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THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2025
The Decade of Debt: Big deals, bigger risk for Corporate America

Global Economy

Reuters
30 December, 2019, 01:40 pm
Last modified: 31 December, 2019, 10:12 am

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The Decade of Debt: Big deals, bigger risk for Corporate America

Corporate bond debt outstanding rocketed more than 50% and will soon top $10 trillion versus about $6 trillion at the end of the previous decade

Reuters
30 December, 2019, 01:40 pm
Last modified: 31 December, 2019, 10:12 am

Whatever nickname ultimately gets attached to the now-ending Twenty-tens, on Wall Street and across Corporate America it arguably should be tagged as the "Decade of Debt."

With interest rates locked in at rock-bottom levels courtesy of the Federal Reserve's easy-money policy after the financial crisis, companies found it cheaper than ever to tap the corporate bond market to load up on cash.

Bond issuance by American companies topped $1 trillion in each year of the decade that began on January 1, 2010, and ends on Tuesday at midnight, an unmatched run, according to SIFMA, the securities industry trade group.

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In all, corporate bond debt outstanding rocketed more than 50% and will soon top $10 trillion, versus about $6 trillion at the end of the previous decade. The largest US companies - those in the S&P 500 Index - account for roughly 70% of that, nearly $7 trillion.

Graphic: Long-term debt for S&P 500

What did they do with all that money?

It's a truism in corporate finance that cash needs to be either "earning or returning" - that is, being put to use growing the business or getting sent back to shareholders.

As it happens, American companies did a lot more returning than earning with their cash during the 'Tens.

In the first year of the decade, companies spent roughly $60 billion more on dividends and buying back their own shares than on new facilities, equipment and technology. By last year that gap had mushroomed to more than $600 billion, and the gap in 2019 could be just as large, especially given the constraint on capital spending from the trade war.

The buy-back boom is credited with helping to fuel a decade-long bull market in US equities.

Graphic: S&P 500 shareholder payouts

Meanwhile, capital expenditure growth has been choppy at best over 10 years. This is despite a massive fiscal stimulus package by the Trump administration, marked by the reduction in the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%, that it had predicted would boost business spending.

Graphic: Capital expenditure of S&P 500

One byproduct of stock buy-backs is they make companies look more profitable by Wall Street's favorite performance metric - earnings per share - than they would otherwise appear to be.

With companies purchasing more and more of their own stock, S&P 500 EPS has roughly doubled in 10 years. Meanwhile net profit has risen by half that, and far more erratically.

Graphic: S&P 500 earnings per share

Graphic: Reported earnings for S&P 500

The corporate bond market has not only gotten bigger, it has gotten riskier.

With investors clamouring for yield in a low-rate world, debt rated only a notch or two above high-yield - or junk - bond levels now accounts for more than half of the investment-grade market, versus around a third at the dawn of the decade.

Graphic: BBB/Baa issuance spikes

 

World+Biz

The Decade in Review / debt / Business deals

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