Animal Spirits Podcast - Talk Your Book: Public and Private Market Credit Opportunities
Episode Date: July 9, 2024On today's show, Ben Carlson and Michael Batnick are joined by Ben Santonelli, Lead Portfolio Manager of Polen Capital's Credit Opportunities Strategy to discuss how interval funds work, navigating in...terest rate increases within your bond allocation, how Polen Capital is actively managing bonds, the biggest risk to high yield bonds, how Polen Capital values businesses, thoughts on why spreads have remained tight, and much more! Find complete show notes on our blogs... Ben Carlson’s A Wealth of Common Sense Michael Batnick’s The Irrelevant Investor Feel free to shoot us an email at animalspirits@thecompoundnews.com with any feedback, questions, recommendations, or ideas for future topics of conversation. Check out the latest in financial blogger fashion at The Compound shop: https://www.idontshop.com Past performance is not indicative of future results. The material discussed has been provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal or investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security or strategy. The investment strategy and themes discussed herein may be unsuitable for investors depending on their specific investment objectives and financial situation. Information obtained from third-party sources is believed to be reliable though its accuracy is not guaranteed. Investing involves the risk of loss. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be or regarded as personalized investment advice or relied upon for investment decisions. Michael Batnick and Ben Carlson are employees of Ritholtz Wealth Management and may maintain positions in the securities discussed in this video. All opinions expressed by them are solely their own opinion and do not reflect the opinion of Ritholtz Wealth Management. The Compound Media, Incorporated, an affiliate of Ritholtz Wealth Management, receives payment from various entities for advertisements in affiliated podcasts, blogs and emails. Inclusion of such advertisements does not constitute or imply endorsement, sponsorship or recommendation thereof, or any affiliation therewith, by the Content Creator or by Ritholtz Wealth Management or any of its employees. For additional advertisement disclaimers see here https://ritholtzwealth.com/advertising-disclaimers. Investments in securities involve the risk of loss. Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. The information provided on this website (including any information that may be accessed through this website) is not directed at any investor or category of investors and is provided solely as general information. Obviously nothing on this channel should be considered as personalized financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. See our disclosures here: https://ritholtzwealth.com/podcast-youtube-disclosures/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today is Animal Spirits talking books brought to you by the Poland Capital Credit Opportunities Interval Fund.
PCO-F-X. Go to polencapital.com. That's P-O-L-E-N Capital.com to learn more.
Welcome to Animal Spirits, a show about markets, life, and investing.
Join Michael Batnik and Ben Carlson as they talk about what they're reading, writing, and watching.
All opinions expressed by Michael and Ben are solely their own opinion and do not reflect the opinion of Ridthold's wealth management.
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Clients of Ridholt's wealth management may maintain positions in the securities discussed in this podcast.
On today's show, we spoke with Ben Santinelli.
Ben is the lead portfolio manager of Poland Capital's Credit Opportunity Strategy.
He's also a co-portfolio manager of the U.S. opportunistic high yield,
an assistant portfolio manager of the bank loan strategy.
Dan, we've been speaking over the past couple of months a lot about private credit.
It's been one of the hottest asset classes of the last couple of years for sure.
One thing that's interesting about the conversation that we had today is that this strategy is to go anywhere.
Is it go anywhere?
I said strategy.
I was supposed to say strategy again.
All right, well, just go with it.
Is it a go anywhere strategy?
It's a go anywhere strategy.
So it could invest not just in private credit, but also in public credit.
And I thought that was an interesting crossover.
Yes, and the fact that he's saying the spreads in private credit have compressed so much that public is actually looking better by comparison.
It's kind of like when VC and tech went through their little mini recession there and people were saying, wait, it makes more sense for we to invest in the public companies down 70, 80 percent than the private companies, which is interesting.
It's also what I was thinking when we were having this conversation is think about how dire things were for the credit space just a few years ago.
I mean, generationally low yields.
There was just, I mean, things were bleak.
And then we had to go through this rough patch of rising rates.
But now that rates have risen and that baseline rate, as he called it, is higher.
There's a lot of attractive opportunities in this space.
