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Maturity wall looms large for Europe's riskiest leveraged loans

Borrowers in Europe continue to face a significant debt maturity wall over the next two-to-three years, despite having addressed a number of looming maturities through refinancings and amend-to-extend exercises over the last six months.

At the end of the first quarter, companies with loans outstanding in the Morningstar European Leveraged Loan Index (ELLI) faced nearly €72 billion of debt coming due within the next three years, and nearly €27 billion in the next two years —  the highest figures on both these measures for five years.



Of the amount due before the end of 2024 (within two years), nearly 68% of the loan amounts outstanding fall into the B-minus rated or lower category, while 50% of loans by amount are rated CCC+ or lower, according to LCD. Similarly, for those maturities coming due before the end of 2025 (within three years), 57% have a rating of B-minus or lower. The share is smaller for those credits rated CCC+ or lower, at 28% — as those borrowers are usually facing the most near-term refinancing risks.  

Time check
The average time to maturity for loans in the ELLI currently stands at 4.14 years, which is the shortest monthly reading since September 2013, while the ELLI's maturity pressure currently peaks in 2028. Despite the large amount of debt falling due in the next three years compared to historical periods, work has already been done by borrowers to address maturities, and — compared with end-December 2021 — loans maturing in 2023 have been reduced by 46%, and 2024 maturities trimmed by 33%. Since the end of last year, the 2023 maturities have declined by 14% and the 2024 maturities by 28%, whereas the 2028 maturities increased by 7%.


Looking at supply type, refinancings in the European leveraged loan market accounted for 64% of institutional new-issue volume in the fourth quarter of 2022, the such highest quarterly percentage since 2Q13. In the first quarter of this year the same refinancing measure fell to 41% (the second-highest quarterly percentage since 4Q19), however new-issue volume has generally been subdued compared to prior years, due to the economic uncertainty generated by factors such as rising interest rates and war in Ukraine.

The looming maturities come as the downgrade ratio (the ratio of downgrades to upgrades for leveraged loans in the ELLI) ticked up to 3.8x at the end of March (on a rolling three-month basis), as downgrades outnumbered upgrades — up from 2.8x at the end of February, and as low as 0.56x back in February last year. Apart from the three months to the end of October 2022, when the ratio reached 4.5x, this is the highest this measure has been since the autumn of 2020.