Re your comment that amzn is now out of it......
IN THE LAST two months, the investment sector that made Mike Milken famous - and eventually infamous - back in the 1980s has been flattened in one of the more brutal short-term routs of "high yield debt" in the 1990s. Indeed, financier George Soros said Tuesday that the "junk-bond market has already shut down" as a global credit crunch restricts the flow of funds and affects "the availability of credit in the domestic economy." Since the beginning of May, corporate bonds tracked by Lehman Bros. Inc., the Wall Street investment firm, have climbed an average of 3.41 percent in value. But during that same period, so-called junk bonds (those with less than investment grade ratings) tracked by Lehman have fallen by more than 4.31 percent through Aug. 31st. What's more, further and steeper declines are likely to have been registered in Lehman's normally slow-moving Index in the two weeks since then. In this universe of shaky businesses, Amazon.com has a special problem.
That in turn is bad news for investors - institutions and individuals alike - who've placed bets on the surprising number of junk offerings that came pouring onto the market from Internet start-up companies as the market approached its top earlier this year. Among the offerings: junk debt from PSINet Inc., Level Three Communications Inc. and Verio, Inc. All are involved in developing Internet-related communications systems. AMAZON.COM JUNK HARD HIT Some of the biggest losers of all: the more than a dozen mutual funds that invested in a huge, $530 million junk bond offering of Amazon.com, the online bookseller, back in May. Since then, Amazon's stock has soared by 55 percent in value - and that's including the stock's recent slide from more than $128 back to barely $72. By contrast, holders of the Amazon junk bonds have watched their value shrink by 13.5 percent - this during a time when U.S. Treasuries have risen by more than 7.5 percent. The rout in junk bonds highlights the high risks inherent in low-grade debt securities, which generally tend to perform well - in the aggregate - only during periods of low inflation and improving economics. When the economic landscape clouds over, so do the prospects for junk debt. That's because companies with junk debt in the market tend to have less attractive balance sheet assets, less stable financials, and a more limited ability to generate cash than do investment grade corporations - which is why the issuers have to offer high interest rates to sell them in the first place. In this universe of shaky businesses, Amazon.com has a special problem. Though its balance sheet showed shareholder equity (the excess of assets over liabilities) of $39.4 million as of June 30th, the company's tangible net worth - which is all that fixed income investors really care about (shareholder equity minus goodwill and purchased intangibles) - is actually a negative $13 million. The rout in junk bonds highlights the high risks inherent in low-grade debt securities.
Worse still, with the announcement back in August that Amazon.com will spend $280 million in stock to acquire Junglee Corp. and Sage Enterprises, Inc., the intangibles portion of Amazon's balance sheet will become larger than ever. And that in turn promises further erosion in the price of the Amazon bonds, no matter what happens to the company as a whole. This lack of tangible collateral behind the junk debt helps explain why Amazon had to offer an eye-popping 10.4 percent yield-to-maturity to entice investors to the offering in the first place. In the deal, Amazon's underwriter, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co., sold $530 million worth of 10-year notes at a startling 38.5 percent discount from their face value - meaning that Amazon received (net of fees to the underwriter), less than $320 million from the offering. Of course, come May of 2008, when the notes mature, Amazon will have to pay back all $530 million, which includes the $210 million it never received in the first place.
Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) price change $73.00 unch
Data: Microsoft Investor and S&P Comstock 20 min.delay
Why pay back more than it received? Because that was the only way the notes could be sold at all. Since Amazon.com couldn't afford the cash drain of interest payments on the notes, Morgan Stanley structured the deal to be free of payment (the interest would simply "accrue") for the first five years, with the notes paying 10 percent annually thereafter until maturity. With the steep payment at maturity, Amazon.com has simply pushed off the day of reckoning in the hopes that its business prospects will brighten enough by then to pay off, or refinance, the deal. More than a dozen mutual funds - including ones run by Oppenheimer and IDS - went for this pitch, and as of the latest published data available from Morningstar Inc., the mutual fund research group, they are now sitting with 13.5 percent-plus losses on the bet. If Amazon.com can hang on until the bonds are callable (at a premium) in 2003 - and then decide in fact to call them in (that is, redeem them) - the current holders should make out OK. If not, well, what can one say? Risks like that face nearly all junk bond investors during uncertain economic times. There are almost no sites on the World Wide Web that offer adequate research - including timely market quotes - about corporate bonds, be they investment grade or just junk. But the best of what's available can be found at a premium site at the address www.interquote.com. Visit the site, pay your sign-up fee (the service costs from $29.95 to $69.95 a month, depending on depth of data required), then hunt around for as many of the following as you can find: bonds from ValueJet, Family Restaurants, Pathmark Stores, Musicland Group, Levitz Furniture, Trump Castle Funding, Wicks Lumber, Motels America, Trans World Airlines, Planet Hollywood, Dictaphone Corp., Omnipoint, Speedy Muffler King, Telex, J. Crew and Bally's Total Fitness, to name but a few. In some cases, the issuers on that list are deeply troubled companies. In other cases they're companies that have been in bankruptcy at least once already. Nonetheless, investors bought their bonds betting that they'd come out all right in the end. As of today, it looks to have been a sucker's bet.
from msnbc...... also on the amzn SI thread...
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