High Yield Debt. Bagaria Rajay
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Rajay Bagaria
High Yield Debt
This edition first published 2016
© 2016 Rajay Bagaria
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Bagaria, Rajay, 1977– author.
Title: High yield debt: an insider's guide to the marketplace / Rajay
Bagaria.
Description: Hoboken: Wiley, 2016. | Includes index.
Identifiers: 9781119134411 (hardback)
Subjects: LCSH: Junk bonds. | Capital market. | Business cycles. | BISAC:
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Banks & Banking.
Classification: LCC HG4651 .B294 2016 (print)
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015042482
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978-1-119-13441-1 (hbk) ISBN 978-1-119-13443-5 (ebk)
ISBN 978-1-119-13442-8 (ebk) ISBN 978-1-119-23695-5 (ebk)
Cover Design: Wiley
Cover Images: Egg Image: © Excentro/Shutterstock
Unicycler Image: © ra2studio/Shutterstock
Preface
Today's U.S. corporate high yield market is worth over $2.5 trillion. That's more than the stock market capitalization of most countries including Germany, France, and Canada. Over 350 funds provide exposure to U.S. high yield including mutual funds, ETFs, and closed-end funds. In addition, a growing number of alternative funds such as distressed debt, mezzanine finance, and credit hedge funds also generate returns from high yield debt. High yield debt has never before been so accessible to both institutional and individual investors around the globe.
The attraction to high yield stems from its high risk-adjusted returns over time. High yield can be broken down into two market segments: high yield bonds and leveraged loans. Over the past 20 years, high yield bonds have produced high single-digit total returns comparable to the S&P 500 with less than half the annualized volatility.1 Leveraged loans have posted mid-single-digit returns with lower volatility than bonds and only one negative total return year in two decades.2 This performance is why pension funds, endowments, insurance companies, institutions, and retirees increasingly buy high yield as a source of current income and complement to dividend paying stocks.
Yet, despite its size and significance, high yield is an often misunderstood asset class. It's a market that is primarily traded over-the-counter and lacks transparency. It has also grown in complexity since its early “junk bond” days. What market professionals come to learn is that not all high yield exposure is the same: specific market segments and fund types can produce meaningfully different results over the same time period. Developing a more informed view of the market is what can lead to a performance advantage.
Working at leading investment firms has provided me with a front row seat to the latest developments in the high yield market during its most transformative period of growth. My first job out of college was in the investment banking program at J.P. Morgan & Co. I joined their high yield group at a time when the firm was pioneering the use of credit default swaps, a trillion dollar industry today. I later joined Goldman Sachs & Co., where I worked on a multi-billion dollar mezzanine fund that was a pioneer in making large-sized privately structured high yield debt investments. Following Goldman Sachs, I spent eight years at Apollo Investment Management where I was a Partner and Investment Committee member responsible for investments in all types of high yield debt through a business development company. More recently, I established a credit hedge fund with the backing of a prominent family office. This fund is engaged in both long and short investment strategies related to high yield bonds and loans and is a top performing high yield fund at the time of writing.3
In my career, which spans nearly two decades and two recessions, I have been fortunate to learn from some of the smartest people in the business. I have worked with teams to invest billions of dollars in high yield issuers. I've seen periods of economic growth and decline, high and low volatility, and have restructured companies that failed to perform. This experience has afforded me with numerous insights on the high yield market which I share in this book.
The decision to write High Yield Debt: An Insider's Guide to the Marketplace was made almost two years ago. While fundraising, I met with many individuals responsible for high yield investments who had surprisingly little understanding of the market. Rather than go through my pitch, I would take these groups through a primer I developed, addressing everything from the high yield market's evolution to tracking the health of issuers and value in spreads. Seeing the knowledge gaps even at the Chief Investment Officer level made me realize that there is a broad-based need for better information on the high yield market. Put another way, if the people managing large investment funds have difficulty understanding high yield,
2
Ibid.
3
eVestment. Performance data (net of fees and expenses) from May 2013 to June 2015 represents a sample of 181 funds that reported their performance and fund information to eVestment as of September 14, 2015. WDO ranked #1 since its inception based on this data.