Michael Roberge
MFS Research Bond Fund
by Marla Brill
MFI Publisher
Michael Roberge, Chief Fixed Income
Officer at Boston’s MFS Investment Management, thinks investors have a good
chance of seeing decent returns from certain pockets of the bond market this
year. But they need to pick their spots carefully.
“It’s a security by security analysis
that’s going to matter in the market over the next year or two,” he says. “The
name of the game in fixed income now is owning the market but avoiding the
mistakes.”
From Roberge’s perspective, investors
have ample reason to keep bond money in play even as interest rates on
intermediate and long-term fixed income investments look poised to follow the
rising trend at the shorter end of the yield curve. “There’s not much yield in
the equity markets, and people who are looking for income from their investments
don’t have a lot of options,” he says. “Besides, almost everyone expected bond
rates to climb last year, and they didn’t.”
The bond market in 2004 indeed defied
expectations by posting gains even after several interest rate hikes from the
Federal Reserve. In a year that many predicted would be marked by negative
returns for fixed-income investments, the average U.S. taxable bond fund
returned 4.54 percent, according to Lipper. High yield funds and world income
funds did even better, posting returns of 9.89 percent and 9.84 percent,
respectively. Even U.S. Treasury securities defied predictions of price erosion,
with the yield of the ten-year benchmark ending the year about where it began. A
number of factors, including strong participation by foreign investors in the
U.S. bond market, helped keep bond prices stable.
But this year presents a new set of
challenges that could make foreign investors more skittish about investing in
U.S. bonds, says MFS Chief Investment Strategist James Swanson. In a recent
market commentary, Swanson noted that U.S. Treasury prices “have the potential
to be strongly affected by dollar weakness because a significant part of the
Treasury market is comprised of non-dollar-denominated investors.” And with the
U.S. savings rate near zero, compared to 10 percent of disposable income two
decades ago, “overseas investors are financing most of the federal deficit.”
Those investors are becoming increasingly concerned that the growing U.S. budget
deficit will erode the country’s economic health, and rates may need t rise to
attract these offshore buyers.
Still, Roberge thinks that while rates
may trend higher, the climb will not be substantial. He sees the Fed Funds rate
increasing to 3 percent over the next 18 months, and a rate of around 5 percent
to 5.25 percent for 10-year Treasury bond within three to six months. He
believes the fund’s benchmark, the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, may be
able to “eek out a positive total return this year. But it will be a close
call.”
Another problem is that the slim
difference in yield between Treasury issues and corporate bonds makes it more
difficult for investors in the latter type of securities to realize capital
gains from narrowing spreads. Recently, high quality corporate bonds yielded
only about 80 basis points more than 10-year Treasuries, he says, while
high-yield “junk” bonds beat Treasury bond yields by about three percentage
points.
“If you look at the high-grade market
from November of 1991 all the way to 1998, the spread was tighter and basically
didn’t move for seven years,” he says. “The reason is that we are in a business
expansion. We are probably in that type of environment over the next several
years, so we expect spreads to remain tight.”
Roberge thinks that spreads between
high yield bonds and Treasuries have enough room to narrow a bit more this year,
and that in a rising rate environment corporate bonds will likely outperform
interest rate-sensitive Treasuries. “The place to find value in fixed income is
the corporate credit markets because of the fundamental improvement we are
seeing,” he says. “Companies have record levels of cash on the balance sheet and
high levels of interest payment coverage, providing solid underpinnings to these
markets.”
As the head of the team that manages
the MFS Research Bond fund, an intermediate-term investment grade offering,
Roberge needs to keep a significant portion of the fund in Treasury notes,
agency securities, and mortgage-backed bonds to maintain the portfolio’s average
credit quality at a high investment grade level of AA-. He also keeps the fund’s
duration neutral relative to its benchmark. Currently, the fund and the
benchmark have durations of 4.5 years.
Roberge relies on credit analysis,
rather than interest rate adjustments, to boost returns. He also has leeway to
overweight or underweight corporate bonds and other non-U.S. government
securities relative to the index. Since its inception in 1999, the fund has
outperformed the Lehman Brothers Index and its Morningstar intermediate-term
bond fund category average for five out of six calendar years. Its three and
five-year annualized yields are in the top 6 percent and top 3 percent,
respectively, for the group.
The fund’s current sector stance
reflects a conviction that corporate bonds will outperform government issues
this year. Recently, the portfolio had about half of its assets in
Treasuries and government securities, including agency issues and
mortgage-backed bonds, compared to about 70 percent in such securities for the
Lehman Index.
Companies at the higher quality end of
the junk bond spectrum that are on the cusp of receiving a credit upgrade from
the major bond rating agencies are of particular interest. When that happens,
the prices of those bonds often get a boost because pension funds and other
institutional buyers that have credit quality restrictions can buy them.
Two years ago, the fund used this
strategy by buying Tyco bonds soon after the company’s management problems made
headlines. Convinced that Tyco had ample asset coverage and generated sufficient
cash flow to meet its debt obligations, Roberge moved in after the stock dropped
substantially, and the bonds were downgraded from an A rating to below
investment grade. Last year, the major rating agencies upgraded Tyco to a low
investment grade rating and the bonds responded favorably. Another long-time
holding, bathroom and kitchen fixture maker American Standard, crossed into
investment grade territory last year after it shored up its balance sheet and
paid down debt.
To select securities that are good
candidates for an upgrade, Roberge and his team of analysts look for companies
that have a proven management team, competitive positioning in the marketplace,
and strong free cash flow. They also like to see strong indenture provisions and
solid collateral.
While free cash flow is usually a plus, Roberge cautions that some companies are using it to benefit stockholders,
sometimes at the expense of bondholders. “With companies awash in cash, the bad
news in the credit markets is the growing pressure by stockholders to add debt
to buy back stock and implement dividends,” he says. “We’ve seen examples
recently of companies sacrificing their investment grade rating by adding debt
to their balance sheets and becoming a junk company to do a share buyback.”
He cites former fund holding HCA as one company that took such a route
when it decided to take on a significant amount of debt last year in order to
proceed with a share buyback. With a sizable chunk of leverage added to its
balance sheet, the rating agencies downgraded the hospital and health care
facility holding company’s bonds. On the other hand, fund holding and Texas
utility TXU Corp. used leverage in a share buyback, but still managed to keep
its balance sheet healthy and avoid a credit downgrade.
“We understand that equity holders
provide capital, but companies need to balance their interests with those of
debt holders,” he says. “TXU has done that.”
While MFS Research Bond fund also owns
a sprinkling of emerging market debt to perk up returns, Roberge believes
investors will need to modify their expectations for the sector this year. “In
2002, when we saw a deterioration of corporate credit quality in the U.S., the
credit quality of the emerging market countries was improving,” he notes. “With
political reforms and corporate restructuring, about half of the emerging market
bond index is now investment grade. There’s been enormous appreciation in this
category, but we won’t seeing that over the next couple of years.” Still, with
emerging market debt yielding about 400 basis points over Treasuries, and
potential for further credit improvement over the next decade, he believes the
asset class remains “relatively attractive.”
MFS Research Bond Fund At-A-Glance
Assets: $1.14 billion
Manager: Management team headed by
Michael Roberge
Top five sectors: U.S. Treasuries,
high-grade corporates, U.S. Government agencies, mortgage-backed, high-yield corporates. |