Well … what can I say here that I didn’t already say in my press release?
Not much! For more information about the fund, see the MAPF Main Page on my company site.
But it’s now available to accredited investors nationally, not just Ontario.
Well … what can I say here that I didn’t already say in my press release?
Not much! For more information about the fund, see the MAPF Main Page on my company site.
But it’s now available to accredited investors nationally, not just Ontario.
Today’s Globe & Mail contained an article by Rob Carrick that mentioned preferred shares.
Riccardo Palombi, a salesperson at the Manitoba-based McLean & Partners had a few words to say:
Mr. Palombi of Mclean & Partners suggests sticking to preferred shares issued by the big banks and other top-quality issuers. As an example, he mentioned the TD preferred series O shares, which pay $1.21 in dividends a year and currently yield about 4.6%.
So, I thought I’d write a bit about TD.PR.O today.
The option schedule for TD.PR.O is:
| Redemption | 2010-11-01 | 2011-10-30 | 26.000000 |
| Redemption | 2011-10-31 | 2012-10-30 | 25.750000 |
| Redemption | 2012-10-31 | 2013-10-30 | 25.500000 |
| Redemption | 2013-10-31 | 2014-10-30 | 25.250000 |
| Redemption | 2014-10-31 | INFINITE DATE | 25.000000 |
A perpetual, paying $1.2125.
Firstly, the 4.6% Carrick mentions is currentYield and I’m saddened, but not surprised that Carrick mentioned it in his article. As readers of my article A Call too, Harms know, I’m not a big fan of Current Yield and greatly prefer yield-to-worst as a measure of preferred share value – assuming, of course, that I’m writing for general publication and am only allowed a single measure of value!
The pre-tax YTW of TD.PR.O is 4.14%, based on the January 12 closing bid of $26.15. So the first thing we want to know is: why accept 4.14% when there are new issues (new bank issues, what’s more, from Royal, Scotia and BMO that yield 4.50%?
One possibility is the implicit degree of interest rate protection afforded to investors by the higher coupon. The TD issue pays $1.2125, as mentioned above, which works out to 4.85% on the original issue price. If rates rise, then all fixed income issue will be hurt, but (for the first little while, at least) TD.PR.O will have some protection, because it will still make sense for the issuer to call the issue at the same price as it would have called them in the absence of a rise.
If, for instance, all perpetual preferreds are trading at 4.80% (pre-tax) in 2014, then we will expect TD.PR.O to be redeemed at $25.00 (or trading slightly above that price), whereas one of the current new issues, paying $1.125 p.a., will be trading at around $23.40, at which price they will be yielding the 4.8% imposed by these hypothetical market conditions. In other words, they will have lost about $1.60 in value, compared to only $1.15 in value for the TD.PR.O. Additionally, the TD.PR.O will have paid about $0.09 more p.a. as dividends.
When HIMIPref™ is used to analyze the cash flows of TD.PR.O for the YTW scenario, we get the the attached report from the cashFlowDiscountingAnalysisBox. This report can also be saved as a text file and uploaded to an Excel spreadsheet.
I hate using Excel spreadsheets to explain things. At some point I’ll write a little feature into HIMIPref that will do this automatically, but that’s way down the list. The purpose of HIMIPref™ is to analyze preferreds write blog posts! While this sort of analysis is implicit in HIMIPref™ it’s buried pretty deeply, in things like curvePrice!
On the tab “Initial Analysis” of the attached spreadsheet, the data provided above has been put into Excel format. Additionally, equivalent data for the RY.PR.? new issue has been approximated by multiplying the cash flows for TD.PR.O by a factor of (4.50 / 4.85) to account for the reduced coupon. The cells highlighted in yellow have been further changed, to reflect an estimated value of $25.00 for the RY.PR.? on 2014-11-30: that is, this analysis projects no change in market interest rates between now and the analysis end-date.
When we sum the values of the individual flows, we find that the net present value for TD.PR.O is, indeed, about $26.10 (there’s some rounding error. So sue me.) which of course it should be since the discounting factors are derived from the Yield that results if it is redeemed on the End Date.
We are amazed and astounded, however, to note that the cash flows of the RY.PR.? new issue sum to about $25.40, which is forty cents more than the price we have to pay for it now. Bonus! Using this analysis, we can say that the TD.PR.O is fairly priced (by definition) but the RY.PR.? is forty cents cheap! So why buy the TD.PR.O.
