a modest price increase to offset inflation,” Chipotle Chief Corporate Affairs Officer Laurie Schalow said in a statement to CNBC.

    The company did not share how much menu prices will rise as a result of the decision.
    After peaking last June, inflation has cooled. Prices for many goods and services are still rising but at a slower rate. The 12-month consumer price index rose 3.7% in August after climbing 8.3% a year earlier, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    The burrito chain started hiking its menu prices in June 2021, citing the cost of rising wages for its employees. It raised its prices again during the first three months of 2022 and then again in July of that year.
    But Chipotle paused its price hikes as some customers pulled back on restaurant spending and ingredient costs stabilized. In April, CEO Brian Niccol said the chain had demonstrated its pricing power but would hold off on raising prices any more. At that time, its prices were up roughly 10% compared to the year-ago period.
    Three months later, Niccol said Chipotle would reconsider its pricing as the company’s fourth quarter drew closer.

    Chipotle’s stock has risen 30% this year, giving it a market value of $50.1 billion. The company is expected to report its third-quarter earnings Oct. 26.
    Insider first reported that Chipotle’s prices are going up again. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Novo Nordisk, DaVita, Exxon Mobil, Amgen and more

    A box of Ozempic, a semaglutide injection drug used for treating Type 2 diabetes made by Novo Nordisk.
    George Frey | Reuters

    Check out the companies making big moves midday.
    Novo Nordisk — The Danish drugmaker stock added 6.27% after saying late Tuesday it was halting Ozempic’s kidney disease treatment trial after a committee said an analysis showed signs of success. Eli Lilly, which makes diabetes drug Mounjaro, rose 4.48%.

    DaVita, Fresenius Medical Care, Baxter International — Shares of dialysis services providers DaVita and Fresenius Medical Care sank 16.86% and 17.57%, respectively, on Novo Nordisk’s news. Baxter International, which makes products for chronic dialysis therapies, slid 12.27%.
    Exxon Mobil, Pioneer Natural Resources — Exxon Mobil shares fell 3.59% after the largest U.S. oil and gas producer agreed to buy shale rival Pioneer Natural Resources for $59.5 billion in an all-stock deal, or $253 per share. Pioneer stockholders will receive 2.3234 shares of Exxon for every Pioneer share held. The deal, Exxon’s biggest since its acquisition of Mobil, is expected to close in the first half of 2024. Shares of Pioneer rose 1.44% following the news.
    Humana — Shares slipped 1.39% after CEO Bruce Broussard said he will step down from his position in the latter half of 2024. The company named Jim Rechtin of Envision Healthcare as his successor.
    Amgen — The biopharma stock added 4.55% following an upgrade from Leerink to outperform. Analyst David Risinger cited an expanding earnings multiple and pipeline newsflow as catalysts.
    Shoals Technologies — Shares gained 5.26% after being upgraded to buy from neutral at Goldman Sachs. The investment bank cited valuation and the potential for gross margin upside.

    Ally Financial — The provider of loans to midsize businesses dropped 2.12% after CEO Jeffrey Brown announced plans to step down, effective Jan. 31, 2024.
    Walgreens Boots Alliance — The pharmacy chain added 0.98% after former Cigna executive Tim Wentworth was named CEO effective Oct. 23.
    Coherent — The stock popped 5.23% in midday trading. Coherent announced Tuesday that Japanese companies will invest $1 billion in Coherent’s silicon carbide business. On Wednesday, B. Riley upgraded shares to buy from neutral, saying Coherent’s silicon carbide business could be worth more than the Street’s current estimate.
    Plug Power — The battery company climbed 5.31% after forecasting a sharp rise in revenue to roughly $6 billion by 2027, according to a regulatory filing.
    Take-Two Interactive Software — Shares gained in midday trading but closed 0.34% lower after being upgraded by Raymond James to outperform from market perform. The firm said it sees a path to more consistent video game releases and a reasonable valuation based on Take-Two Interactive’s Grand Theft Auto 6 release soon.
    — CNBC’s Michael Bloom, Hakyung Kim, Yun Li and Lisa Han contributed reporting. More

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    Birkenstock slides more than 12% in stock market debut after opening at $41 per share

    Shares of German shoe brand Birkenstock, known for its Arizona sandals, dropped more than 12% in their market debut Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
    Shares opened at $41 after the company priced its IPO at $46 per share, near the midpoint of its expected range of $44 to $49.
    Birkenstock raised about $495 million in the offering and plans to use the proceeds to pay off loans.

    A Birkenstock banner hangs outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on October 11, 2023, as Birkenstock launches an Initial Public Offering (IPO). 
    Angela Weiss | Afp | Getty Images

    Shares of Birkenstock slid more than 12% in their debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday.
    The German shoe brand’s stock closed at $40.20 per share, down from its opening trade of $41 per share, giving it a market value of $7.55 billion. The stock’s opening price came in lower than its initial price of $46 set Tuesday, which was just shy of the midpoint of its expected range of $44 to $49 per share.

