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Starting the Year Off with a Bang–a Big Bang

I left the office for 90 minutes today and was really pretty shocked to see a near 1% gain in equities–so indexes were already pretty darned high–so let’s stretch them further I guess. Oh well I don’t buy common stock any longer so it doesn’t really matter to me–but still WOW.

The good part of today is income issues also took a nice pop–why? There is a lot of money chasing around after yield-it is as simply as that–there simply is no other explanation.

I thought maybe we had seen the peak in pricing of preferreds and baby bonds–but certainly the ‘average’ prices show we are continuing to see gains.

It was interesting to see interest rates tic 4 basis points lower to 1.88%–lower rates just don’t jib with skyrocketing stock prices. Oh well–what’s new.

It will be good to get to next Monday, when we get back to normal–folks will be back from vacation and we will start to see some new income issues once again. But for now Santa just keeps on giving.

Ticker Changes for the New Year

REIT Senior Housing Property Trust has changed their name to Diversified Healthcare Trust (DHC) and as such their tickers for baby bonds will be changed. I will be updating all the various lists and security detail pages today sometime. mikeo picked this change up.

Also Zions Bancorporation (ZION) has moved their listings for their preferred stocks and baby bond from NASDAQ to the NYSE so there are preferreds and baby bond tickers that I will be updating in the next day to reflect the new exchange.

2019-A Highly Profitable Year for All–What will 2020 Bring?

I almost hate to see 2019 end–it was great for most everyone (unless you were a hedge fund)–almost everyone got to participate in one asset bubble or another.

For as long as there has been either financial TV–whether CNBC, Fox Business or previous to these FNN (Financial News Network) or the internet I would pop out of bed in the morning and check the equity futures markets to find out what has been happening in the world financial markets.

During the last 3 months (or maybe more) I seldom even check the markets until 8:30 a.m. central — the equity market opening time. I don’t remember a time when equity prices moved in only 1 direction for so long and even when prices move lower most certainly it is a prelude to a move much higher. Why even look–‘party on’‘be happy’.

Now, for sure I am happy–double digit profits even when only 60-75% invested most of the time–what’s to be unhappy about?. Now these gains are tempered by the lousy 2018 many of us had–in my case I was down only 1-2% in 2018–which is lousy, but far from as terrible as many people performed. My devotion to higher levels of cash and ownership of almost exclusively short duration term preferreds and baby bonds served me well in 2018–but it is a 2 edged sword and devotion to these securities mean generally a lower coupon, thus providing less income.

In 2019 I swerved away from my devotion to the term preferreds and short duration baby bonds (although they still form the base positions for my investing) and have ‘tinkered’ through most of the year with ownership of some higher risk perpetual preferreds. For me to hold a small position in junky Tsakos Energy Navigation 8.875% perpetual preferred (TNP-C) through most of the year is a rare occurrence. Of course I try to minimize risk–in this case the TNP-C issue has a ‘failure to redeem’ penalty which kicks in on 10/30/2020 (so there are 4 dividend payments left at 55 cents each) and I fully expect a full redemption on 10/30.

I played a lot–at least for me–with dividend captures and flips. Virtually all of them worked providing 1 or 2 month returns of 1-4%. THIS JUST ISN’T RIGHT!!! I have never been able to be correct 90% of the time—it just isn’t possible–normally.

On the other hand I have never lived through a period in my 49 years of investing where the Fed almost instantly jumps to alleviate interest rate rises, or equity price softening–this is not fake news–but these markets are pretty ‘fake’.

$1 trillion deficits are forecast as far as the eye can see–no one really cares–just sell the bonds to the primary dealers who will then dish them off to the Fed–at some point we will have a big fire with all the paper and all will be right in the world–‘party on’!

Each day that goes by, each week, each month that goes by, brings us closer to a day of reckoning. The day when a ‘China deal’ no longer means anything (since even a true China deal is forecast to only boost GDP a few 1/10’s%) to markets, the day when the Fed gets the hell out of the way and lets interest rates rise and fall on supply and demand, the day when Deutsch Bank (or someone) fesses up that after ‘rolling’ derivatives for years they are bankrupt—and on and on.

Now as I write this I don’t really see that anything is changing–economic numbers are still OK–employment is great and no doubt the Fed is still there to make ‘everything alright’. But it is coming–the reckoning. WE JUST DON’T KNOW WHEN-next month or in 5 years. For now ‘party on‘!