The last, the credit cycle is weird because, or the rate cycle.
Yeah, but it was more of a rate cycle than a credit cycle.
That's the interesting thing.
Yeah, treasuries got destroyed compared to junk bonds in 2022, right?
which is very unusual to see in a risk-off environment.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, it has been,
so we haven't had to deal with the credit side of the situation,
which meant that those yields have come up,
but they didn't have any blowout and spread.
So things are looking pretty attractive there,
at least, I guess, people worry until the recession hits,
but this was a really interesting talk.
So we talked to Ben Santonelli again from Poland Capital
about all the different places they're looking for opportunities,
the difference between public and private credit
and all these things.
So here's our talk with Ben.
So Ben, welcome to the show.
Your credit opportunities fund is relatively new.
I'm curious.
Was this created because there was demand from clients?
Was there a growing opportunity set?
Because rates are higher, some other reason, a little bit of everything.
What's the reason for rolling this fund out in recent years?
Yeah, sure.
So this is a strategy that we've had around since 2010.
We have nearly $300 million in that strategy.
But the idea behind rolling out the interval fund specifically was to really bring an institutionalized product to a different market, and that's the retail channel.
With where base rates are today, when you can get double-digit yields, regardless of where spreads are, that's something that our clients have said, you know, they're looking for.
So for the retail channel, it's an opportunity for them to get access to a strategy that we've
run for nearly 15 years with some pretty good success.
We'll talk about the opportunity set today.
You mentioned rates, and obviously that's a big component of the story.
But what type of vehicle is the $300 million comprised of?
Yeah, so the $300 million vehicle is based on a separate accounts.
We have two separate accounts, and then we obviously have the interval fund.
all three of them are managed by me. They're the same strategy. And the interval fund,
obviously, is just a different vehicle for somebody to access that strategy. For the people
who are unaware, and some of our listeners might be, how does an interval fund work? What's the
difference? How does that fund structure set up? Yeah, sure. So really, the interval fund is just
a vehicle for retail investors to get access to illiquid investments that were previously the domain
of only institutional clients. So our mutual, our interval fund, excuse me, PCOFX has about $30 million
in it. Again, daily subscriptions, quarterly liquidity, quarterly redemptions, capped at 5% of the NAV.
And again, it's really, to us, it's no different than managing any of the other accounts in
this strategy. It's really just a vehicle. All right. So just to sum up, you can buy whenever you
want, like any mutual fund, you can get liquidity on a quarterly basis, and you can potentially,
and correct me if I'm wrong, take out 100% of your investment, assuming that things are fine
and there's no sort of run on the strategy. As long as no more than 5% of the overall assets
wants their money back, you'll get your money back on a 90-day basis. That would be correct.
So with the throat clearing setup for the structure out of the way, let's talk about the
current environment. You have a couple of really great charts in your brochure talking about
the opportunity set today versus where we were in 2021. And I remember, because it wasn't that long
ago, talking about high yield bonds when they were earning, like literally when they were yielding
4, 4.5%. And it was just like, who is the buyer of this? Unbelievable. Now, obviously, we didn't
know what inflation was going to do and what was going to happen to the price of these. But the
environment today looks a lot different. So we actually do have high yield and high yield,
which is nice. Direct lending as well. You've got a big premium over where we were just a couple
of years ago. So why don't we start with the different slices of the private credit market that
you all are investing in? What's the biggest piece? Is it the direct lending? Is it the leverage
loans? Is it something else? Yeah, sure. So in this, you're exactly right. First of all,
I'll just hit on this. Two years ago, we were getting paid 5% today for the same.
quality, same credit quality, we're getting paid 9.5%. So we've been huge beneficiaries of the
underlying move in base rates, and that's not just our strategy, but all lenders have benefited
from where base rates are. So in this strategy, you know, we have the ability to go up to 50%
in illiquids, but really what we're trying to do is just find the best relative value in the
marketplace, whether it be in bonds, whether it be in loans, whether it be in public credit
or in private credit.
And it's that flexibility to be able to toggle between asset classes to find what is
truly the best relative value in the marketplace that's really led to some of the competitive
advantages that we have.
