US HIGH YIELD-Big bankruptcies down, recoveries up
By Dena Aubin
NEW YORK, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Big corporate bankruptcies fell to their lowest level in more than a decade in 2006, yet the golden era of scant default risk may be nearing a peak.
Last year, just 14 companies with assets of more than $100 million (in 1980 dollars) filed for bankruptcy protection, down from 25 in 2005 and the fewest since 1994 when there were 11, according to UCLA law professor Lynn LoPucki's Bankruptcy Research Database.
But some analysts think that's as good as it will get.
"What a lot of people feel is that bull markets don't go on forever, there are always cycles in the economy and that eventually there will be big defaults," said Matthew Dundon, head of research for Miller Tabak Roberts Securities in New York. "But the market's not voting that it will be any time soon."
Indeed, tight credit spreads, gains in the riskiest bonds and the hottest lending market in years all point to a sanguine attitude about default risk.
In another sign of optimism, the proportion of bonds that are distressed, or yield at least 10 percentage points more than Treasuries, is the lowest in the 16 years that Merrill Lynch has been tracking them.
"What is remarkable is how so many formerly distressed issues have just been snapped up by the market," said Christopher Garman, high-yield strategist for Merrill Lynch. "It's very indicative of really robust demand for yield and quite frankly not enough supply of new high-yield bonds."
Some strategists worry, however, that today's benign conditions are the calm before the storm. A key concern is debt being piled on healthy companies by a flood of leveraged buyouts. Continued...








