Unlock the Editor’s Digest at no cost
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favorite tales on this weekly publication.
International company debt gross sales soared to a file $8tn this 12 months, as corporations took benefit of red-hot demand from traders to speed up their borrowing plans.
Issuance of company bonds and leveraged loans climbed by greater than a 3rd from 2023 to $7.93tn, in keeping with LSEG information, as huge corporations from AbbVie to Dwelling Depot took benefit of borrowing prices falling to their lowest degree in many years relative to authorities debt.
The surge in exercise handed a earlier peak in 2021, as robust investor demand drove down prices for company debtors even earlier than the Federal Reserve and different central banks began chopping rates of interest from their multi-decade highs.
“Markets are firing on all cylinders, after which some,” mentioned John McAuley, Citigroup’s head of debt capital markets for North America.
Bankers say these low cost funding prices — at the very least relative to protected authorities bonds — initially persuaded corporations to pull forward their issuance to keep away from any market turbulence across the US election. However when spreads tightened additional within the wake of Trump’s resounding victory, some determined to lock in subsequent 12 months’s borrowing wants, too.
“Initially it was nearly ‘let’s de-risk our funding for the 12 months’,” mentioned Tammy Serbée, Morgan Stanley’s co-head of fastened revenue capital markets. “Then it was, ‘Really situations look fairly enticing, why don’t we simply pull ahead 2025 as nicely?’”
Pharma group AbbVie raised $15bn from an investment-grade bond sale in February to assist fund its acquisitions of ImmunoGen and Cerevel Therapeutics, whereas different giant issuers in 2024 included Cisco Methods, pharma group Bristol Myers Squibb, beleaguered aerospace group Boeing and retailer Dwelling Depot.
The typical US investment-grade bond unfold shrank to as little as 0.77 share factors within the aftermath of the election, the tightest hole because the late Nineties, in keeping with Ice BofA information. It has since widened solely barely. Spreads on riskier high-yield company bonds have widened extra since mid-November, but in addition stay not removed from 17-year lows.

Regardless of the slim spreads, whole borrowing prices stay elevated because of the degree of Treasury yields, with yields on investment-grade company debt at 5.4 per cent, in contrast with 2.4 per cent three years in the past, in keeping with BofA information.
These comparatively excessive yields on company debt have attracted huge inflows, with traders pouring nearly $170bn into world company bond funds in 2024, in keeping with EPFR information, probably the most on file.
Dan Mead, head of Financial institution of America’s investment-grade syndicate, mentioned it had been the financial institution’s busiest 12 months for high-grade greenback borrowing aside from 2020, when Covid stimulus sparked an issuance frenzy.
“We put out an estimate for every month about what we anticipated provide must be . . . and each month the precise provide has exceeded [them],” he added.
Even after 2024’s issuance bonanza, many bankers mentioned they anticipated a gentle stream of borrowing subsequent 12 months as corporations refinance the wave of low cost debt they secured in the course of the pandemic.
Marc Baigneres, world co-head of investment-grade finance at JPMorgan, expects “exercise will stay regular” subsequent 12 months. However he additionally highlighted the “wild card” of “the potential for extra vital, large-scale, debt-financed [mergers and acquisitions]”.
Nonetheless, some bankers cautioned that the company borrowing frenzy might sluggish if spreads widen meaningfully from present ranges.
“The market is pricing nearly no draw back danger proper now,” mentioned Maureen O’Connor, world head of Wells Fargo’s high-grade debt syndicate. “With spreads priced to perfection, you’re seeing idiosyncratic danger decide up.”