You know, we're not just dedicated private lending.
We're not just strictly high yield bonds or leveraged loans.
I like to hear from portfolio managers talk about going through difficult times.
So I'm just curious before we get into today's opportunity set, like how did you
navigate that environment when high yield bonds were, we're yielding such low levels historically.
And I think high yield did okay because spreads never really blew out. But a rising rate environment
obviously is bad for bonds. So how did how did things shake out with you in the last call it
18 to 24 months? Yeah. So one of the nice things about that flexibility that I mentioned is we can
buy bonds and loans. So we've historically had, you know, anywhere from 20 to 40 percent of the portfolio
and loans, which are obviously floating rate.
So that adjusted effective duration on that portion of the portfolio is muted.
It's effectively zero.
Wait, I'm sorry to cut you off, but it's obvious to you.
It's not obvious to the listener, maybe.
Can you just explain what's the difference between a bond and a loan?
Yeah, sure.
So a bond is a fixed rate contract, and generically speaking, a loan is a floating rate contract.
So when you're floating rate, you're resetting the interest rate on that security
every three months or six months, most of them are three months. So the impact of moves in interest
rates on your overall return profile are very muted. There's a there's a large difference
between the credit quality of companies that buy or issue bonds versus companies that take out
loans. You know, I think that would probably be a fair statement for the marketplace in general.
The way we're looking at credit, you know, it doesn't matter if we're buying a loan or a bond.
What we're trying to do is underwrite high-quality businesses at loan to values that are, you know, 50%, 60%, so there's a big equity cushion behind us.
And, you know, so the security classification doesn't have nearly the impact or the restrictions on us.
We're just looking to find good quality businesses that can generate cash.
Whether it's a loan, whether it's a bond, again, whether it's public or private, really doesn't make a difference for our strategy.
So at what point did you feel comfortable saying, all right, those loans that reset so quickly were great while they worked during the resuming environment?
Now it's time to extend our duration or risk or however you want to put it.
When did that happen for you?
Yeah.
So, Ben, the other thing that I think is important is where we focus the strategy.
The strategy is on the lower tier in the middle market.
So when you're investing in the lower tier, the middle market, your coupon tends to be higher than the overall market.
market. Today, the coupon on the interval fund is just under 10%. So another impact to that
duration move is the fact that when you have a coupon of 10%, 25, 50 basis point moves,
you know, in underlying rates, they're going to hurt investment grade. They're going to hurt
long duration assets. Generically lower tier middle market, you know, is not a long duration
asset. And when you have a coupon that high, the impact from interest rates is very
very muted.
When you say lower Q, do you mean in terms of the size of the borrower or the credit
quality or both?
It's really, you know, look, we don't, we like to say we don't rely on ratings agencies
to determine the level of risk that we're taking.
But for the general market, it's, you know, lower quality would probably be single B,
double, excuse me, single B, triple C.
But, you know, those are, those are ratings that, you know, a large ratings agency puts on them.
It's not generically how we view risk.
We view risk more through the lens of loan to value.
on the overall business, not just debt through a tranche or what the interest coverage ratio is,
but really how much is in this entire enterprise worth and what are we lending against?
How much of what you're doing is private versus public markets?
So today in the Interval Fund, we have about 25% of the account is in what we would deem illiquid
investments or private markets. You know, that has come down a little bit. I think that
the biggest, you know, there are a few reasons for that. One of them is the illiquidity premium
that you're getting paid today in the marketplace. It has shrunk. You know, the private markets
have become more institutionalized. There's been a lot of money raised, and they've just
become more competitive. So historically, when we were getting, you know, four or five hundred
basis point illiquidity premium, today it's probably one to 200. So again, this is where, you know,
where we find the flexibility to be able to toggle between public and private, very beneficial,
because today you can get, you know, with, again, where base rates are, you can get liquid securities
for relatively the same yield that you can find in the private markets at the same loan to values,
and you can pick up that liquidity. So why would you want to allocate, you know, just for the sake of
allocating to private credit? Volatility.
With all that money rushing in, though, into private credit, how quickly did that spread narrow?
Did that happen really fast, or did it take a while to happen?
