Below are press releases from companys with preferred stock and/or baby bonds outstanding–or just news of general interest. Earnings season is pretty much over so we will have slow news days for a month or two.
Below are press releases from companys with preferred stock and/or baby bonds outstanding–or just news of general interest. Earnings season is pretty much over so we will have slow news days for a month or two.
Below are press releases from companys with preferred stock and/or baby bonds outstanding–or just news of general interest. Earnings season is pretty much over so we will have slow news days for a month or two.
Well we had a week which saw the S&P500 hardly move–really one of the quietest weeks in years. The range was about 1% with a low of 6029 to a high of 6093–and ending on Friday with a loss of about 1/2% for the week. The economic news on the week was mainly on forecast, although producer prices were a bit hot, but prices remained tame.
Interest rates were a bit out of control on the week with rates on the 10 year Treasury shooting higher by 25 basis points. The yield closed the week at 4.40%–one has to wonder if equities can continue to remain level or move higher with threats of higher interest rates. It certainly seems like the ‘sugar high’ of the elections has disappeared and now we have to deal with the here and now and the specter of massive government deficits.
This week we have the FOMC meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday and then the presser and rate cut announcement mid day on Wednesday. I am fairly confident in the 1/4% rate cut–also I am relatively confident that Jay Powell will attempt to tamp down future expectations for more rate cuts –whether he succeeds is questionable in my mind. On Friday we get the PCE–personal consumption expenditures–report for another read on inflation.
Last week, we had some ugly numbers in the average $25/share preferred and baby bond pricing. The average price fell by 25 cents, with investment grade off a whopping 37 cents, bankers off 23 cents, CEF preferreds off 8 cents, and mREIT issues off 9 cents. Even the shippers fell by 13 cents. Part of this fall was ‘real,’ while late-week ex-dividend dates contributed to the fall.
The Federal Reserve balance sheet grew by $2 billion – the 1st pause we have seen in runoff of the balance sheet assets since early October.
Last week we had 2 new income issues price with BDC Gladstone Investment (GAIN) pricing a new baby bond with a coupon of 7.875% and CLO CEF Pearl Diver Credit (PDCC) pricing a term preferred at 8%.
Below are press releases from companys with preferred stock and/or baby bonds outstanding–or just news of general interest. Earnings season is pretty much over so we will have slow news days for a month or two.