Bond Analysis -
Science or Numerology?
There are more methods for analyzing bonds than there are bonds,
or so it seems. Even so, some are clearly essential to evaluating
risk and potential returns. We'll look at a few here.
Part I - EVALUATING RISKS
Bond investment risk comes in a variety of forms, including
credit risk, interest rate risk, inflation (one form of asset
erosion), liquidity and maturity risks.
Credit Risk
Even the most secure bond investment has some credit risk. In
1995, U.S. Treasuries, considered the gold standard of bonds were
close to default for the first time in history. For corporates and
municipals the risks are even greater, running everywhere from the
AAA/Aaa to B and below ('junk' bonds). For any of these there's the
real and not negligible risk that the principal may not be repaid
at maturity.
Since capital preservation is one of the first fundamentals of
prudent investing, evaluating credit risk is among the foremost
tasks to be undertaken. Fortunately, many of the same tools
available to stock investors are applicable.
Look at future earnings potential, current Earnings Per Share,
dividend payments, amount of outstanding debt and foreseeable
relevant technological changes. Study current management track
records and possible legal entanglements. All these, and many more,
give an overview of a particular issuer's credit risk, beyond the
available major agency ratings, which should be studied as well, of
course.
Many of these considerations apply to municipals and other
government issuers as well. For example, consider current
management practices. Not too many years ago, Orange County
California in the U.S. - one of the most credit worthy and
financially prudent municipalities in the country before and after
the crisis - found itself in dire straits for a period because of
one official's fondness for investing tax receipts in junk
bonds.
Dividends paid leaves less money for investment in R & D and
current productivity improvements. As debt loads grow, the amount
of interest paid increases, reducing the amount for such
investments as well as bringing a company closer to default on
existing debt, since only so much can be sustained by current
revenues.
Technology
Technology and other large scale social changes eventually
obsolete any product or service in a growing economy. Companies
adapt or eventually fade as the result of new companies coming into
being to meet the new demand.
General Electric no longer makes the largest portion of its
revenue from selling light bulbs, as it did 100 years ago. In a few
years, those that do will either adapt to light diode bulbs or face
loss of revenue as tungsten filament bulbs become museum
artifacts.
Interest Rates
Interest rates change, for reasons that are complex and
difficult to predict with confidence. There are grown men who
attempt to pick apart every phrase uttered by the FOMC (Federal
Open Market Committee - the body that determines Fed Funds and
other rates that heavily influence U.S. interest rates in general).
Others spend considerable time using advanced statistical
techniques (which we'll examine later), to bring some science into
the mix. The bottom line, however, is that no one knows with any
high degree of certainty what rates will be in a year, five years
or longer.
A large number of bond issues have maturities with 5-30 year
periods. Any change in the prevailing interest rates affects
unmatured bonds in two ways. A rise in rates depresses the price
for those considering selling prior to maturity, since investors
can get a better rate with a new instrument. And the pressure to
sell rises, since the bondholder can himself get a higher rate with
a new instrument. The longer he holds the older one, the more
opportunity costs he incurs.
Inflation
Inflation reduces the amount of real return on any bond. Even
ignoring tax issues, an 8% bond in a 4% inflation environment is
worth half its coupon value. Historically, inflation tends to
increase more than it decreases. When it does decrease the general
economy tends to suffer, worsening returns for all investments.
Inflation expectations are often built into investment
decisions. Those who borrow even in a relatively low 3% inflation
environment, know that the money they pay back costs less when paid
back 5 or 10 years hence. If inflation rates decrease, they pay
back with more valuable money than they expected.
Liquidity and Maturity
Bond investors tend to have greater exposure to liquidity risk
than stock traders. Bonds can be harder to find buyers for, since
high-yields tend to be risky (particularly if the issuing company
has failed to meet expectations first formed at issue date), and
low-yields may have to sell at deep discounts to attract buyers in
a rising interest rate environment.
Information about the value of bonds can be harder to obtain or
analyze. Bond trading is inherently more complex than stock
trading, while at the same time bond yields and cash flow have
inherently more tools to make predictions owing to their (usually)
fixed coupon and maturity.
Maturity is one of the fundamental attributes used to measure
those cash flows, but some bonds are issued with a 'callable'
feature which permits the issuer to redeem them at face value prior
to maturity. That overthrows expectations and calculations made at
the time of purchase. That introduces a form of risk.
One way to offset some of that risk is to employ a technique
known as 'bond ladder' investing. The investor calculates the cash
flows from a set of bonds having different maturities, purchasing
ones with 1-year, 3-year, 5-year or more in order to minimize
interest rate change and other risk by offsetting it with staged
maturity dates.
In Part II, we'll look at some of the tools available to
evaluate risks and rewards quantitatively.
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