It's happened pretty fast.
I mean, we've been doing private credit or, you know, direct lending for since the founding
of the firm in 1996.
It's never been a direct strategy that we have or an independent strategy.
We've always maintained that flexibility.
But, you know, look, the market's grown from.
from basically a nascent, you know, boutique into an institutionalized asset class.
Today, it's over, I think, a trillion and a half dollars.
That is taken, you know, less than 10 years.
The rise has been pretty dramatic.
And, you know, everybody sees the numbers.
Most of those assets are being raised by the top 10 managers.
There still is an opportunity in that space for the lower tier, the middle market,
direct lending that we have historically done.
but the, you know, the 500 to a billion dollar tranche, unit tranche deals that are in the
marketplace today.
I mean, it's, you know, that that's really not the market, the market that we're targeting.
Ben, I mean, I yelled that volatility and I was only sort of kidding.
In fact, I actually wasn't kidding.
Like if you said, why would you invest to something illiquid when you can get the same
yield in a liquid market, there's an incentive to not show the marks, like the public
liquid marks on a daily basis.
And you laugh.
But that's a big part of the.
story. Yeah, it's definitely a big part of the story for institutional investors, you know,
who have boards that they need to report to and want to, you know, not have to mark their
book, mark to market. You know, I think for individual investors who are sophisticated,
who take a relatively long-term view, I don't know if that, you know, that volatility is as
much of a concern, especially when you're generating a coupon of 10%, you know, and a yield of 11, you know,
11.7 percent. I think it's a little bit different for institutions than it is for retail.
So the question that we have to ask anytime we talk to someone about a fund like this is
what's the plan for a recession? Because that's the thing everyone's waiting for.
It's like, well, we've had this renaissance and credit and all this money's rushed in there.
But what happens when the economy turns, then? What then? So how do you think about navigating
that scenario whenever it might happen? Yeah, sure. I mean, I think we're preparing for that right now.
I mean, we're seeing fundamentals are okay in the marketplace, but we're seeing, you know, weakening employment numbers.
Inflation is more under control.
And, you know, what we've done in this fund and across of all of our strategies is we've really become a little bit more conservative.
You know, we're moving away from credit risk, locking in some higher quality names that might have a little bit more duration to them.
but you know I think ultimately what it comes down to whether you're investing in public credit
private credit regardless of the security class it comes down to underwriting and are you investing
in businesses that generate cash through the cycle and generate enough cash in order to refinance
or or pay back their debts and and really that doesn't it doesn't matter what economic cycle
you're in if you don't have the right underwriting skills you're not going to
you know, you're not going to be able to do that. So we have a team that's been together for a number of years.
We've worked through different economic cycles. We've worked through different rate environments.
So, you know, I'm pretty positive on the quality of our portfolio and the names that we've underwritten that have gone in there.
And again, this is a portfolio of 40 names. It's truly the best ideas across all of our strategies.
So we don't have, we don't have to pick 200 names to pop.
affiliate a portfolio. We have 40 names in this portfolio. The top 10 names make up 50% of the
portfolio. It is, again, it's a best idea is portfolio. So that's why I'm pretty confident that
those names will be able to see through whatever type of slowdown or recession is on the
horizon. All right. We'll get into portfolio construction a minute. But before we do, I don't want to
leave the topic of the compression and yields. Undoubtedly, it's a function of so much money coming
into the market.
But do you think that there's also part of it is that just where rates are, like even
if there wasn't so much money in rates, I'm sorry, in private credit, that just from rates
going from the 10 year going from 50 basis points up to 4.5, wherever it is, 450, that the
spread would compress just because if it held constant, the rates that these companies would
pay would just be punitive and they wouldn't be able to service the debt.
Is that a part of it?
