November 2024, From the Field -
Securitized credit markets participated in the broad third‑quarter (Q3) fixed income rally that was fueled by positive inflation trends and signs of a softening labor market. These developments convinced investors that the Federal Reserve will be able to cut interest rates more deeply than previously thought. The Fed easing policy while the U.S. economy is still in a relatively healthy state was beneficial for U.S. government bonds, driving yields lower, as well as risk assets, as a proactive Fed reduced concerns that tight monetary policy will tip the economy into recession. Although securitized assets delivered positive excess returns1 over the quarter at the index level, they underperformed investment‑grade corporate bonds after outperforming in the previous quarter.
The Fed, which had held its policy rate in a 5.25% to 5.5% range for more than a year, cut rates by an unusually large 50 basis points at its mid‑September meeting. In their updated summary of economic projections, policymakers forecast more rate cuts by the end of next year than they did in June as their focus shifted from combating high inflation to maintaining a strong labor market. At his press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell justified the rate cut by saying that the objective is to restore price stability “without the kind of painful increase in unemployment that has come sometimes with disinflation,” indicating that the central bank is keenly aiming to engineer a soft economic landing.
However, following quarter‑end, upside surprises in U.S. economic data caused the market to price out some of these rate cuts. Treasury yields rebounded following a steep decline since late April, and interest rate volatility spiked to new year‑to‑date highs.
Commercial mortgage‑backed securities (CMBS) delivered some of the strongest returns among our sectors in Q3. The non‑agency segment of the CMBS market generated total returns of 4.55% and excess returns (versus similar‑duration2 Treasuries) of 0.51% at the index level.3 However, performance for individual bonds varied widely due to high idiosyncratic risks for individual properties.
Asset‑backed securities (ABS) produced positive, but less robust, total returns of 3.35%, due in part to their lower‑duration profile in a falling rate environment.4 The sector broadly generated excess returns of 0.15% for the quarter. However, lower‑rated tranches and out‑of‑benchmark segments—such as bonds backed by data centers, commercial equipment, and whole‑business cash flows—recorded stronger results.
Similarly, collateralized loan obligations (CLOs)5 generated positive, but lower, returns due to having low sensitivity to movements in interest rates given their floating rate coupons (instead, returns for the CLO sector are driven more by spread duration, or sensitivity to movements in credit spreads).6 The broad sector returned 1.84%, which translates to excess returns of about 0.45%.7 Like the ABS market, lower‑rated CLOs were the best performers, reflecting strong risk appetite and fading near‑term recession concerns.
In the diverse non‑agency residential mortgage‑backed securitized sector, where there is not a comprehensive market benchmark, jumbo mortgage loan bonds, which are longer‑duration securities, produced strong results. Single‑family rental (SFR) bonds and re‑performing loans also performed well. Credit‑risk transfer securities (CRTs),8 which had performed strongly over the past year, delivered less impressive results given that valuations were already quite expensive.
The four major securitized credit sectors have experienced heavy issuance year‑to‑date that has already exceeded the totals for full‑year 2023 (Figure 1). Issuance has been on a record‑setting pace in the ABS market, totaling USD 262 billion in early October compared with USD 256 billion last year.9 But demand remains just as strong as the supply glut has helped keep spreads in the high‑quality sector at relatively attractive levels.
Issuance of non‑agency RMBS, at USD 114 billion, is already 44% higher than the total for all of 2023. We anticipate that supply will remain relentless due to refinancings of earlier deals and new production in the pipeline, which could accelerate if mortgage rates resume falling. Demand for new issuance has been choppier than in the ABS market. However, insurers have shown voracious demand for the sector due to attractive yields, particularly focusing on the nonqualified mortgage subsector.
Benefiting from broadly improved sentiment amid hopes for rate relief, CMBS issuance has been robust year‑to‑date, reaching USD 152 billion. That puts the sector well on its way to exceed the amount for last year, which was the lowest since 2016, but well short of the record high of USD 351 billion in 2021 when rates were lower and the floodgates were wide open. Single‑asset/single‑borrower issuance has increased the most by far, but sponsors have also brought more conduit deals to market this year in response to the improved demand environment. While deals backed by lower‑quality properties have continued to struggle to find buyers, demand for issues backed by strong collateral has been ample.
CLO issuance, including refinancings and resets of previous deals, has been enormous at USD 344 billion around quarter‑end. But demand has been resilient. Domestic banks have started buying again, and Japanese institutions remain active participants. Exchange‑traded funds that focus on CLOs, which have grown in number, continued to receive an influx of cash. The Fed’s rate‑cutting regime could eventually reduce demand from some yield‑focused investors. But a moderate cutting cycle and sustained U.S. economic expansion—our economics team’s base case—are unlikely to cause a mass exodus from the sector. And, despite spreads being narrow, we believe that spreads for AAA rated tranches could tighten further into year‑end.
The fundamental trend for securitized credit sectors isn’t on an improving path, but it’s also not overly concerning. In the ABS market, we expect continued—but manageable—delinquencies and losses in consumer segments like auto loans and credit cards. A normalization in credit fundamentals following massive pandemic‑related stimulus measures that bolstered consumer balance sheets has arrived. While this is impacting all borrowers, pressures are most acute for lower‑income borrowers. Credit card balances are elevated, but, positively, repayment rates remain higher than they were in the pre‑COVID period. Yet market pricing doesn’t reflect any deterioration in fundamentals, which is apparent in the flatness of the credit curve (i.e., spreads on lower‑quality issues are tight relative to higher quality). Spending at restaurants also bears monitoring, especially for weaker and less established whole‑business securitization issuers, as stretched consumers rein in spending.