    Birkenstock sold 10.75 million ordinary shares in the offering, raising about $495 million and initially valuing the company at about $8.64 billion. Birkenstock had originally sought a valuation of up to $9.2 billion.
    The company’s market debut comes nearly 250 years after it was founded by German cobbler Johann Adam Birkenstock. It remained under family control until 2021 when private equity powerhouse L Catterton acquired a majority stake in a deal that valued the business at $4.85 billion. 
    In an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street,” Birkenstock CEO Oliver Reichert explained why the company decided to go public.
    “The best thing for the brand would be staying family owned, but within the family there were so many problems, so we go for the second best option and that’s to be public and give the brand back to the people,” said Reichert.

    Since L Catterton acquired its stake, sales have grown and Birkenstock’s valuation has nearly doubled. Between fiscal 2020 and 2022, sales jumped from 728 million euros ($771 million) to 1.24 billion euros. Over that time, the company grew direct-to-consumer sales, strategically exited certain wholesale partnerships and focused on driving sales of items with higher price points.

    It posted net income of about 187 million euros in fiscal 2022 and saw margins of about 60%. Birkenstock has room to grow those margins if it expands its direct-to-consumer sales, which have grown from 18% of sales in fiscal 2018 to 38% in fiscal 2022, it said in a securities filing.
    The offering comes as the IPO market gradually begins to defrost after more than a year of stagnation. But it has remained choppy and uncertain. Multiple recent IPO filers did well in their first couple of days of trading, but those stocks have since fallen.
    Instacart priced its long-awaited IPO at $30 per share last month. But after an initial 40% pop, it closed at $33.70 on its first day on the Nasdaq and is now trading below its opening share price. Oddity Tech, another L Catterton-backed consumer company, debuted on the public markets in July with a 35% pop and saw its stock close at $47.53 after the first day of trading. Soon after, it reached a high of $56 per share but since then, Oddity’s stock has fallen and is now trading below its initial offering price of $35.
    A similar trend has followed Johnson & Johnson spinoff Kenvue.
    The footwear and apparel sectors have been under pressure this year as consumers shift their spending from goods to services. But Birkenstock’s growth, sustained profitability and cultural relevance after its recent cameo in the “Barbie” movie have sparked interest from investors.
    “Birkenstock is a long-standing brand but it fits into the trend of embracing casual comfort in the workplace after COVID. It continues to grow even in the face of a declining global footwear market, as consumers allocate their disposable income to other interests, such as travel,” Alex Smith, global sector lead at research firm Third Bridge, said in an emailed note.
    “The current growth is being driven by a younger, new consumer base and its rising popularity among celebrities – even Barbie has been spotted wearing Arizona sandals.”
    Despite its long history, Smith noted Birkenstock still has room to grow. Its customer base is still primarily female customers because of its sizing options and manufacturing capabilities, and it could expand sales outside of the U.S. and Europe. More

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    ChargePoint shares fall after EV charging operator announces $232 million raise

    EV charging network operator ChargePoint said it’s raising $232 million via stock sales.
    The company’s shares were down in afternoon trading.
    CFO Rex Jackson said in a statement that the new funds, together with a recently secured credit line, will support the company into early 2025.

    A ChargePoint electric vehicle charging station at Walnut Creek City Hall parking lot, Walnut Creek, California, April 18, 2023.
    Smith Collection/gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images

    Shares of EV charging network operator ChargePoint Holdings closed sharply lower Wednesday after the company said it’s raising $232 million via stock sales.
    The company’s stock was down over 15% at Wednesday’s market close.

    ChargePoint said in a statement that a group of institutional investors has agreed to purchase $175 million in newly issued stock. The company also disclosed it has raised $57 million during the current fiscal quarter via its existing “at-the-market” stock offering facility, for a total of $232 million in new funds.
    CFO Rex Jackson said in a statement that the new funds, together with a recently secured credit line, will support the company into early 2025.
    “These raises and our recently announced $150M revolving credit facility are consistent with our announced capital strategy to bolster our balance sheet,” Jackson said, adding the company has no further plans to offer stock via its at-the-market facility.

    Stock chart icon

    ChargePoint shares fell after the EV charging network operator announced a new stock sale.

    ChargePoint also disclosed that it has altered the terms of a prior $300 million convertible notes deal to give the company another year to pay back the funding but straps it with higher interest payments.
    ChargePoint’s shares closed at $4.49 on Tuesday, down about 53% since the beginning of 2023. More

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    Fed officials see ‘restrictive’ policy staying in place until inflation eases, minutes show

    Jerome Powell, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, arrives to a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, March 22, 2023. 
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Federal Reserve officials at their September meeting differed on whether any additional interest rate increases would be needed, though the balance indicated that one more hike would be likely, minutes released Wednesday showed.
    While there were conflicting opinions on the need for more policy tightening, there was unanimity on one point – that rates would need to stay elevated until policymakers are convinced inflation is heading back to 2%.

