Corporate Credit: How to Understand the Capital Structure
A corporate bond’s position in the capital structure is an important determinant of its risk and return. Seniority helps determine repayment priority in the event of a default, directly influencing the bond’s risk, pricing and investment return. As such, understanding the capital structure is fundamental to assessing the credit risk embedded in a corporate bond.
What the scale of seniority means for investors
The order of repayment in a default scenario is central to investor outcomes. Generally, the higher a bond sits in the capital structure, the lower the loss in the event of a default. At the top of the hierarchy is senior secured debt, which has the highest priority and, consequently, is first in line for repayment. Below this sit senior unsecured bonds, followed by subordinated and hybrid debt. Equity ranks lowest in the capital structure and typically receives no recovery in a default scenario.
Beyond recovery outcomes, the capital structure can provide valuable insight into a company’s leverage and refinancing needs. By assessing the amount of debt outstanding, its maturity profile, and its ranking, investors can better understand the issuer’s cash flow coverage, refinancing pressures, and probability of default.
How the capital structure shapes risk and pricing
A corporate bond’s yield and price are closely tied to its position in the capital structure. Lower ranking debt typically compensates investors for greater potential losses through wider credit spreads and higher yields.
The telecoms sector, where issuers often have debt across the full seniority spectrum, illustrates how capital structure influences risk and pricing.
Positioning
- Senior secured bonds sit at the top of the capital structure and are generally repaid first. They are typically backed by tangible assets such as network infrastructure, fibre systems, towers or other physical assets. Maturities are often relatively short – commonly around five to seven years.
- Hybrid bonds sit much lower in the capital structure. They combine features of debt and equity, are not backed by collateral, and typically have very long maturities, sometimes extending to perpetual structures.
Risk Profiles
- Senior secured debt generally carries a lower risk of full capital loss, reflecting historically higher recovery rates. In the event of a bond restructuring – where a company is no longer able to meet its debt obligations – bondholders can enforce claims against hard assets or cash flows.
- Hybrid bonds can absorb losses earlier in stress scenarios, meaning the impact on investors will likely be more severe. Issuers can defer coupon payments and failure to redeem at the first call date is relatively common.
Pricing and Yield
- Senior secured debt typically trades at tighter credit spreads as investors are compensated primarily for liquidity and refinancing risk rather than default risk. A large European telecoms company, for example, may typically trade at a spread of around 80 to 150 basis points.
- Hybrid bonds offer substantially higher yields – sometimes up to 500 basis points above senior secured debt – to compensate investors for their subordinated position in the capital structure, coupon-deferral risk, and extension risk (the risk that a bond remains outstanding for longer than anticipated). Longer duration and volatility also contribute to wider pricing.
Why capital structures can change over time
Capital structures are not static and can change quickly and materially, making ongoing monitoring essential. For example:
- New issuance: Unsecured or subordinated bondholders could be subordinated further if a company issues new senior secured debt. This often occurs during leveraged buyouts (LBOs) when additional layers of higher-ranking debt are introduced, diluting existing creditors and increasing refinancing risk.
- Asset sales or changes in collateral: If a company sells assets, ring-fences subsidiaries, or pledges collateral to new lenders, bondholders across the capital structure can be negatively affected.
- Restructuring or bankruptcy: In more severe cases, restructuring or bankruptcy could lead to a full overhaul of the capital structure. Outcomes may include debt-for-equity swaps, reductions in principal (‘haircuts’), maturity extensions, or the issuance of new financing that ranks above the existing senior secured debt, all of which can significantly alter recovery prospects for different creditor classes.
Understanding a company’s debt capital structure is vital, as it shows how risk is distributed across its liabilities. Even if a portfolio appears diversified, investors need to be careful to avoid exposing themselves unwittingly to concentrated subordination risk. A clear understanding of the hierarchy of claims, and how it may evolve over time, is critical to assessing true credit exposure and potential return.