The Business Times

Pimco CIO says vaccine boosts outlook for some pandemic-hit junk bonds

Published Thu, Nov 12, 2020 · 06:44 AM

[NEW YORK] Positive data on an experimental Covid-19 vaccine has improved the outlook for high-yield credit, especially for companies slammed by the coronavirus pandemic, said Dan Ivascyn, chief investment officer (CIO) at bond giant Pacific Investment Management Co (Pimco).

Mr Ivascyn also told Reuters in an interview that prospects for a split US Congress after last week's election has dampened stimulus prospects, making it more likely Treasury yields will remain range-bound despite a recent rally.

While rising coronavirus cases should make for a "bumpy next several weeks or months, help is on the way", Mr Ivascyn said, referring to developments like Pfizer's announcement on Monday that initial trial results indicated its vaccine was more than 90 per cent effective.

"If you look through this period of uncertainty, you get to a place where we think risk assets can perform reasonably well."

Airlines, hospitality, travel and gaming are among sectors Mr Ivascyn said he finds attractive, particularly if there is progress early next year on containing the virus.

Two days after the vaccine announcement, spreads of the riskiest US corporate bonds over Treasuries on Wednesday remained near their narrowest since February.

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Mr Ivascyn noted that companies in pandemic-hit sectors have had to offer investors attractive collateral packages and covenants on bonds in order to raise new debt.

While a vaccine is good news for corporate credit, the confidence it could spark in the US economy lowers the chances of lawmakers passing a large stimulus package. And without a significant increase in new debt offered by the US Treasury, "we're a little bit more constructive on rates remaining range-bound", Mr Ivascyn said.

Mr Ivascyn expects inflation to remain subdued without a flood of new Treasury supply. Longer-dated Treasury bonds are particularly sensitive to inflation expectations and therefore likely to remain anchored in that scenario, producing a flatter yield curve.

Pfizer's announcement sent the benchmark 10-year yield to its highest since March, edging close to 1 per cent. The yield curve steepened sharply.

Vaccine progress, however, will not significantly affect Federal Reserve policy plans, said Mr Ivascyn, who expects interest rates to be held near zero for several years, accompanied by quantitative easing.

REUTERS

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