Some scenario analysis is done on the “Scenarios” tab of the spreadsheet. For each presumed market yield, we calculate the price of each issue, being careful to cap this value at the appropriate redemption price. Then we account for tax effects to derive an exit value. We use the discounting factor from the “Initial Analysis” tab to compute the present value of the exit value, add this to the present value of the dividends, and then come up with the present value of the whole package. In columns “Q” & “R”, we compare this discounted present value to the actual market price to see whether it’s cheap or expensive, given the scenario for market yields. Obviously, if our scenario is for rising yields, they’re both expensive. Any fixed income will be! But the degree of protection has been calculated.
I’ve prepared a chart:
So, if you want some protection from rising interest rates, you may well prefer TD.PR.O to the new bank issues, accepting the fact that this will probably be an underperforming choice if rates are unchanged from this time until the call-date.
I consider this analysis to be very approximate and do not explicitly use it in HIMIPref™. I’m more interested in curvePrice, the price at which an instrument should theoretically trade if all its features are valued the same way as similar features on similar issues, and at Yield-to-Worst, these being two major components of valuation:
| Curve Price Component | TD.PR.O | RY.PR.? |
| Price due to base-rate | 24.30 | 23.31 |
| Price due to short-term | 0.04 | 0.04 |
| Price due to long-term | 0.50 | 0.46 |
| Price due to Liquidity | 1.52 | 1.48 |
| Price due to error | -0.03 | -0.03 |
| Total Curve Price | 26.33 | 25.27 |
| Current Quote | 26.15-19 | 25.00 Issue |
| After-tax Yield-To-Worst | 3.30% | 3.58% |
A full HIMIPref™ analysis shows this issue roughly comparable to one of the new bank issues. But I like RY.PR.B & RY.PR.C better in that “bank perpetual” space.
| Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30 | |||||||
| Index | Mean Current Yield (at bid) | Mean YTW | Mean Average Trading Value | Mean Mod Dur (YTW) | Issues | Day’s Perf. | Index Value |
| Ratchet | 4.09% | 4.10% | 26,019 | 17.25 | 1 | 0.0000% | 1,028.4 |
| Fixed-Floater | 4.78% | 3.46% | 80,266 | 12.49 | 7 | -0.1285% | 1,038.9 |
| Floater | 4.58% | -22.12% | 64,197 | 8.22 | 4 | -0.1081% | 1,040.1 |
| Op. Retract | 4.68% | 2.04% | 80,829 | 2.03 | 17 | -0.0759% | 1,031.5 |
| Split-Share | 5.05% | 0.67% | 402,269 | 2.86 | 11 | +0.2502% | 1,046.0 |
| Interest Bearing | 6.70% | 5.53% | 73,992 | 2.65 | 6 | -0.1272% | 1,035.4 |
| Perpetual-Premium | 5.02% | 3.66% | 247,098 | 5.14 | 55 | -0.0320% | 1,052.2 |
| Perpetual-Discount | 4.51% | 4.53% | 784,569 | 16.34 | 3 | -0.0670% | 1,054.9 |
| Major Price Changes | |||
| Issue | Index | Change | Notes |
| POW.PR.B | PerpetualPremium | +1.0113% | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.26% based on a bid of $25.97 and a call 2008-12-28 at $25.50 |
| LBS.PR.A | SplitShare | +1.7576% | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 3.61% based on a bid of $11.00 and a hardMaturity 2013-11-29 at $10.00 |
| Volume Highlights | |||
| Issue | Index | Volume | Notes |
| PWF.PR.J | OpRet | 102,764 | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 1.98% based on a bid of $26.84 and a call 2008-5-30 at $26.00. The market appears convinced that it will make it to the softMaturity 2013-7-30 at $25.00 to yield 3.42% and who knows? Maybe it’s right. The issue pays $1.175 and the call premium declines by $0.25 annually. |
| BNA.PR.C | SplitShare | 97,100 | Recent New Issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.51% based on a bid of $24.68 and a hardMaturity 2019-01-10 at $25.00. I confess to some surprise that this isn’t priced much higher. |
| ACO.PR.A | OpRet | 50,009 | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 2.04% based on a bid of $27.91 and a call 2008-12-31 at $26.00. It may make it to its softMaturity 2011-11-30 at $25.00, to yield 3.32% … it pays $1.4375, but the call premium declines by $0.50 p.a. |
| SLF.PR.D | PerpetualDiscount | 29,771 | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.53% based on a bid of $24.67 and a limitMaturity. |
| CM.PR.H | PerpetualPremium | 27,560 | Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.36% based on a bid of $25.66 and a call 2014-4-29 at $25.00. |
There were six other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.
5Banc Split Inc. has announced (via CCN Matthews) that:
it has completed the issuance of an additional 100,000 Class B Capital Shares (the “Capital Shares”) and 100,000 Class B Preferred Shares (the “Preferred Shares”) at prices of $10.00 per Capital Share and $10.00 per Preferred Share pursuant to the exercise of the over-allotment option granted to the Company’s agents in its recently completed offering of Capital Shares and Preferred Shares. All together, the Company has raised total gross proceeds of $282 million under the offering.
The FBS.PR.B new issue closed on December 15. This is good news. Always nice to see these things get a little more liquid.
Claymore has filed a preliminary prospectus on SEDAR date January 8, 2007, for the “Claymore S&P CDN Preferred Share ETF”.
The Claymore S&P CDN Preferred Share ETF has been designed to replicate the performance of the S&P CDN Preferred Share Index, net of expenses. The investment strategy of the Claymore S&P CDN Preferred Share ETF is to invest in and hold the Constituent Securities of the S&P CDN Preferred Share Index in the same proportion as they are reflected in the S&P CDN Preferred Share Index.
The preliminary prospectus goes on to advise that
The S&P CDN Preferred Share Index is designed to serve the investment community’s need for an investable benchmark representing the Canadian preferred share market. The S&P CDN Preferred Share Index measures the performance of a selected group of preferred shares listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The index is comprised of preferred shares issued by Canadian entities that meet critera relating to minimum size, liquidity, exchange listing and time to maturity determined by Standard & Poor’s
…
The constituents of the S&P CDN Preferred Share Index™ are available on the Claymore website at www.claymoreinvestments.ca and on the S&P website at www.standardandpoors.com
The referenced list of constituents is not yet available, but this is very interesting.
Hat tip to Financial Webring Forum for bringing this to my attention.
| Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30 | |||||||
| Index | Mean Current Yield (at bid) | Mean YTW | Mean Average Trading Value | Mean Mod Dur (YTW) | Issues | Day’s Perf. | Index Value |
| Ratchet | 4.09% | 4.10% | 26,170 | 17.25 | 1 | -0.0403% | 1,028.4 |
| Fixed-Floater | 4.78% | 3.44% | 82,080 | 10.14 | 7 | -0.0436% | 1,040.3 |
| Floater | 4.57% | -22.41% | 65,513 | 8.23 | 4 | -0.0784% | 1,041.3 |
| Op. Retract | 4.67% | 2.02% | 82,205 | 2.04 | 17 | -0.0932% | 1,032.3 |
| Split-Share | 5.06% | 1.07% | 403,351 | 2.86 | 11 | -0.1108% | 1,043.4 |
| Interest Bearing | 6.69% | 5.49% | 74,638 | 2.66 | 6 | +0.1522% | 1,036.7 |
| Perpetual-Premium | 5.02% | 3.77% | 252,058 | 4.91 | 55 | -0.0934% | 1,052.5 |
| Perpetual-Discount | 4.51% | 4.51% | 792,398 | 16.35 | 3 | +0.0673% | 1,055.6 |
| Major Price Changes | |||
| Issue | Index | Change | Notes |
| There were no index-included issues with major price changes today. | |||
| Volume Highlights | |||
| Issue | Index | Volume | Notes |
| GWO.PR.I | PerpetualDiscount | 313,859 | Nesbitt crossed 100,000 at $24.90. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.55% based on a bid of $24.87 and a limitMaturity |
| AL.PR.F | Floater | 172,800 | Global crossed 86,000 at $25.77 for cash, then 86,000 at 25.48 for regular settlement. The issue went exDividend today for $0.28125. |
| BAM.PR.K | Floater | 100,700 | Scotia crossed 100,000 at 24.70. |
| PWF.PR.J | OpRet | 80,932 | Desjardins crossed 80,000 at 26.86. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 2.23% based on a bid of $26.75 and a call 2008-5-30 at $26.00. Obviously, there are some willing to bet that it will last until its softMaturity 2013-7-30 at $25.0. Pays only 1.175, with a 0.25 annual decline in redemption premium, so they might be right. Maybe. |
| BNA.PR.C | SplitShare | 72,300 | Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.47%, based on a bid of $24.76 and a hardMaturity 2019-1-10 at $25.00. That’s basically even with the recent perpetual issues! |
There were nine other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.
I regret to say that indices will not be updated tonight, although the HIMIPref™ database is fully up-to-date.
What with putting the finishing touches to an article for the February issue of Canadian Moneysaver and … and and AND looking at some very interesting results for yet another measure of yield … I just ran out of time.
And I’m hungry.
| Major Price Changes | |||
| Issue | Index | Change | Notes |
| There were no index-included issues with major price changes today. | |||
| Volume Highlights | |||
| Issue | Index | Volume | Notes |
| BNA.PR.C | SplitShare | 798,550 | New issue settled today |
| CM.PR.I | PerpetualPremium | 224,124 | TD posted the last trade, a cross of 68,300 at $25.40. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.53% based on a bid of $25.30 and a call 2016-3-1 at $25.00. Since the YTW exceeds the issue yield of the Royal, Scotia and BMO new issues, as well as having a certain amount of interest rate protection due to its higher coupon, some may conclude that this old issue is more attractive than the new ones. The volume indicates that, perhaps, many have done just that. I’m not one of them, but then, I’m a capital-gains fan. An equal number of shares were sold, of course, but the price was up today, at the issue gained 0.3172% (bid/bid). |
| SLF.PR.B | PerpetualPremium | 224,124 | TD crossed 73,500 at 25.90. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.33% based on a bid of $25.85 and a call at $25.00 2014-10-30. I say it’s expensive, but disagreement makes a market! |
| RY.PR.D | PerpetualPremium | 94,560 | Nesbitt bought 21,500 from Scotia in the day’s last trade, at $25.05. It closed at 25.02-05 … basically, within transaction costs of the virtually identical new issue. |
| TD.PR.M | OpRet | 61,600 | Scotia crossed 50,300 at 27.18 in the day’s last trade. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 2.41% based on a bid of $27.21 and a call 2009-05-30 at $26.00. The premium declines $0.25 p.a. and the issue pays $1.175 … so who knows? It might make it to the softMaturity 2013-10-30 at $25.00, to yield 3.22%. Even the latter figure doesn’t beat bonds by much … bond-equivalent 4.51%, when seven-year bank paper yields about 4.35% … pre-tax! A lot of the stuff out there is high-coupon, no good for taxable clients. |
There were twelve other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.
Update
| Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30 | |||||||
| Index | Mean Current Yield (at bid) | Mean YTW | Mean Average Trading Value | Mean Mod Dur (YTW) | Issues | Day’s Perf. | Index Value |
| Ratchet | 4.09% | 4.10% | 27,045 | 17.24 | 1 | +0.0806% | 1,028.8 |
| Fixed-Floater | 4.77% | 3.40% | 82,533 | 10.12 | 7 | -0.0110% | 1,040.7 |
| Floater | 4.57% | -22.39% | 64,560 | 8.25 | 4 | -0.0490% | 1,042.1 |
| Op. Retract | 4.67% | 1.86% | 82,649 | 2.04 | 17 | +0.0923% | 1,033.3 |
| Split-Share | 5.05% | +0.58% | 403,757 | 2.86 | 11 | -0.1249% | 1,044.5 |
| Interest Bearing | 6.70% | 5.47% | 75,125 | 2.66 | 6 | -0.0192% | 1,035.2 |
| Perpetual-Premium | 5.01% | 3.62% | 256,821 | 5.04 | 55 | -0.0590% | 1,053.5 |
| Perpetual-Discount | 4.51% | 4.53% | 780,073 | 16.35 | 3 | -0.1075% | 1,054.9 |
I was surprised at the hostile reception accorded BNA.PR.C, the new issue that settled today after being announced December 20.
It traded in a fairly narrow range, 24.70-85, on heavy volume of 798,550 shares. The closing quotation was 24.74-78, 10×10.
More later.
Much later, more: I’ve uploaded the Split-Share sub-Index Portfolio Evaluation. Interested readers should be able to tell with a glance at the “Yield-to-Worst” column (and a peek at the “Modified Duration – Yield to Worst” column) that I do have some basis for considering this issue undervalued!
The Royal Bank decided to join BMO and Scotia in issuing a new 4.5% Perpetual this week.
This one is for 10-million shares ($250-million), with an anticipated settlement date of January 19. It’s designated “Non-Cumulative First Preferred Shares, Series AE” and is a bought deal.
The redemption schedule is:
| Redemption Schedule, RY Series AE | ||
| From | To | Price |
| 2012-2-24 | 2013-2-23 | $26.00 |
| 2013-2-24 | 2014-2-23 | $25.75 |
| 2014-2-24 | 2015-2-23 | $25.50 |
| 2015-2-24 | 2016-2-23 | $25.25 |
| 2016-2-24 | INFINITE DATE | $25.00 |
More later.
As noted on the January 9, 2007 Market Action report, the mean-yield-to-worst on the Split Share index has now gone negative.
This is due to the exceptional performance of DIV.PR.A, which had a stellar bid/bid return today of +1.2128%, despite the fact that it is currently callable at prices well below its current quotation. Will the market never learn?
Even after the recent call for redemption of the CVF.PR.A shares (under the same management as DIV.PR.A), people still do these things. If I thought that they were knowingly taking the risk, having explicitly taken a view on the likelihood of redemtption, it wouldn’t bother me so much … but that’s not what I think and I am bothered.
A portfolio evaluation of the split-share index as of today is available here.