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, you've definitely seen a split between really the halves and the half.
of nots from a company perspective. Companies that were in, you know, had any touch of secular
decline to them or over levered balance sheets. Those companies are really, really struggling with
this rate environment. You know, then you have other businesses, leisure, capital goods, other
names where, you know, they've only been strengthened in this environment. Because they went into it
with relatively strong balance sheets, you know, they've seen a different outcome. So it really has
bifurcated the market into halves and have-nots. I would say that when you're talking about
four, four and a quarter percent base rates, you know, that is, it's going to have an impact on
everybody. But again, you know, loan issuers probably more susceptible because they have more
floating rate debt than bond issuers. And the fact of that matter is, you know, we are investing in
the lower tier of the high yield market. I mean, these are not, you know, the, the Netflix is the
apples and Googles of the world. You know, so there's definitely. So what's the biggest risk there
being in that lower tier is because some people would say the risk in that in high yield as well,
just spreads blowing out. For you, is risk also just default? Like, what keeps you up at night?
It's specific, because everything that we do is bottom up on a company by company basis,
it's idiosyncratic risk of 40 different businesses.
there are really no universal themes of, you know, higher rates aren't going to, or lower rates
aren't going to blow up this portfolio.
Higher rates aren't, you know, an economic slowdown.
Yeah, it will hurt, but it's not going to materially impact.
What would materially impact performance is if one of the 40 businesses loses a major customer
has a, you know, an environmental or a plant issue at one of their main manufacturing
facilities, you're really taking business risk on these 40 names.
and that's what's going to drive the performance.
So it is truly credit risk of our underwriting.
So how does that manifest itself in risk?
Is it because, you know, investors could look past price volatility,
depending on how nasty it gets.
But when you say risk to the portfolio,
are you talking about risk of income not being distributed?
Like, how do you think about risk?
And how should your investors think about it?
No, I don't think of it as income not being distributed
because we have 40 names in there.
You know, and they're all, like I said,
with a yield of 11.7%.
Well, I mean, it's really the credit risk of those underlying businesses
not being able to perform, and thus there would be default risk.
So, you know, credit risk goes far enough, then you hit default risk.
And, you know, if we have defaults, we do have the ability to work through those
defaults.
I think that's an important differentiator.
We do have in-house legal on our team, and we have a team that is very,
seasoned and working through restructurings and defaults.
But, you know, look, when you have, and I hate to keep harping on it, but when you have a 10%
coupon on the portfolio, that hides a lot of price volatility.
That's a massive income generator.
And really to the clients that have purchased this fund and other clients in the strategy,
they're really looking to this fund as an income generator.
We have a lot of institutional clients who, yeah, yields are high, but when you look at the market
on a spread basis, it's just not that attractive. Retail investors, from what we've seen,
you know, they're really not driven by spread. They're driven by income. And, you know,
I agree. Retail, they just love the absolute yield level, right? Yeah. It's kind of true,
isn't it? Yeah. I mean, it goes a little bit to the fact of institutions are strategic allocators
they're going to set it and then it's going to be there for the next 100 years or as long as
that institution is there they're going to go up and down with the market retail investors
can be a lot more tactical and you know when you have an 11.7 percent yield on a portfolio
that that's a pretty compelling return for a fixed income investment how often do you pay that
income out is it a monthly basis quarterly i believe it's quarterly you might need to check that
with uh the powers it be it's uh okay
Distributions that says monthly.
At least that's for the institutional share class.
So, again, we could check on that.
But I'm looking at the top 10 issuers, and you've got names, and these names won't mean anything to most listeners.
But I want you to talk about, if not specifically, these companies, but just what are these businesses?
So specialty steel, baffeland iron ore mine, iron mines, excuse me, clear channel, outdoor holdings, husky injection molding systems, internet brands.
Like, how big are these companies?
Like, how do you find them?
Talk about the portfolio. What's inside here?
Yeah. So I will say that 75% of the portfolio is private equity-backed businesses.
A good one that you guys have probably heard of. I know not all of them are household names,
but internet brands. They own WebMD, you know, private equity-backed company, you know,
obviously, yeah. WebMD is a huge brand out there. So, you know, like I said,
most of them are private equity-backed businesses, but the universal theme of all.
of those businesses is they generate sustainable, predictable cash flow. That is as debt investors,
what we're craving. And we can't, you know, one of the sectors that we do not participate in almost
at all is oil and gas. For the simple fact of the volatility and the lack of predictability in
being able to look out three, five, seven years and predict the cash flows of that business,
we find that very difficult.
