Complacent investors loose risk appetite after sub prime collapse: Standard & Poor''s
27 Aug 2007
As problems in the housing and sub prime markets spread, investor risk appetite has shrunk. In the US credit markets; investors are shunning deals with innovation and added risk.
To counteract growing investor reluctance during the first half of August, central banks around the world pumped liquidity into the financial markets.
"For at least two years, Standard & Poor''s Ratings Services has argued that investors were too complacent about risk," says David Wyss, managing director and chief economist at Standard & Poor''s. "Now, they are over-reacting in the opposite direction. How much and how far they''ll over-react remains to be seen. History suggests that the credit markets will normalise fairly quickly, but that could still be months away."
Fixed-income
investors have turned to the havens of government securities
and cash and cash equivalents--such as bank deposits,
CDs, and plain-vanilla commercial paper--to avoid the
current uncertainty. "Liquidity will re-emerge when
the repricing of risk actually reaches a new level,"
commented Jean-Michel Six, Standard & Poor''s chief
economist for Europe.
The
securitised mortgage market has experienced the greatest
investor pullback, but risk aversion has extended well
beyond that. "Up until a couple of months ago, companies
were able to refinance with unfettered access to the capital
markets," noted Diana Vazza, managing director and
head of global fixed income research at Standard &
Poor''s.
"Now, all that has changed. Issuance in the US has
fallen off a cliff."
Although both high-quality and high-yield offerings have felt the chill in the markets, speculative-grade issuance that Standard & Poor''s rates have nearly frozen. Investment-grade offerings, while also lower, have fared comparatively better. "The market will still consider more conventional, soundly structured deals at higher rates," said Vazza.
The
rating agency''s paper, Investors Are Finally Remembering
What ''Risk'' Means, examines various aspects of the current
liquidity squeeze.