FYI: When Petroleo Brasileiro SA sold 100-year bonds in June, the move was largely seen as a sign the corruption-tainted oil producer had put the worst of its problems behind it.
For investors like Pacific Investment Management Co., Fidelity Management & Research Co. and Capital Group Inc. -- the three biggest holders of the securities -- that turned out to be a costly miscalculation. Since the $2.5 billion offering, the bonds have tumbled 15 percent. That’s four times the average loss for emerging-market company debt.
Regards,
Ted
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-09-14/pimco-fidelity-stung-by-collapse-of-petrobras-s-100-year-bond?cmpid=yhoo
Comments
"Isn't that company in trouble as part of the country's larger political scandal?"
"Yeah, but they're issuing a ONE HUNDRED YEAR bond! That MUST mean they're okay!"
"Oooh, okay, lets buy a s-ton!"
Cut to a few months later....
"Hey, why did Brazil just get downgraded to junk? Gee, is that bad for the 100-year Petrobras bonds we bought?"
Seriously, who's buying 100 year bonds of anything these days, especially a company that has been an incredible mess for a while now.
Yep - Sounds insane. ... I suspect perhaps insurance companies and some pension funds might find 100-year bonds of use in managing their long-term obligations and risks.
Also, possibly a hedging tool for some bond fund managers in extremely limited amounts (I'm thinking of something like 1% of total portfolio.)
To me, the 100-year bond sounds more like a derivative instrument than a real bond. Its risk/rewards are highly dependent on a whole host of unknowns.
Anyway, you make a bunch of bets on 9% bonds, most work out, a few don't, and you've got a nice return for a bond fund.
I don't own PIMIX, because I don't want any excitement in my bond fund, but those guys ain't dumb and have done well for their investors.