Banks deter corporate credit

For now, concern focused on profit more than liquidity

NEW YORK -- The biggest U.S. banks have been quietly discouraging some of America's safest borrowers from tapping existing credit lines amid record corporate drawdowns on lending facilities, according to people familiar with the behind-the-scenes conversations.

For Wall Street, it's not an issue of liquidity so much as profitability. Investment-grade revolving debts -- especially those financed in the heyday of the bull market -- are a low-margin business, and some even lose money. The justification is that they help cement relationships with clients who will in turn stick with the lenders for more expensive capital-markets or advisory needs.

That's fine under normal circumstances when the facilities are used sporadically. But with so many companies suddenly seeking cash anywhere they can get it, they're now threatening to make a dent in banks' bottom lines.

So far, it seems some corporations are willing to oblige, turning instead to new, pricier term loans or revolving credit lines rather than tapping existing ones. McDonald's Corp. last week raised and drew a $1 billion short-term facility at a higher cost than an existing untapped revolving debt. The rationales will vary from borrower to borrower, but market watchers agree that for most, staying in the good graces of lenders amid a looming recession is important.

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"The banker is coming at it trying to manage two things -- the relationship profitability and their portfolio of risks and assets," said Howard Mason, head of financials research at Renaissance Macro Research. "Bankers have some cards to play because they can talk to their clients that have undrawn credit lines. The sense is that there's a relationship involved, so relationship pricing and goodwill applies."

That's not to say that liquidity doesn't factor into the equation for banks at all. While there's little concern that they won't be able to meet all the funding needs of their corporate clients, there's also little appetite to push the envelope.

U.S. financial institutions have sold almost $50 billion of bonds over the past two weeks to bolster their coffers, and corporate bankers are advising companies not to hoard cash unless they urgently need it. Some are even telling certain clients to hold off on seeking new financing to avoid overstressing a system already stretched to its limits operationally as bankers are inundated with requests while stuck at home because of the coronavirus pandemic.

"The banks are open, but if everybody asks at the same time, then it's going to be difficult from a balance-sheet perspective," Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Arnold Kakuda said.

Still, the significant capital requirements needed to fund tapped facilities and the strain that mass drawdowns put on profitability as bank funding costs rise and the macro backdrop worsens remain the main driver, said the people familiar with the matter.

"The corporate banker doesn't want everybody to take a hot shower at the same time in the house," said Marc Zenner, a former co-head of corporate finance advisory at JPMorgan Chase & Co. "They want to use their capital where it's most beneficial."

Wall Street mainstays including JPMorgan, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. are among the biggest players in the market for investment-grade company loans.

Representatives of all four banks declined to comment.

McDonald's signed a new revolving debt and immediately tapped the full $1 billion as a "precautionary measure" to reinforce its cash position, the company said in a regulatory disclosure Thursday. It also priced $3.5 billion of bonds last week as part of its broader liquidity management strategy.

A representative for McDonald's referred Bloomberg to the company's recent filings while declining to comment further.

Corporations have other reasons for turning to new, more expensive facilities rather than tapping undrawn revolving debts as well. In addition to the benefit of maintaining extra liquidity via the unused credit lines, it also signals to suppliers and investors that they continue to have access to bank financing.

But not every company sees it that way given the current global economic uncertainty.

Many investment-grade borrowers, even ones not directly affected by the covid-19 outbreak, want as much cash on hand as possible in case credit conditions worsen.

Strains in the market for commercial paper, a type of short-term financing that companies use to make payroll or purchase inventory, are prompting corporations to tap both new and backup credit lines.

Companies in the U.S. have drawn $162 billion from revolving facilities and received $26.1 billion in new revolving debts and term loans since March 9, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. General Motors Co. drew down a record $16 billion from its revolving debts.

Business on 03/31/2020

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