How the Fed Saved Structured Note Issuance

 | Jul 25, 2023 21:22

There’s an aspect of the higher interest rate structure we are now blessed/cursed with that hasn’t gotten as much airplay, but which is great news for dealer desks and also a good thing for institutional investors (and some high net worth individual investors). And that is the new energy that the higher rates will inject into private note structured product.

A classic structured note is typically designed so that the buyer is guaranteed to get his money back, plus the possibility of some more-attractive payout. So, for example: I might issue a note that will pay you 60% of the total gain in the S&P 500 over the next 5 years – but if the S&P is lower in 5 years, you still get your money back. That’s a pretty simple version, but the embedded bet can be as exotic as you like (and from the standpoint of the dealer, the more exotic, the better because the harder it will be for you to price it and the more profit, therefore, they can book on it).

When I was tasked with issuing notes from the Natixis Securities (North America) shelf, for example, we offered a 10-year note that redeemed at either the total rise in the CPI over those 10 years or the average return of the S&P, Nikkei, and Euro Stoxx 50, or par (100%), if both of the other two possibilities were negative.

I recall another dealer in 2007 or 2008 was selling a 1-year note that had a huge coupon as long as inflation was between, say, -1% and +3%, but zero otherwise. But you still got your money back. You could structure something with knock-out options, average-price or best-of or lookback options – on interest rates, equities, commodities…even an option on a hedge fund. I want 20% of the latest global macro fund’s upside but with a guaranteed downside.

The key ingredient to all of these things, though, is interest rates – and when interest rates are very low, it is difficult to make a structured note look attractive.

Once upon a time, like back at Bankers Trust in the mid-1990s, the way a structured note was created was to make a special purpose trust that held two securities: a zero-coupon Treasury bond with a maturity equal to the note’s maturity and ‘something else’ – usually an option. The investor would invest $100. The dealer would spend $80 on the zero coupon bond…which, since it matures at par, guarantees the principal…and has $20 left over to spend on anything else that couldn’t decline below zero. Classically, this is an option, so the trust would look like this: