Posts Tagged ‘tenancy’
Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Fallen Angels and crossover credits are often targeted by alternative investor groups like hedge funds and risk arbitrageurs who speculate on the mispricing between the various financing instruments of a company.
Characteristics of Fallen Angels:
- High leverage in respect to operating cash flows
- Weak industry trends lead to low and unpredictable operating cash flows
- A further deterioration of the operating performance is not sustainable with the financial profile
- Loss of market share
- Not enough liquidity to support the ongoing business
- Decreasing asset quality
- Management is unable to identify profitable business units
- Weak and complex debt structure
- Unfavorable regulatory environment and lack of support by the government (mainly for European companies)
Tags: Aids finance, Debt, economics, estate, Estate Planning, heir, income, inheritace, insurance, Interest, joit, last will, Market, market cycle, rate, tenancy
Posted in management, merchandise, money spending, negotiationg, online bank, payments, profitability | Comments Off
Sunday, October 25th, 2009
The level of implied volatility is a widely used indicator for risk appetite, and, on the individual company level, for the uncertainty related to future earnings. It is also considered a good measure of equity-market risk, because the higher the implied volatility the higher the price of equity options, and thus the higher the cost of insuring against equity-market downturns. Corporate bond spreads reflect the compensation that the investors demand for taking on credit risk. While the debt and equity markets’ estimates of risk, as explained by the Merton model, tend to move together, temporary disconnections do occur. The combination of low levels of implied equity volatility and wide credit spreads suggests the potential for the credit spreads to tighten, as the divergence in the equity and credit market eventually gets corrected. Conversely, when implied equity volatility appears high relative to credit spreads, credit markets are more optimistic about business risks in the corporate sector. The decoupling in the second half of 2003, however, was not an indication that credit spreads were rich relative to implied equity volatility. Rather credit markets were faster to cash in on the reduced risks in the corporate sector because of the massive balance sheet deleveraging, especially in the telecom sector.
Corporate managers were selling off assets, issuing equity and keeping cash for the debtholders, as opposed to using the cash to buy back stock for the first time in 10 years. By the end of the year, equity volatility came down significantly, closing the gap in the assessment of risk.
Tags: foreclosure, loans, mortgage, shares, tax, taxes, tenancy, Tenancy-in-Common, tenant, trade value
Posted in payments, profitability, real estate, research, stocks, strategy elements, taxes | Comments Off
Friday, October 23rd, 2009
Phase 3 is characterized by high growth and rising leverage, as during the years 1997 to mid-2000. In this period M&A activity was rapidly accelerating, driven by a major focus on the creation of shareholder value. While earnings grew in this period, aggregate measures of corporate profitability like the ratio of after-tax profits of the nonfinancial corporate sector to GDP already declined. Deteriorating free cash flow measures also signaled heightened risk in the corporate sector. As one would generally expect in the expansion phase, equities performed well while credit spreads widened. In general, the high level of debt accumulated during the expansion makes companies vulnerable to economic downturns. Low growth and rising leverage increase the risk of defaults and rating downgrades, and are generally negative for credit as well as equity markets. The years 2000–02 are a typical example for this phase.
Tags: inheritace, insurance, Interest, joit, last will, Market, market cycle, market cycles, rate, tenancy
Posted in companies, credit cards, customer demand, developers, employee, equity, expenses | Comments Off