CLOs Attract Domestic, Foreign Banks, Pushing Up Loan Prices

Banks from Wells Fargo & Co. to smaller Japanese lenders are flocking to top-rated collateralized loan obligation deals, pushing up secondary prices for buyout debt.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo have been buying AAA rated CLO securities in bulk, three years after a market-wide pull back from such securities. The $1.3 trillion CLO market has welcomed renewed appetite from other buyers, such as Japanese firms JA Bank Osaka and Rakuten Bank, which are both deploying capital into CLO deals.

“The CLO AAA market is unique because it’s the only large floating-rate asset class rated AAA,” said Brian Pilko, the head of portfolio management and research at AGL Credit Management. “So if you’re a bank and looking to deploy billions of dollars in AAA, this is the best option.”

Demand for CLOs is helping to keep issuance of the securities high, close to last year’s record pace, even if there are few new leveraged loans to bundle into the bonds. Many of the loans for the bonds are coming from the secondary market, helping to keep prices on the debt relatively high. Investors snatching up the CLOs are betting that the floating-rate debt will pay relatively high yields as rates stay elevated.

For CLO managers, the steady stream of buyers interested in the top tranches helps guarantee they can put a deal together, given AAA pools make up about 60% of a deal.