For 2020 my expectations are very modest–I have always tried to earn 7%–guess I am a 7% guy, but honestly for 2020 I will be happy with a 5%-6% return. I am going to scrutinize base positions more than ever. If we don’t get a setback in share prices of preferreds and baby bonds it is likely I will hold a fair amount of cash–I simply am not going to pay $27 for a 5.25% coupon (or some such silly number).

For now ‘party on’.

Heads Up–GasLog LTD 8.75% Preferred Tumbles-Updated

Update–PTrader has posted a link in the comments here that indicate that the company may call this issue before too long. I had a low ball order in on this on Tuesday but with the added info and the pop in the shares Tuesday I will not have an interest in shares.

The GasLog LTD 8.75% perpetual preferred (GLOG-A) tumbled in the last 2 days by about $1. It is now trading at $25.43 down from $26.40 2 days ago.

The issue is callable 4/7/2020 and some folks probably figured out there was ‘call risk’ and wanted out.

Shares went ex dividend on 12/30 for payment 1/2/2020 so they will be building accrued dividends which with the normal 30 day call notice minimizes the call risk cost. Whether the company would be able to call this issue is an unknown.

NOTE–this is not the partnership which is GLOP–this is the parent company.

I may pick up a small position.

Heads Up–Bancroft Fund A1 Preferred Dumped at Close Today (credit rating updated)

Closed end fund (CEF) Bancroft Fund perpetual preferred (BCV-A) took a tumble near the close today (Monday) falling 88 cents on a 966 share’dump’.

Folks need to realize when you put a market order to sell on a stock that average 1,625 shares traded each day you can get badly bruised.

This issue carries a coupon of 5.375% which is damned good for a nice investment grade issue (Moodys A1)–and with a closing price of $25.50 today (after trading as high as $26.46 last Friday) this is as good as it gets. Shares had good ex-dividend a few days 2 weeks ago.

If the drop late today stimulates more selling tomorrow I will be a buyer.

The Bancroft Fund is a fund managed by Gabelli.

NOTE–the issue is thinly traded and most charts are wrong–you should use a chart at your broker (Fido chart is correct).

Who Issues Preferreds and Baby Bonds?

Just a bit of trivia into who issues $25 preferred stocks and baby bonds.

Below is a chart that breaks down the number of issues of $25 issues outstanding.

This is really nothing new for those that have been investing in these issues for years–but maybe newer investors aren’t aware of the breakdown.

This doesn’t show them by dollars–just by individual issues outstanding. The chart shows banks are the largest issuer–and if I listed by dollar value it would show banks are by far and away the biggest issuer since the big banks–i.e. JPMorgan and Bank of America tend to sell issues with 30, 40 or 50 million shares–while REITs etc are more in the 1-10 million area.

Monday Morning Kickoff

Records continue to be set in the equity markets–even with a holiday right in the middle of the week. The S&P500 opened the week at 3226 before seeing a low of 3220, but turning higher on Friday and closing at 3240.

The 10 year treasury seems to have found a fairly “sticky” yield in the last few weeks–in the 1.85% to 1.95% area. Last week it opening at 1.91% before hitting 1.94%, but closed the week at 1.87% as it drifted lower last Friday. With the slow markets last week whether this is meaninfull at all is doubtful. I see that the yield has popped a bit this morning to be at 1.94% now.

The Fed Balance sheet popped again last week as it grew by $28 billion. This gives us total growth during December of an incredible $100 billion of Non quantitative easing (that’s what Powell says anyway).

Last week we didn’t have any new preferreds or baby bonds announced–probably will be the same this week with the holiday right in the middle of the week again.

Below you can see that pricing on shares of preferreds and baby bonds moved the tiniest amount higher for the week. Remember that ex-dividend dates occur during these period and distort the numbers a little, but with a larger sample size the distortions are minimized.

Priority Income Fund Term Preferreds on Sale

The Priority Income Fund (no publicly trading) is a closed end fund which holds collateralized loan obligations (CLOs).

There are 5 outstanding issues of term preferreds from Priority Income Fund and most of them have gone ‘on sale’ during the last month.

The issues are generally down 4-5% since highs reached in September. For instance the PRIF-C 6.625% issue is trading at $24.70 after hitting a high in the $26.20 area.

Shares went ex-dividend on 12/12 for payment on 12/31/2019–so there is no accrual in the shares.

Disclosure–I own the PRIF-D 7% issue. Additionally I’m looking to see if I want to add the PRIF-C issue now (both are small – less than full positions).

