Moody's: Liquidity-Stress Indicator remains near its historic low in early 2018 despite mixed movements

Moody's Liquidity-Stress Indicator falls when corporate liquidity appears to improve and rises when it appears to weaken.
"Recent equity volatility is a reminder not to be complacent about risk," said John Puchalla, a Moody's Senior Vice President. "Nevertheless, corporate credit markets remain healthy, and while loan and bond issuance is lower than last year, companies are retaining good market access."
The SGL-4 default rate inched higher to 36.6% in January 2018 from 35.1% at the end of 2017, hovering above its 32.1% long-term average rate, even while remaining significantly lower than 2016's 55% rate. Defaults remain concentrated in companies where sector strains or a weak balance sheet make repairing a stressed liquidity position harder even with a growing economy, Puchalla says. Overall, Moody's forecasts that the one-year US speculative-grade default rate will fall to 2.0% in January 2019 from 3.2% in January 2018.
Meanwhile, Moody's Covenant-Stress Indicator edged up to 2.3% in January 2018 from 2.2% in December, but remains below the 5.5% long-term average, helped by the widespread prevalence of cov-lite structures and signaling that few speculative-grade issuers are at risk of violating their financial maintenance covenants.
Powered by Capital Market - Live News
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
More From This Section
Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel
First Published: Feb 21 2018 | 10:07 AM IST
