E-mail us: service@prospectnews.com Or call: 212 374 2800
Bank Loans - CLOs - Convertibles - Distressed Debt - Emerging Markets
Green Finance - High Yield - Investment Grade - Liability Management
Preferreds - Private Placements - Structured Products
 
Published on 11/6/2015 in the Prospect News Investment Grade Daily.

Citigroup preferreds free to trade; new jobs figures increase chance of December rate hike

By Stephanie N. Rotondo

Seattle, Nov. 6 – The latest jobs number was “much stronger than expected,” a preferred stock trader said Friday, increasing the likelihood of an interest rate increase in December.

In October, nonfarm payrolls increased by 271,000, the biggest gain in nearly a year. Unemployment meantime dipped to 5% from 5.1% previously. Those figures, coupled with a strong dollar and declining oil, have many market players thinking that a rate increase is imminent, especially if the data stays strong in the coming weeks.

In response, the preferred stock market was experiencing “a decent sell-off, but not much.”

The Wells Fargo Hybrid and Preferred Securities index closed down 52 basis points.

Citigroup Inc.’s $1.5 billion of 6.125% $1,000-par series R fixed-to-floating rate noncumulative perpetual preferreds – a deal priced Thursday – were meantime seen holding in at 100.375 bid, 100.5 offered early in the session. However, a source noted that the paper “ended up getting hammered at the end of the day,” falling to 100.375.

The source added that the volume weighted average price was 100.625 and that “higher-volume trades” took place in a 100.875 to 101 context.

The issue freed to trade early in the session, according to a trader.

As for Citi’s $25-par preferreds, the 6.875% series K fixed-to-floating rate noncumulative preferreds (NYSE: CPK) dropped 24.12 cents to $26.9588, while the 7.875% fixed-to-floating rate trust preferred securities (NYSE: CPN) lost 6 cents, closing at $25.45.


© 2015 Prospect News.
All content on this website is protected by copyright law in the U.S. and elsewhere. For the use of the person downloading only.
Redistribution and copying are prohibited by law without written permission in advance from Prospect News.
Redistribution or copying includes e-mailing, printing multiple copies or any other form of reproduction.