    “A majority of participants judged that one more increase in the target federal funds rate at a future meeting would likely be appropriate, while some judged it likely that no further increases would be warranted,” the summary of the Sept. 19-20 policy meeting stated.
    The document noted that all members of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee agreed they could “proceed carefully” on future decisions, which would be based on incoming data rather than any preset path.
    Another point of complete agreement was the belief “that policy should remain restrictive for some time until the Committee is confident that inflation is moving down sustainably toward its objective.”
    The meeting culminated with the FOMC deciding against a rate hike.
    However, in the dot plot of individual members’ expectations, some two-thirds of the committee indicated that one more increase would be needed before the end of the year. The FOMC since March 2022 has raised its key interest rate 11 times, taking it to a targeted range of 5.25%-5.5%, the highest level in 22 years.

    Since the September meeting, the 10-year Treasury note yield has risen about a quarter percentage point, in effect pricing in the rate increase policymakers indicated then.

    Stock chart icon

    10-year Treasury yield

    At the same time, a handful of central bank officials, including Vice Chair Philip Jefferson, Governor Christopher Waller and regional Presidents Raphael Bostic of Atlanta, Lorie Logan of Dallas and Mary Daly of San Francisco, have indicated that the tightening in financial conditions may negate the need for further hikes. Of the group, Logan, Waller and Jefferson have votes this year on the FOMC.
    “In our view the Fed has belatedly converged on the lowest-common-denominator idea that the rise in yields means there is at present no need to raise rates again,” wrote Krishna Guha, head of global policy and central bank strategy at Evercore ISI. Guha added that officials want to wait before locking themselves in to a longer-term position on rates.”
    Markets waffled following the minutes release, with major sock averages slightly higher heading into the close. Traders in the fed funds futures market pared back bets on additional rate hikes — down to just 8.5% in November and 27.9% in December, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch gauge.
    Members in favor of further hikes at the meeting expressed concern about inflation. In fact, the minutes noted that “most” FOMC members see upside risks to prices, along with the potential for slower growth and higher unemployment.
    Fed economists noted that the economy has proven more resilient than expected this year, but they cited a number of risks. The autoworkers’ strike, for one, was expected to slow growth “a bit” and possibly push up inflation, but only temporarily.
    The minutes said consumers have continued to spend, though officials worried about the impact from tighter credit conditions, less fiscal stimulus and the resumption of student loan payments.
    “Many participants remarked that the finances of some households were coming under pressure amid high inflation and declining savings and that there had been an increasing reliance on credit to finance expenditures,” the minutes said.
    Inflation data points, particularly regarding future expectations, generally have been indicating progress toward the central bank’s 2% target, though there have been a few hiccups.
    The Fed received some bad inflation news Wednesday, when the Labor Department said that the producer price index, a measure of inflation at the wholesale level, rose 0.5% in September.
    Though that was a bit lower than the August reading, it was above Wall Street estimates and took the 12-month PPI rate to 2.2%, its highest since April and above the Fed’s coveted 2% annual inflation target.
    The PPI tees up Thursday’s release of the consumer price index, which is expected to show headline inflation at 3.6% in September, and core excluding food and energy at 4.1%. More

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    Goldman Sachs warns of hit to third-quarter earnings on deal to offload GreenSky

    Goldman Sachs said Wednesday that it agreed to sell its fintech lending platform GreenSky to a group of investors led by private equity firm Sixth Street.
    The deal, which includes a book of loans created by Goldman, will result in a 19 cents per share reduction to third-quarter earnings, Goldman said in the statement.
    The New York-based bank is scheduled to disclose results Tuesday.

    David Solomon, CEO of Goldman Sachs, during a Bloomberg Television at the Goldman Sachs Financial Services Conference in New York on Dec. 6, 2022.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Goldman Sachs said Wednesday that it agreed to sell its fintech lending platform GreenSky to a group of investors led by private equity firm Sixth Street.
    The deal, which includes a book of loans created by Goldman, will result in a 19 cents per share reduction to third-quarter earnings, Goldman said in the statement. The New York-based bank is scheduled to disclose results Tuesday.

    The move is the latest step CEO David Solomon has taken to retrench from his ill-fated push into retail banking. Under Solomon’s direction, Goldman acquired GreenSky last year for $1.7 billion, overruling deputies who felt the home improvement lender was a poor fit. Months later, Solomon decided to seek bids for the business amid his broader move away from consumer finance. Goldman also sold a wealth management business and was reportedly in talks to offload its Apple Card operations.
    “This transaction demonstrates our continued progress in narrowing the focus of our consumer business,” Solomon said in the release.
    The bank is now focused on its core strengths in investment banking and trading and its push to grow asset and wealth management fees, he added.
    Goldman will continue to operate GreenSky until the sale closes in the first quarter of 2024, the bank said.
    The expected hit to third-quarter earnings includes expenses tied to a write down of GreenSky intangibles, as well as marks on the loan portfolio and higher taxes, offset by the release of loan reserves tied to the transaction, Goldman said.

    It follows a $504 million second-quarter impairment on GreenSky disclosed in July.
    The Sixth Street group includes funds managed by KKR, Bayview Asset Management and CardWorks, according to the release.
    Private equity groups have played key roles in several of the banking industry’s asset divestitures since the start of the year, providing funding for the PacWest merger with Banc of California, for example.
    Read more: Goldman Sachs faces big write down on CEO David Solomon’s ill-fated GreenSky deal More