podcasts Ratings /ratings/en/research-insights/podcasts/06162023-the-upgrade-podcast content esgSubNav
In This List

The Upgrade Episode 28: Material Shifts In Key Credit Stats Drove Downgrades To 'B-' And 'CCC'

COMMENTS

Table Of Contents: S&P Global Ratings Corporate And Infrastructure Finance Criteria

COMMENTS

CreditWeek: What Are The Risks And Opportunities Of The Data Center Boom?

COMMENTS

Instant Insights: Key Takeaways From Our Research

COMMENTS

U.S. Holiday 2024 Sales Outlook: Consumers Will Trim Trees And Spending This Season

Listen: The Upgrade Episode 28: Material Shifts In Key Credit Stats Drove Downgrades To 'B-' And 'CCC'

In this discussion, Minesh Patel, the US sector lead of Leveraged Finance at S&P Global Ratings, teams up with the Director of Leveraged Finance, Hanna Zhang, to explore the key insights presented in Hanna's latest commentary, titled "U.S. Leveraged Finance Q1 2023 Update: Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes -- Material Shifts In Key Credit Stats Drove Downgrades To 'B-' And 'CCC', And Upgrades To 'B-'."

Key takeaways from the article include:

  • Within 12 months leading to a rating action, higher debt service costs and slower profit growth were often the leading factors in downgrades to 'B-' and the 'CCC' category (CCC+/CCC/CCC-).
  • Median leverage for companies downgraded to the 'CCC' category rose to 15.5x as EBITDA all but dried up. It was 8x for entities rated 'B-'.
  • About 21% of 'B-' rated borrowers had EBITDA interest coverage of less than 1x in the 12 months ended on March 31, 2023.
  • We estimate that roughly 37% of 'B' rated issuers employ interest rate hedges. Interest rate sensitivity for 'B-' rated companies is much higher, with roughly 19% employing hedges and 90% floating-rate debt exposure
  • Speculative-grade borrowers may be returning to cash preservation, but 2022 was loaded with shareholder rewards and heavy working capital investment for companies rated 'B+' and higher.
  • Issues with recovery expectations within the 50%-70% range account for two-thirds of total new issuance in the first quarter of 2023, although average recovery expectations remain near the low end of the post-2017 average.

View related article:

 

Create a free account to unlock the article.

Gain access to exclusive research, events and more.

Already have an account?    Sign in