Back in the headlines, BABs cheapen, offer opportunity despite call risk
3 min readSpreads on Build America Bonds have widened “significantly” in the last few months amid a wave of refinancings despite a debate over the legal ability of issuers to call the debt, according to municipal bond strategists.
So far this year, the BABs index option-adjust spread has cheapened 10bps compared to the ICE Broad Taxable Municipal Bond Index OAS, BofA strategists noted in a Friday report.
“There is no particular reason other than the much-debated ERP refunding,” BofA said. So far this year, issuers have brought $4 billion of BABs to market for a refunding, BofA said. The pace quickened in April, with $2.4 billion brought to market in just the first two weeks of the month, the bank said.
The strategists noted that the BABS index includes par value of $97.6 billion compared to the TXMB’s $374 billion of par value. “The overall impact on the BABs index is a larger index price decline than for TXMB,” the report said.
After years of little refunding activity on the pricey and popular paper, the market has started to show sizable savings for issuers who replace BABs with tax-exempt debt. The
The refinancings have sparked controversy among investors, who have challenged the transactions, arguing that sequestration does not qualify as an extraordinary event, and
BABs with ERP calls make up about 13% of the taxable municipal market, according to Appleton Partners Inc.
Even “if nothing comes out of this legal challenge, and the trend of calling BABs will continue unabated, we still find various types of direct-pay bonds that are worth buying even now, as their risk of being called is low, in our view,” said Barclays strategists in an April 12 note.
The majority of BABs have ERPS that are “struck at T+100bps,” noted Barclays. Spread calls of all bonds that are trading wider than that “are out of the money, and these bonds are worth buying if investors are not concerned about their credit quality.”
In addition, all low-coupon BABs that are trading below par are attractive, as their holders will only benefit if the bonds are called, strategists said. “However, investors should be aware that if rates rally, and the price of the bonds jumps over par, the risk of it being called below the market price will increase, and its spreads might widen as a result.”
Barclays named as an example of value BABs issued by MEAG Power for its Vogtle nuclear plant, that are trading wider than T+100bp, noting that the Vogtle 3 project has already started operating, while the Vogtle 4 should be finished early next year.
The Bloomberg BABs Index has seen spreads widen to over 100bps from inside 90bps in February, James G. Faunce of Penn Mutual Asset Management noted in a Thursday
Western Asset in an April 9
Partly that is because the attractive tax-exempt relative valuations are restricted mostly to the AAA group, the firm said, and issuance costs could dampen the positive benefits. “Last, we believe issuers could question whether the sequestration of BABs subsidies qualify as an ERP event, and may ultimately determine that costs associated with legal challenges could outweigh positive economics associated with the refinancing.”