HomeNewsOpinionResistance is futile for European borrowers as yields soar

Resistance is futile for European borrowers as yields soar

Companies are accepting the reality that borrowing costs are likely to stay high for the foreseeable future

October 05, 2023 / 11:26 IST
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Higher borrowing costs may be biting the wider euro-zone economy, but at least its capital markets are functioning smoothly with corporates accepting the new environment of much higher yields and investors playing along.

With European bond yields at their highest level in a decade, you might expect corporate debt issuance would be slow to non-existent. Instead, new bond sales by companies actually exceeded those from financial and government-related borrowers in September for the first time this year. It suggests that corporate treasurers are accepting that higher interest rates are here to stay, and that there’s nothing to be gained from a delay in coming to market.

Nearly €43 billion ($45 billion) of new corporate bonds were minted last month, by 50 different issuers across 76 tranches. Consumer-related companies including Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc, Carlsberg Breweries AS, E.ON SE and BMW Finance NV were the most active, contributing more than half of the new deals.

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This year has been the most active for new issues in a decade, setting aside 2020 and 2021 when borrowers of all flavors took advantage of a pandemic-driven surge in demand for fixed income. The most comparable year is probably 2019, and this year's total issuance exceeds that by 15 percent with more than €1.28 trillion of supply so far. However, the standout sector has been corporate issuance of €250 billion — nearly 50 percent ahead of 2022's pace. That’s especially impressive as governments globally are ramping up their own borrowing needs.