It feels like for the first time in years, most key market stakeholders are aligned. Globally, central banks are seriously looking at rate cuts, with Switzerland being the first to pull the pin. Corporates are seemingly feeling better about the world and are working hard on M&A, while private equity firms are busy turning their attention back to operational strategies and ‘bread and butter’ private equity, having shifted from spending significant time assessing the impact of rising interest rates and COVID. Direct lenders and investment and commercial banks are open for business and spreads have come in from their peaks in early 2023. We have seen debt financing activity pick up globally, with refinancings and repricings driving most of the volume so far, but new money corporate and private equity activity has also begun to increase in recent weeks off a low base. What more could you want.
Unfortunately, it’s not all smooth sailing as geopolitical risks, sticky inflation, productivity issues and half the world’s population and GDP is heading to the polls this year1 – and all are weighing on investors’ minds. Defaults have remained low across markets, but stressed borrowers are quietly looking for financing alternatives, a trend that we believe will continue as base rates aren’t likely to drop quickly. Winners and losers are likely to be concentrated by sectors and/or relative position within their own sectors, with the ability to pass increased costs to customers – a key requirement.