Being a CEF Priority Income Fund must maintain a 200% coverage ratio and they are currently at around 400% (at least last time I calculated it), but are assets are ‘level 3’–meaning the value is not directly observable so each investor should do their own due diligence as many may not be comfortable holding CLO related securities.

I expect Priority to issue more term preferreds in the months and years ahead as this is their method of utilizing leverage.

You can check all the outstanding issue here.

A Few Sells and a Buy

While markets are a bit quiet as we end the year we are trying to grab a few end of year gains (all in IRA accounts) and get ready for the new year.

Yesterday I let go of a full position in the Gabelli Heathcare and Wellness Trust 5.76% perpetual preferred (GRX-A). I loved the 5.76% coupon on a strongly investment grade issue (Moodys A2), but it is living on borrowed time. The issue closed at $26.01 yesterday and has been callable since 8/20/2015. GRX does have a 5.875% issue outstanding which is now callable which may ‘protect’ the 5.76% issue, but more likely they would call both. This issue was a ‘base’ position–one which is a long term hold in the portfolio so I will be looking for another base position.

Additionally I tried to sell the new Medallion Bank 8% fixed to floating preferred (MBNKP). This new issue traded very weakly early on – down to the $24.40 area–2 weeks ago, but closed at $25.22 yesterday. I had an average cost of $24.58. My limit sell was obviously a bit greedy as only 88 shares were sold, but hopefully will get it done today. These shares were bought only as a flip–no intention to hold this junky issue too long.

I bought the Urstadt Biddle 5.875% perpetual preferred (UBP-K) yesterday, mainly as a dividend capture move. The issue had fallen a bit yesterday and goes ex dividend in 2-3 weeks. The combination of a short term fall (I hope) and a foreseeable ex dividend date for 37 cents made this particular issue attractive. This will have a target of 1.5% so may hold through ex date or will sell when my target is reached – maybe before ex date.

I tried (but didn’t get an execution) to grab a position in the GDL Fund cumulative, puttable issue (GDL-C) for a ‘base’ position, but didn’t get an execution. I am happy with a 4% position for a base issue and it would help replace the Kayne Anderson 3.50% Mandatory Redemption term preferred (KYN-F) which will be called in April.

While there aren’t any big selloff going on it appears to me that there are some individual issues being ‘sold’. These are not large volume issues, but it appears that the sells are likely individual investors, so one may be able to snag a bargain today somewhere.

Into the Home Stretch

Well hopefully folks are getting through the holiday period with their sanity. With our 6 grand kids ranging in age from 4 to 15 holidays are becoming less stressful as they are quite content to play with each other instead of requiring adult supervision (at least as much).

So with just 4 trading days left in 2019 I hope we maintain our gains–I really expect market movements will be pretty muted, whether it be stock prices or interest rates.

Last night I was adding more data and filing in a few blanks in the database when I came upon an issue I thought I would mention. This is for folks looking for a stable value issue–with a relatively short maturity date.

The issue is the GDL Fund $50/share preferred (GDL-C).

This issue is cumulative, puttable and callable. The coupon is set at 4% for 2019 and 2020, which will potentially be reset later in 2020 for the next 4 years.

Investors can ‘put’ shares back to the company in March, 2020 and March 2022 at $50 plus accrued dividends.

There is a mandatory redemption in 2025 at $50/share.

The issue is trading around $50.90 and as happens with these types of issues it is somewhat illiquid–trading only 600 shares a day.

Being a Gabelli CEF (closed end fund) the fund must maintain a 200% asset coverage ratio–as of 6/30/2019 coverage was at 237%. The fund holds level 1 assets (common stocks mostly) and quite honestly, the fund performance is pretty lousy, but I am not overly concerned about the fund performance as long as they maintain asset coverage.

The issue is not rated, but would likely be investment grade if they decided to rate it.

So this issue has a lot of good qualities–for me the 2025 mandatory redemption is perfect. The puttable period in 2022 and the mandatory redemption will help maintain shares in the $50 price area. Also the 4% coupon isn’t too bad for this type of issue.

The company can redeem shares starting in March, 2021–but I would be surprised if a 4% issue were called.

Current yield is 3.93% and yield to worst is just under the 3% area.

I am pondering a purchase since I have a rather large position (for me anyway) of over 1000 shares of the Kayne Anderson 3.50% (KYN-F) issue and with the mandatory redemption in 4/2020 I am looking for a place to stash some ‘safe’ money.