Moody's Liquidity-Stress Indicator falls when corporate liquidity appears to improve and rises when it appears to weaken.
"Speculative-grade liquidity continues to improve due to strong credit markets, the recovery in oil and gas, and a growing US economy that is bolstering corporate earnings and cash flow," said Moody's Senior Vice President John Puchalla. "The declining LSI presages a lower US speculative-grade default rate, which we forecast will fall to 2.1% in October 2018 from 3.2% today."
Refinancing are spurring upgrades of Moody's speculative-grade liquidity (SGL) ratings, Puchalla says in "LSI lowers bar on liquidity risks and defaults." So far in November there have five SGL rating upgrades and three downgrades. The upgrades included two energy companies, California Resources Corp. and Pioneer Energy Services, which have both recently completed refinancing. Conversely, among the downgrades was beleaguered department store chain Sears Holdings Corp., which was downgraded to SGL-4 due to weak sales, negative operating cash flow and meaningful 2018 maturities.
Meanwhile, Moody's Covenant-Stress Indicator slipped to 2.3% in October from 2.4% in September, its lowest level since April 2015 and a sign that companies face fairly negligible risk of violating their financial maintenance covenants. Economic growth and the prevalence of covenant-lite loan structures is limiting the risk of covenant violations.
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