It's much easier and much more repeatable to find, you know, a widget manufacturer in Ohio that's made those widgets for 85 years and they've always earned a 20% EBITOM margin and had, you know, 2% of CAPEX as a percent of sales in it.
They generate, you know, 10% of free cash flow to debt every year.
That's a story that is predictable.
It might not be as sexy as the oil and gas guy who's going to.
go from 10 million of EBITDA to 250 million when they find the next deposit. But the fact of
the matter is those companies, the predictability of the cash flows of those businesses.
And the repeatability of being able to do that as an investor finding those companies is
incredibly difficult. Do you place any other constraints in the portfolio other than kind of avoiding
the energy and gas sector? You know, we really don't. I mean, we've always pride at our
is kind of a go anywhere, you know, credit shop. I think we do have some basic ground
rules that, you know, and one of those is generating sustainable, predictable cash flow.
You know, I think we've historically stayed away from companies that, you know, whether
they're government contracting, whether it's biotech, things where we don't have the ability,
we don't have any real insight to predict with any level of confidence the future cash flows of
those business. They can be very lumped.
be, they can be here one day gone the next. You know, those are businesses that we want to try
to avoid. And, you know, the other, in other general theme is we're really not looking at, not
necessarily asset quality, but we're not looking at asset coverage as a means for recovery.
You know, when we say we're lending against, you know, the total enterprise value of a business
is how much, how much is this business worth to a buyer? Not what are the assets worth? Those
can fluctuate materially. It's really, how much is this business worth based on the cash that
generates today? And that's the number that we're going to lend against, not, you know, how much is
this deposit and the ground worth or these plants? What's the, you know, construction value of those
plants? We're not really looking at asset value. We're really looking at cash flow.
Do you need to be like business or business analysts, sector analysts, or are you allowed to just be
financial analysts where you say, I don't even care what this business does, but I've got 15 years
of data and I know all I need to know. What exactly do you need to say? Look, some firms do
do a generalist model. I think what's worked for us is having our analysts broken up by sectors
because they gain that inherent knowledge of covering a sector for, you know, five, 10, 15 years.
They develop relationships with management teams. They develop contacts within that industry so that
you know, they can use their network when they're, you know, out researching these businesses.
So ours are broken up by sector. It's worked for us. And, you know, we've never really seen a
reason why if you cover industrials for high-yield bonds, why that knowledge wouldn't translate
into covering industrials for leverage loans or for a private credit business. If you know
industrials, you know industrials. It doesn't matter the type of security that you're purchasing.
you need to be able to value a business and value those cash flows.
And so for us, the sector model has worked very well since we've been around.
Are you surprised that spreads have remained as tight as they have over the last couple of years?
Like, what are your thoughts on that?
Yeah.
I mean, no, I'm not.
You know, given the underlying strength in the economy, when you look at employment over the last three years,
the employment numbers have been incredibly strong.
You know, America's pastime is spending money.
It's probably not baseball anymore.
And when people are employed, they're going to spend money, whether it be, you know, cars, homes, cruises, whatever it may be.
So when you have as strong as the consumer has been, which is really the driver of our economy today, you know, it doesn't surprise me that spreads have been this type.
you add that into the amount of money that was pumped into the economy and the rate cuts that
were taken, you know, during COVID and before COVID, capital was free effectively.
So there was no incentive to not spend. There was no incentive to save, I guess, is a better way
to put it. Anything else we didn't cover that you wanted to hand today, Ben?
No, I mean, I'd probably just hammer the fact that you can get equity-like returns in a fixed-income
instrument and that's unlike we've seen in probably the last 15 years so it really is going to
depend on the individual person or individual institution what their goals are and what their
targets are but for a fixed income portfolio to be generating you know upwards of 11 and a half
percent yield that has a you know a 15 year track record of generating alpha if that fits I think
it should work. But, you know, people, people make different choices all the time. So they have
different goals. Perfect. Okay. Thanks, Ben. Appreciate it. Okay, thanks to Ben. Again, check out
pulling capital.com to learn more. Email us, Animal Spirits at the compound news.com.