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 10/10/2014 in the Prospect News Investment Grade Daily.

Preferred stocks decline to end week; Inland prices upsized deal; Fannie, Freddie gain

By Stephanie N. Rotondo

Phoenix, Oct. 10 – Preferred stocks came in again on Friday as the Dow Jones industrial average erased all of its gains for the year.

Though a trader said early in the day that the preferred space was “holding pretty steady... We’re not seeing the sell-off like the high-yield markets,” by the end of business that was no longer the case.

The Wells Fargo Hybrid and Preferred Securities index closed out the week off 10 basis points. According to one market source, it was “initially off a lot more, about double.”

In the primary, Inland Real Estate Corp. priced $100 million of 6.95% series B cumulative redeemable perpetual preferreds Friday morning.

Initial price talk on the non-rated deal was in the 7% area. The deal was upsized from $50 million.

A trader said the new issue was “holding up pretty well” early in the session, seeing a less 10-cent bid for paper.

Wells Fargo Securities LLC was the bookrunner.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac preferreds were again rising Friday and dominating overall trading in that space.

A market source said the preferreds were “up a bit... I’m assuming it was because [Fairholme Funds] formally went ahead with the appeal,” referring to a Sept. 30 decision by federal judge Royce Lamberth in which he dismissed investors’ lawsuits regarding what they claimed was an illegal takeover by the government of a majority of the agencies’ profits.


© 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.