Structure, potential advantages, and risks in the leveraged loan asset class.
What is a CLO?
Collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) are actively managed investment products comprised of a diversified pool of leveraged loans that generate cash flow as they are repaid. CLOs allow investors to access the leveraged loan asset class in an efficient and structured way.
The leveraged loan asset class has grown tremendously, resulting in increased liquidity and institutional scale over the last two decades. Once considered a niche, the asset class has grown to over $1 trillion, now on par with high-yield bonds.
Put simply, CLOs are entities that purchase hundreds of leveraged loans made to non-investment-grade corporate borrowers across diverse industries. Leveraged loans are floating-rate loans, which typically produce higher income in higher interest rate environments compared to fixed-rate loans or high-yield bonds. They are typically the most senior security in a corporate borrower’s capital structure. Therefore, they are entitled to be paid back before any high-yield bonds or common equity of the company in the event of bankruptcy or default. These loans are usually assigned ratings by credit agencies and secured by the company’s assets (inventory, real estate, property, and equipment). Historically, they have had higher recovery rates compared to unsecured loans and highyield bonds.
As borrowers pay the interest (and eventually, the original borrowed amount) on their loans, these cash flows go to the CLOs that own the loans. The CLOs then redistribute the cash flows to their investors according to a specific schedule of payments, predetermined by the structure of the CLO.
CLOs bundle corporate leveraged loans into structures that are divided into tranches (slices), or layers of risk, and sold to investors depending on their differing risk-return objectives. Unique features of the structure are summarized below:
CLOs allow investors to access the leveraged loan asset class in an efficient and targeted way, offering a wide array of securities across the risk spectrum.
CLOs typically offer higher yields than comparably rated government and corporate bonds. Further, the floating interest rate payments (a spread above a benchmark rate) provide higher income in rising interest rate environments compared to fixed-rate instruments.
CLOs employ a variety of mechanisms to limit, detect, and correct any deterioration of underlying loans. Moreover, a typical CLO holds over 200 individual leveraged loans that are spread across many different industries. This high level of diversification helps mitigate the default risk of any single company or industry. In short, CLOs are but another tool for diversified return enhancement.
Like any investment strategy, CLOs come with some risks, including:
This information is based on the views of, and provided by, SEI Investments Management Corporation (SIMC), a registered investment adviser and wholly owned subsidiary of SEI Investments Company. This information should not be relied upon by the reader as research or investment advice or recommendations (unless SIMC has otherwise separately entered into a written agreement for the provision of investment advice regarding the subject matter of this material).