In the CMBS market, delinquencies, transfers of loans to special servicing, and negative headlines are most glaring in the office segment (Figure 2). Fundamentals there remain highly bifurcated. Bonds backed by high‑quality, in‑demand properties have seen strong demand. On the other hand, there is limited appetite for bonds backed by older buildings that have seen tenants depart for newer structures offering more amenities or simply have less need for office space due to a shift to remote working. Cash flows in the lodging segment, which benefited from a surge in post‑pandemic travel, have also been declining more recently, which bears watching. Cash flows remain stable in the industrial and multifamily areas of the market.
For CLOs, the structure of deals matters, and we are focused on the higher‑quality areas of the market. The percentage of defaults and distressed exchanges in the bank loan market reached a 43‑month high of 3.7% in September according to J.P. Morgan. There has been moderate improvement in credit rating downgrade activity, but the lowest‑quality CCC rated area remains a concern. However, the Fed lowering rates should help ease the pressures caused by high borrowing costs. The lower‑rated tranches of the CLO market (BBs) are most impacted by loan defaults, downgrades, and haircuts stemming from liability management exercises by debt‑laden companies.
Fundamentals in the non‑agency RMBS market are largely neutral. Affordability remains a problem, but existing homeowners have built up substantial equity as housing prices continue to rise. A strong labor market and slower, but still high, wage growth enables homeowners to make loan payments on time. As such, credit performance has been holding up.
Credit spreads were relatively steady over the quarter, although they meaningfully tightened for some areas like CMBS and subprime auto loan ABS. Spreads have generally tightened further in October. CMBS continued to offer the widest spreads, followed by RMBS, but those sectors also possess higher spread duration compared with ABS, a sector that tends to be more defensive and less volatile in times of market turbulence.
Looking at specific sectors, these are our current views:
All in all, we remain constructive on the securitized credit asset class. Fundamentals remain benign. Though index‑level valuations aren’t screaming as attractive, there continue to be pockets of value versus competing credit sectors. Yields are also attractive, which should sustain demand for yield‑focused investors like insurance companies and pension funds. We continue to rely on our strong credit research and trading platforms to identify fundamentally sound, reasonably priced opportunities.
Chris Brown is the head of the Securitized Products team and a portfolio manager in the Fixed Income Division, where he co-manages the Total Return Bond, US Core Plus Bond, US Core Bond, and US Investment Grade Core Bond Strategies. Chris is the cochair of the Investment Advisory Committees for the Total Return Fund, Total Return ETF, and New Income Fund and a member of the Investment Advisory Committees for the Short Duration Income Fund, Global Multi-Sector Bond Fund, QM U.S. Bond Index Fund, QM U.S. Bond ETF, GMNA Fund, Dynamic Credit Fund, and Mortgage-Backed Securities Multi-Sector Account Portfolio. He is a member of the Core/Core Plus Portfolio Strategy team and a cochair of the Sector Strategy Advisory Group. Chris is a vice president of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
Ramon de Castro is a portfolio manager in the Fixed Income Division. He manages and is a member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the GNMA Fund and manages the Mortgage-Backed Securities Multi-Sector Account Portfolio. He also is a member of the Investment Advisory Committees of the Short-Term Bond Fund, Global Multi-Sector Bond Fund, Inflation Protected Bond Fund, Limited Duration Inflation Focused Bond Fund, New Income Fund, Total Return Fund, and the U.S. Treasury Funds, Inc. Ramon also is a sector portfolio manager responsible for the agency and non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) sleeves of various multi-sector fixed income portfolios, and he is a member of the Money Market Credit Policy Committee. Ramon is a vice president of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
Jean-Marc Breaux is a sector portfolio manager in the Fixed Income Division. He is a member of the Money Market Credit Policy Committee. He also is a member of the Investment Advisory Committees for the Short-Term Bond Fund, New Income Fund, and Total Return Fund. Jean-Marc is a vice president of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1 Excess returns measure the performance of a bond relative to a similar‑duration U.S. Treasury security.
2 Duration measures the sensitivity of a bond’s price to changes in interest rates. Bonds with longer duration have higher sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
3 Source: Bloomberg Non‑Agency CMBS Index.
4 Source: Bloomberg US Aggregate ABS Index.
5 CLOs are securitized portfolios of bank loans structured into slices, or tranches, of varying credit risk. An outside firm manages the portfolio of loans.
6 Credit spreads measure the additional yield that investors demand for holding a bond with credit risk over a similar‑maturity, high‑quality government bond. Option‑adjusted spreads are adjusted for any early repayment options that issuers may have.
7 Source: J.P. Morgan CLOIE Post‑Crisis Index.
8 CRTs are a type of RMBS issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac but with credit risk borne by private investors. They can incur losses if enough homeowners in a pool of mortgages default on their loans.
9 Source for ABS, CLO, CMBS, and RMBS issuance totals: J.P. Morgan. All totals in U.S. dollars as of September 30, 2024.
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