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  • The bonds of Household International are well oversold, according to sell- and buy-side analysts, but the same three researchers are split on Capital One's bonds, with the buy-siders recommending their portfolio managers steer clear of the credit, as it is too risky. Van Hesser, high-grade analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston, believes fears of slower-than-expected GDP growth have caused spreads to widen on Household and Capital One. However, he argues that they are cheap despite the 2-3% growth scenario forecast by CSFB economists.
  • David Teolis has joined Forest Investment Management, a hedge-fund based in Old Greenwich, Conn., as a portfolio manager for the firm's newly developing distressed business. He will also co-manage the fund's capital structure arbitrage program, says Doug Cramer, a firm spokesman to whom Teolis referred calls. Teolis joins from Nomura Asset Management. Nomura officials could not be reached.
  • None of the traders interviewed by BondWeek reported a single high-yield bond that was better on the week as of Thursday afternoon. Damage was relatively contained in sectors such as gaming, healthcare, chemicals and industrials. Holders of a certain $30 billion telecom issuer were not so lucky.
  • J.P. Morgan and Salomon Smith Barney quickly raised the $200 million "B" tranche for Swift & Co., the name given to the ConAgra Foods beef and pork processing business acquired by Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst. Officials at the banks did not return calls by press time, but a buysider said the deal blew out.
  • At least three high-yield strategists are forecasting positive returns for the remainder of the year, in spite of last Wednesday's WorldCom-related sell-off, which caused returns of -4.23%--the worst single-day for returns in high-yield history, according to Mike Taylor, high-yield strategist at Bear Stearns. The month of June was also the worst on record, according to the Merrill Lynch High-Yield Master II, which was down 7.16% through last Wednesday.
  • Brian McManus, head of collateralized debt obligation research at Merrill Lynch, and a frequent Insitutional Investor Fixed Income All-America Research Team winner, has retired to Miami. Dan Castro, the asset-backed securities research chief, says he is filling in for McManus. He says there are no immediate plans to replace him. Castro adds that McManus, 44, likes to travel and owns property in Eastern Europe and Nicaragua. At Merrill, he reported to Marty Fridson, managing director and chief high-yield strategist. Fridson did not return calls. McManus did not reply to e-mail messages.
  • Greg Zappin, formerly a director of telecom research at Standard & Poor's, has joined Delaware Investment Advisors in Philadelphia, according to a spokeswoman at Delaware. Zappin will work as an analyst focusing on junk and high-grade credits primarily in the consumer products, retail and industrial sectors. He reports to Ward Tatge, senior v.p. and director of fixed-income research. The position is new as Delaware was looking to beef up its research group. No further hires are planned.
  • Favorable industry dynamics, including reimbursement levels that have bounced back from the dark years of the Balanced Budget Act, support Community Health Systems' $1.25 billion senior secured credit facility. "Reimbursement is back in line with traditional levels and third-party payor rates remain favorable," said Luke Coha, analyst at Fitch Ratings. Community Health, a rural hospital management company, is refinancing its credit facility to improve interest expenses and extend maturities. The new credit, which consists of an eight-year, $800 million "B" loan and a six-year, $450 million revolver, has been assigned a BB rating by Fitch.
  • Active trading of names in the workout process and a drive for amendments that save a credit from nonperformance can impede a company's progress towards workout salvation, according to panelists at the Distressed Debt Investing 2002 conference held in New York last week. In a session dubbed "Sell-Side Perspective: Knowing When to Hold, Draw or Fold," players pulled apart the negative impact secondary bank loan trading can have on a smooth workout process. Trading activity that enlarges the circle of people working out the credit and amendments that enable some institutional players to keep the credit are the biggest things that gum up the works or workouts.
  • Brian McManus, head of collateralized debt obligation research at Merrill Lynch, and a frequent Institutional Investor Fixed-Income All-America Research Team winner, has retired to Miami, according to sister publication BondWeek. Dan Castro, the asset-backed securities research chief, said he is filling in for McManus as there are no immediate plans to replace him. He added that McManus, 44, likes to travel and owns property in Eastern Europe and Nicaragua.
  • More than $50 million of Silgan Holdings traded around the 100 1/2 level last week. Traders said the food packaging company is a well-known credit that investors are comfortable with. When a shockwave like WorldCom goes through the market, investors retreat to names they are comfortable with--names with no news, one dealer explained, adding that credits like this just bounce along and remain untouched. At the end of last week, the paper was quoted in the 100 1/4 to 100 3/4 range.
  • Fleming Companies received strong support from the institutional segment of the bank loan market as it came to market last month with a bank, bond and equity financing package. According toMatt Hildreth, treasurer, equity and bond investors turned colder as the offerings were proceeding. "Safeway missed their earnings the day before the equity offering, so [proceeds there] were a little less than planned," Hildreth said. "We also got the bonds done, but at the high end of price talk as the market backed up a little."