The Ranks of Corporate Zombies Are Growing: Credit Weekly

The Ranks of Corporate Zombies Are Growing: Credit Weekly

The Ranks of Corporate Zombies Are Growing: Credit Weekly

<p>The tally of “zombie companies” in the US that aren’t earning enough to cover their interest expenses stands at the highest since early 2022.</p>

The tally of “zombie companies” in the US that aren’t earning enough to cover their interest expenses stands at the highest since early 2022.

As Halloween monsters of all stripes flood neighborhoods in search of candy and parties this weekend, credit markets are seeing the resurgence of a different type of zombie.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The tally of “zombie companies” in the US that aren’t earning enough to cover their interest expenses stands at the highest since early 2022, with almost 100 gaining the designation in October. The main reason: Companies that gorged on debt at near-zero interest rates in the pandemic era have since been hurt by tariffs and higher funding costs.

The odds of getting much relief on either front aren’t improving, with the US signing trade deals that lock in some of the higher tariffs and the Federal Reserve signaling that it might not continue to cut rates at its December meeting. Zombies will have to take steps to fix their balance sheets, such as boosting earnings or arranging costly new financing, or potentially face default.

It won’t be easy. “Even if the Fed were continuing with cuts, the borrowing costs for small companies, zombie companies, are still multiples higher than historic averages,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab.  “A lot of these companies were barely scraping by at zero rates.”

Many of the companies that slid into zombie status in October were in health care and biotech. The sector has been under pressure amid soaring costs and shrinking federal subsidies. Other types of companies with exposure to tariffs were added to the list, too. And many of the companies have been on the list for some time.

Among the corporate zombies in the US were film producer Lionsgate Studios Corp.; the firm owns the rights to popular film franchises including John Wick, The Hunger Games and Twilight. Other signs of potential distress are embedded in bond prices. Tronox Holdings Plc, a chemical company, raised funds from the bond market earlier this year to refinance its revolvers; its new notes have fallen by about 9 cents on the dollar since pricing.

Some of Altice USA’s CSC Holdings 2029 bonds that debuted only last year have been quoted below 80 cents, yielding close to 20%. The company “likely requires a strategic or financial maneuver” to address a “massive maturity wall in 2027,” according to a note from Bloomberg Intelligence.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *