Archive for May, 2007

Television Appearance, 2007-5-11, 6pm

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

I will be appearing on BNN’s Stars & Dogs programme at the captioned time.

Sure wish I was the star!

TOC.PR.B Under Credit Review Negative by DBRS

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

DBRS has announced it has:

placed the ratings of The Thomson Corporation (Thomson or the Company) – long-term debt rated A (low), Commercial Paper rated R-1 (low) and Preferred Shares rated Pfd-2 (low) – Under Review with Negative Implications following the Company’s announcement today that it has initiated discussions which are expected to lead to a transaction to acquire Reuters Group PLC (Reuters) in a cash and equity transaction (50%/50%) for roughly $19 billion ($14.09 or £7.05 per Reuters share).

DBRS expects to finalize the ratings of Thomson once its review has been completed, with the final rating expected to remain within the investment-grade range.

The Thomson 7-year bonds, mentioned in the previous post on this issue, have rebounded to +85bp after spiking to +110bp when the rumours started.

Thomson preferreds continue to be rated P-2 with a developing outlook by S&P.

Update : Moodys has joined in:

Moody’s Investors Service placed The Thomson Corporation’s (“Thomson”) A3 senior unsecured ratings on review for possible downgrade following the company’s announcement that it is in merger discussions with Reuters Group PLC (“Reuters”) for a combination of the two businesses for an approximate $19.4 billion purchase price, including assumed debt.

Note that Moodys does not explicitly rate the prefs, just the Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture (and associated shelf), which they currently rate A3 ((P) A3)

Update, 2007-09-14: Moody’s has downgrade the USD debt from A3 to Baa1

Update, 2007-11-15: DBRS has affirmed the preferreds at Pfd-2(low) because:

During the course of the review, Thomson announced that the proceeds from the sale of its Learning division would exceed previously expected levels by more than $1 billion and that these proceeds would be used to reduce the incremental debt taken on by the Company to complete the Reuters acquisition. DBRS now expects net debt-to-EBITDA to increase from just over 2.0 times in 2006 to approximately 2.5 times (pro forma 2007), a range that is within DBRS’s expectations for an A (low) rating.

Malachite Fund : Questions from a Potential Client

Monday, May 7th, 2007

A number of questions regarding the fund were asked on Financial Webring Forum. While that is certainly a great venue for asking questions, I don’t feel comfortable answering them there – so I’ll answer here.

Is Malachite MAPF good alternative (to DPS.UN) for qualified accredited investors? Well, I certainly like to think so! DPS.UN is a closed-end passive fund trading on the TSX with a MER of about 56bp. As far as MAPF is concerned, it is my belief that the preferred share market is sufficiently inefficient that significant gains can be made by trading between issues from time to time. The historical results that the fund has been able to achieve support this view. There can be no guarantee that outperformance will continue, but I think that index +2% (after expenses, before fees) is achievable with a portfolio size much greater than I currently have. With the fee schedule currently in place, net return to unitholders should handsomely exceed the 56-bp-less-than-Index returns expected from a diversified passive fund with a 56bp MER.

What is its MER besides 1% annual fee? Fund expenses have been capped at 50bp, with excess expenses being absorbed by the manager. The fund’s total expenses are sufficiently low that the fund will not have to grow very much before I can stop paying out this money and the rate goes down. Fund expenses are almost entirely due to Audit Fees. Further details are available from the Annual Reports of the fund, which are published on my website.

If its duration is same as 10 year bond, is it safe investment for redemption after 10 years? That depends largely on what you mean by “safe”! It is my opinion that, given the high credit quality of the fund’s investments and their nature, the risk profile of the fund is similar to a corporate bond fund such as iShares CDN Corporate Bond Index Fund (XCB) , with a greater expected after-tax return due to the Dividend Tax Credit and trading based on market inefficiency.

Its returns are better than index since inception. Why is its fund size so small after 5 years? There are a number of hurdles that have to be overcome before the fund can grow in size.

  • Investor disbelief that active trading is possible. Liquidity is a problem in the preferred share marketplace, but can be turned into an opportunity. It is difficult for an investor to place an order of, say, 10,000 shares on the TSX and get filled at a known and reasonable price in a short period of time. Patience is required. Many investors are completely unaware of the existence of the Institutional “Upstairs” Market – every brokerage has a pref trader. Institutions can call and ask him to execute a trade – it then becomes his job to find a counterparty and charge both sides a nickel per share commission (or, sometimes, do the trade out of inventory, like David Berry!). Sometimes you get filled, sometimes you get a partial fill, sometimes you get no fill at all. But the market is there – look at the daily volumes I report as part of the highlights every day! Virtually every cross that I mention happened in this manner.
  • Pre-tax Returns are (generally) lower than on bonds A silly reason, but important. People compare performances based on pre-tax returns.
  • I’m not big enough to be sold through brokers Hymas Investment is not (yet) as big as Investors Group. The brokerage houses will not put MAPF on their permitted list.
  • I might run away with all the money. I hate this reason, but I have to face facts. Anybody who knows me won’t worry about this, but those who don’t will account for this risk and sometimes make it the deciding factor. There’s nothing I can do about it, except offer segregated accounts.
  • I am a lousy salesman People don’t like being told that everything they thought they knew about the preferred share market is wrong. Those who are willing to believe that active management is possible want a somewhat more exciting story than I’m able to tell … they want to hear that my Crystal Ball tells me the direction of interest rates, and my chicken entrails tell me what’s going to happen to the credit ratings of particular companies … not that there are frequent supply-and-demand imbalances in the marketplace and that you can frequently make as much as twenty cents a share by catering to them. I don’t like going out and chit-chatting – what I like best is to work on my analytical systems and keep improving them. I took the view, when I started the firm, that if I was able to deliver three years of outperformance (five at the outside) the fund would sell itself. I was wrong – but I’m learning a lot about how the fund selling business really works.

 

When will passive fund version be available? As soon as I am in a position to offer it. MAPF is small and doesn’t make me any net management fees. That’s OK (if disappointing) – the fund serves as an advertisement for my software, for the consulting side of my business (I offer advice to other firms about preferred shares in particular, fixed-income in general and quantitative systems) and for the possibility that a major fundco will (finally!) put their sales force behind an active preferred share product with my firm as manager. But I don’t need two advertisements, especially if the second one advertises passive management! I’ll start a passive fund as soon as I get committments for investment that will allow me to offer a good product and make a little money on the deal … that would be about $5-million, done for fund expenses + 20bp management fee (which would put the total MER in the 30-35 bp range)

Update & Bump, 2007-05-07 from 2007-2-2: A careful reader commented on this thread and I thought it was an important enough question to be worth a reply in the body of the post. The comment is:

MAPF is a very interesting alternative to DPS.UN or CPD. However there is very high turnover on MAPF, with consequent transaction costs and tax implications. Assuming MAPF outperformance of +2% over index, won’t the 1% to 1.5% fee + transaction costs + c.g. taxes minimize any potential outperformance for segregated fund? Thanks.

OK, there are several parts to this question!

The first has to do with turnover & transaction costs. Yes, MAPF has a very high turnover and proportionately high transaction costs. However, I will note that the performance figures presented are NET of transaction costs – I’m not trying to present returns as if commissions were zero! They’re all right there, embedded in the reported returns.

The current focus on Transaction Costs is, I am convinced, a plot by the banks (who just want to sell plain-vanilla closet-index funds run by plain-vanilla portfolio managers making plain-vanilla salaries … but to sell these funds at a high fee), aided and abetted by the securities commissions staff (very few of whom have ever gotten on the ‘phone and told the dealer “Done” in their lives). Because, in and of itself, Transaction Costs don’t mean squat.

Reporting transaction costs for an investment fund is like reporting “Cost of Pencils” for a Bank. Does the bank spend money on pencils? Yup. Would the bank make more money if it got all its pencils for free? Yup. Does breaking out this figure give you any idea as to whether the bank is wisely using its pencil budget to make (however indirectly) more profit? Um … no.

The philosophy of the fund is the same as my philosophy towards investing: you can make good money selling liquidity. When the price of a particular issue goes – as far as I can tell, to the best of my ability – out of bounds by $0.25, do you really want me to forgo the opportunity to trade on this, because I’ll have to pay $0.10 commission? I don’t think you do, really. The $0.10 is simply a cost of doing business and how good I am at judging the potential for such business will be reflected in my returns net of transaction costs versus the index.

“Tax implications” is a much more reasonable concern, but you must remember that preferred shares are – in terms of investment behaviour – fixed income instruments. They are not equities. Equities can double – octuple – n-tuple, which is why turnover & tax is a much more important factor. It’s a very nice thing to defer punishing amounts of capital gains tax until your estate is wound up. Pref’s ain’t gonna do that. The most optimistic long-term view you can take on a pref – or a bond – is that eventually it will be priced at par, when the company forces you to sell it.

While tax implications are accounted for in HIMIPref™ it’s not a major factor. In simulations, I do see some tax-loss selling (for instance, most parameterizations for simulations will swap the Transcanada issues when they went down to about $35 (from par value $50) in 1999/2000), but not much. The tax implications in the system are mainly: do I sell this today and take a capital gain? Or do I sell it tomorrow and take a dividend? Now that these forms of income are taxed very similarly, even this little finesse isn’t very important any more … I just sell when I think I can make some money!

So that takes care of two things: it is mainly through incurring transaction costs that I am able to make some money in the first place; and long term capital gains on bonds are zero (OK, sometimes a pref gets called at a premium. That’s a minor detail.), so you should be happy – no, thrilled! – to pay lovely capital gains taxes on a consistent basis.

Fees. Yes, fees will reduce your returns relative to no fees but, as with transaction costs, it’s the price of doing business. Note that a passively managed fund (such as DPS and CPD) should not be expected to outperform the index gross of fees and expenses on a long term basis; therefore, your expected long term return is the index less fees and expenses, currently 45-50bp on these products. I’m happy with my past track record of delivering returns that exceed the index net of fees and expenses and spend a lot of time trying to figure out how to continue doing it.

AL.PR.E & AL.PR.F Placed "Under Review – Developing" by DBRS

Monday, May 7th, 2007

In response to Alcoa’s hostile bid for Alcan, DBRS has

placed the ratings of Alcan Inc. (Alcan or the Company) Under Review with Developing Implications … However, the financial profile of New Alcoa would be much more aggressive relative to that of stand-alone Alcan, given the debt incurred to finance the proposed acquisition. DBRS notes that Alcoa’s offer has an allocation of 20% stock and 80% cash. Accordingly, New Alcoa’s pro forma leverage (gross debt-to-capital) would be 64% versus 33% for stand-alone Alcan. Similarly, pro forma cash flow-to-total debt would be at 0.14 times for New Alcoa versus 0.56 times for stand-alone Alcan. DBRS notes that these financial metrics are very aggressive for the currently assigned ratings.

DBRS will continue to monitor the proposed acquisition. In the event that this transaction is completed based on the current structure of Alcoa’s offer, a downgrade in the ratings would likely result due to the aggressive financial profile. However, DBRS notes that the ratings in all likelihood would remain investment grade.

What with the BCE problem and the TOC problem, there soon won’t be any high quality floating rate issues of any description! Then … perhaps … a fund creating high-quality synthetic floaters will attract more attention!

New Issue : EPCOR Power Equity Ltd. 4.85% Perpetuals

Monday, May 7th, 2007

I have been advised of a new issue from EPCOR Power Equity Ltd, 4.85% Perpetuals.

Issue size is 5-million shares = $125-million.

Ratings are P-2(low) by S&P, Pfd-3(high) by DBRS

Settlement is May 25.

As yet I do not have the redemption schedule, so I’ll have to update this later.

Update: The press release states:

The Issuer has also granted the underwriters an over-allotment option, exercisable at any time up to 30 days following closing of the Offering, to acquire an additional 750,000 Series 1 Shares at the issue price of $25.00 per Series 1 Share. If the option is fully exercised, it would increase the total gross proceeds of the Offering to $143.75 million….

The Series 1 Shares will pay cumulative dividends of $1.2125 per share per annum, yielding 4.85% per annum, payable quarterly on the last business day of March, June, September and December of each year. The first quarterly dividend of $0.42305 per share is expected to be paid on September 28, 2007.

The Series 1 Shares will not be redeemable by the Issuer before June 30, 2012. On or after this date, the Series 1 Shares will be redeemable by the Issuer in whole or in part, at the Issuer’s option, on at least 30 and not more than 60 days prior notice.

… but nothing about the schedule of redemption prices.

Update: I am advised that:

The Series 1 Shares are not redeemable by the Corporation before June 30, 2012. On or after June 30, 2012, the Series 1 Shares will be redeemable by the Corporation in whole or in part, at the Corporation’s option, on at least 30 and not more than 60 days prior notice by the payment of the amount in cash per Series 1 share. Such redemption may be made upon payment in cash of the amount of $26.00 per Preferred Share if redeemed during the 12 months commencing June 30, 2012; $25.75 per Preferred Share if redeemed during the 12 months commencing June 30, 2013; $25.50 per Preferred Share if redeemed during the 12 months commencing June 30, 2014; $25.25 per Preferred Share if redeemed during the 12 months commencing June 30, 2015; and, if redeemed on or after June 30, 2016 at a Redemption Price of $25.00 per Series 1 Share plus, in each case, all accrued and unpaid dividends up to but excluding the date fixed for redemption.

Average Volume Calculation for New Issues

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Recently, assiduous reader Drew had some questions about the volume-average calculation of the recent new issue CFS.PR.A.

The HIMIPref summary screen indicates that the average trading volume of CFS.PR.A is 119,000 shares, well in excess of its volume over the recent past. Could you please explain this. I am guessing that higher liquidity is positive for valuation and vice versa. If this guess is correct, what sort of impact would the actual trading volume of CFS have on its valuation score?

…that would require an average trading volume of 10000 shares. Unless my memory is deceiving me again, it does not trade anything like that volume on an average basis. Today’s trading volume of 2000 seems closer to average, if a little high.

To understand the design decisions that have been made, it is necessary to understand the two major uses of volume-average in the HIMIPref™ system (which are fed into the model via averageTradingValue:

  • the averageTradingValue is used to create a liquidityMeasure, that quantifies the dollar value traded vs. other issues. This measure (which is capped) is fed into the yield curve calculation and the yieldCurvePremiumLiquidity is calculated. In other words, it is considered that there is a spread to the curve assigned to the marketplace for liquidity, just as there is a spread assigned for credit ratings and everything else. When the curve gets re-applied to the instrument’s characteristics to determine the curvePrice of the instrument, the dollars-and-cents value of the instrument’s liquidity then becomes part of its valuation.
  • During simulations, it is assumed that a portfolio can sell one-half of the volume-average at the bid price, or buy this quantity at the ask price.

For many years, the first point was moot. I was unable to discern any premium paid in the marketplace for liquidity – every day’s premium was 0.00%, or at at most one or two bp, the effect of mathematical accidents more than anything else. This changed a few years ago. Hesitantly at first, and then with increasing ferocity, the mathematical model started to assign a premium to liquidity which now stands at about 17bp per liquidity unit; the range of values of the liquidity unit varies between -1 and +2. Hence, liquidity has become more important to the marketplace.

Now, what of new issues? When issues are announced, they are valued on a preIssue basis, with the volume-average deemed to be 100,000 shares. This figure is fairly arbitrary – all I can say is that it seems to work pretty well, most of the time. As soon as the the issue starts trading, the volume will decline below this figure after a week (usually!) and the value for volume-average (and hence, the value of the liquidity curvePriceComponent) will decline with it. This will basically take the path of an exponential moving average – see the various links in this post for an explanation.

The trouble with CFS.PR.A is that it turned out to be a ridiculously small issue – only 1,610,000 shares were issued (virtually all to retail, I’ll warrant) – so the 100,000 estimate of average trading volume was very, very high. The daily volume of the issue (see graph) hasn’t been much at all and hence the decay of volume-average has been a relatively smooth curve (graph) that still hasn’t declined to a reasonable estimate of what the volume actually is.

The system works better with issues of normal size and trading patterns, like the recent new issue SLF.PR.E. I have uploaded a graph comparing volume-averages, as well as a graph of the SLF.PR.E daily spot volumes.

So … CFS.PR.A does (as far as I can tell) have a volume-average (and hence a valuation) that is over-estimated by HIMIPref™. That part’s easy. What’s more difficult is deciding what, if anything, to do about it. If I get any ideas, I’ll programme them!

 

May 4, 2007

Friday, May 4th, 2007
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 4.58% 4.59% 43,333 16.28 2 -0.3161% 990.0
Fixed-Floater 5.33% 4.48% 135,556 16.51 6 +0.1191% 970.0
Floater 4.72% -20.46% 73,173 10.96 3 +0.0395% 1,064.3
Op. Retract 4.73% 3.16% 85,916 2.32 17 +0.0848% 1,034.0
Split-Share 4.96% 4.16% 175,793 3.89 12 +0.0203% 1,046.5
Interest Bearing 6.49% 4.87% 61,987 2.24 5 +0.0788% 1,049.2
Perpetual-Premium 5.13% 4.53% 170,664 5.25 48 +0.0360% 1,050.2
Perpetual-Discount 4.61% 4.63% 790,950 16.15 18 -0.0460% 1,053.8
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BCE.PR.I FixFloat -1.3072% Exchange/Reset date is 2011-8-1 (Exchanges with series ‘AJ’, not issued); until then pays 4.65% of par. Good volume today of 17,292 shares in a range of 22.90-00, so it seems a little unfair that it was down, closing at 22.65-00, 22×14.
WN.PR.E PerpetualDiscount -1.0309% Downgraded yesterday by S&P. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.99% based on a bid of 24.00 and a limitMaturity. Still the lowest-yielding Weston Perpetual – see the comparables.
WN.PR.D PerpetualPremium +1.0121% Downgraded yesterday by S&P … what, me worry? Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.26% based on a bid of 24.95 and a limitMaturity.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
TOC.PR.B Scraps (would be Floater, but there are volume concerns) 530,500 Presumably due to the rumours of a bid for Reuters. This young feller-me-lad pays 70% of Canadian Prime on par value, and closed today up a bit, at 25.30-54, 3×2. Callable any time at $25.00.
FBS.PR.B SplitShare 530,500 What’s a mature split-share doing with this kind of volume? Better ask Nesbitt, they crossed 500,000 at 10.13. Callable every December 15 at $10, until maturity at $10.00 2011-12-15 … the pre-tax bid-YTW is 2.78% based on a bid of 10.20 and a call 2008-1-14 (heh … the inclusion in the programming of maturityNoticePeriod leads to imprecision on occasion. Oh, well, sue me …) at $10.00. The buyer is obviously hoping that the shares (or at least a significant fraction thereof) will survive until the hardMaturity 2011-12-15, to have yielded 4.45%. And, mind you, the big buyer only paid 10.13 for them (plus commission!), so it’s not as bad as it looks.
BNS.PR.L PerpetualPremium 118,645 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.53% based on a bid of 24.92 and a limitMaturity.
CM.PR.H PerpetualPremium 112,840 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.37% based on a bid of 25.70 and a call 2014-4-29 at 25.00.
RY.PR.G PerpetualDiscount 110,700 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.61% based on a bid of 24.51 and a limitMaturity.
SLF.PR.A PerpetualPremium 58,305 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.44% based on a bid of 25.61 and a call 2014-4-30 at 25.00.

There were fifteen other $25-equivalent index-included issues trading over 10,000 shares today.

TOC.PR.B the Next Credit Worry?

Friday, May 4th, 2007

I don’t think my regular readers will be surprised if I mention that I have something of a philosophical disdain for floating rate issues. They trade with lower yields (generally!) than their fixed-rate cousins and there’s not really a lot of reason for that. Sure, there is a certain amount of interest rate protection built into the concept of a floating rate, which is very nice to have – but, as I pointed out in an article last August one very big reason why short rates are lower than long rates is credit risk … and with a floating rate preferred share, you have perpetual credit risk.

So anyway, Reuters announced today:

it has received a preliminary approach from a third party which may or may not lead to an offer being made for Reuters. There is no certainty an offer will be made or necessary approvals, including those required under Reuters constitution, will be received.

It has been mooted that the suitor is Thomson:

News and financial data provider Reuters said it had received a takeover approach from an unidentified bidder, sending its shares up almost a third, with Canadian publisher Thomson widely touted as the suitor.

Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper reported on its Web site on Friday that Thomson was in talks to buy London-based Reuters, citing sources close to both companies.

Reuters and Thomson both declined to comment.

There is more speculation on Bloomberg.

Thomson has some CAD denominated bonds outstanding, maturing in 2014. I have been advised that the spread on these bonds has moved from +48bp to +110bp, which is a hell of a move for a seven year bond. Let’s see … modified duration is, oh, call it 6 years, yield change 62bp, 6×0.62 = 3.72 … that’s a 3.7% price change on the bond. And I don’t mean the price went up! It would appear that the bond market – or, at the very least, a few trigger-happy participants thereof – are concerned about the financing of the deal.

The preferreds will be on the volume charts for today’s market action report! 245,800 shares traded, including a block of 41,800 at 25.50 crossed by National Bank; 96,300 crossed by Scotia at the same price; and another 103,700 crossed by Scotia at the same price again.

TOC.PR.B has been around since the beginning of time, drifting in and out of the HIMI Preferred Indices as the volume waxes and wanes. The last change was removal at the end of February.

Update, 2007-05-07: Thomson has issued a press release:

The Thomson Corporation (NYSE: TOC; TSX:TOC) confirmed today that it has made a preliminary approach to the Board of Directors of Reuters Group Plc. that may or may not lead to an offer being made for Reuters.

A further announcement will be made in due course.

BNA.PR.A, BNA.PR.B, BNA.PR.C Downgraded by DBRS

Friday, May 4th, 2007

DBRS has announced:

has downgraded the rating of BAM Split Corp. (the Company) to Pfd-2 (low) from Pfd-2, with a Stable trend, with respect to the 6.25% Class A Preferred Shares; the 4.95% Class AA Preferred Shares, Series 1; and the 4.35% Class AA Preferred Shares, Series 3 (collectively, the Preference Shares).

The entire portfolio (the Portfolio) owned by the Company is composed solely of Class A Limited Voting Shares of Brookfield Asset Management Inc. The downgrade reflects DBRS’s revisions to its rating approach for single name split share issuers. Pursuant to DBRS’s publication of January 31, 2007 (Split Share Issuers: A Performance Overview), the rating assigned for a preferred share issued by a single name split share company will generally be limited to the rating applicable to the corporate preferred shares related to those shares in the supporting Portfolio, unless there are structural or other features built into the split share issuer which serve to further enhance its credit quality. Brookfield Asset Management Inc.’s Preferred Shares are currently rated Pfd-2 (low) with a Stable trend by DBRS.

Notwithstanding the rating adjustment, the Portfolio has continued to perform well, having appreciated 11% since January 31, 2007. The current downside protection of over 77% provides significant capital protection to the holders of the Preference Shares. The Portfolio generates a sufficient yield (after expenses) to provide 1.21 coverage times over the distribution of dividends to the Preference Shares. If necessary, the Company may write covered calls or sell a portion of the Portfolio to fund the dividend on the Preference Shares.

So in other words, the rating is limited by the rating on the underlying securities, in the absence of mitigating factors. The publication they are referring is on their site.

The announcement does not appear to be related to BAM’s asset spin-off … but you never know!

BNA.PR.C is a recent new issue. The company changed its name last year, when the ticker symbol of the underlying shares changed from BNN to BAM.

Weston Comparables

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

OK, so now that Weston has been downgraded by S&P (with DBRS still considering the possibility) and now that the shares have started to get hit, I thought it would be fun to look at some comparables:

Pfd-3 [high/-/low] (DBRS) Fixed-Rate Perpetuals
Issue DBRS Rating S&P Rating Coupon Quote, 5/3 Pre-tax bid-YTW YTW Mod Dur YTW Pseudo-Convexity
FAL.PR.H Pfd-3 (high) P-2(low)  1.625  25.61-63 4.58%  0.95  -4.82 
LB.PR.E Pfd-3 P-3(high)  1.3125  25.25-33 5.22%  5.23  -59.93 
FTS.PR.F Pfd-3 (high) P-2(low) Watch Positive  1.225 25.43-51  4.63%  7.07  -1.93 
LB.PR.D Pfd-3 P-3(high) 1.50 26.11-19  4.91%  1.60  -547.3 
WN.PR.A Pfd-2 (low) CW-Negative P-3(high) 1.45 25.30-44  5.71%  3.29  -67.2 
WN.PR.C Pfd-2 (low) CW-Negative P-3(high) 1.30 24.91-00  5.27%  15.00  -30.26 
WN.PR.D Pfd-2 (low) CW-Negative P-3(high) 1.30 24.70-07  5.32%  14.92  -9.99 
WN.PR.E Pfd-2 (low) CW-Negative P-3(high) 1.1875 24.25-44  4.94%  15.57  1.15 

Not many comparables, eh?