Beyond The Obvious

The effects of the geopolitical climate over the past few months have rippled out across Debt Capital Markets. 

From the conflict in the Middle East and its impact on global oil prices, to questions around the upcoming midterm elections, navigating the current environment has been a key concern for both issuers and investors.

In our latest episode of Markets Mindset, Mizuho Americas’ Head of Investment Grade Capital Markets and Syndicate, Victor Forte, leads a discussion around the surprising resilience and potential causes for concern that have surfaced last quarter.

Victor speaks with Moshe Tomkiewicz, Head of Investment Grade Debt Capital Markets, and Colby Griffith, Head of U.S. Debt Syndicate, to hear their perspectives on the current environment and the best courses of action for issuers going forward.

Our experts touch on:
  • The state of investment grade net issuance 
  • The midterm election’s impact on M&A financing 
  •  Where spreads are heading into summer
  • Why European credit markets have underperformed
  • How rate volatility might affect the credit curve
  •  Market projections going into Q2

Hear from our experts as they discuss what investors and issuers need to know as the market weathers global uncertainty.

What is Beyond The Obvious?

In Mizuho | Greenhill’s Beyond The Obvious podcast channel, we uncover the value that others miss.

Our podcast is a source for the latest discussions on topics related to capital markets, dealmaking activity, business leadership and more.

Delve into insights from our investment & corporate banking thought leaders to hear their unique perspectives on current trends and market influences.

Learn how industry icons and influential figures began their journeys, overcame adversity and rose to success.

Discover insights that look deeper.

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Welcome back to Markets Mindset.

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Once again here with Moshe Tomkiewicz, Head of DCM, and

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Colby Griffith, Head of Debt Syndicate.

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It's been a while since we've been together.

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A lot has happened in that short while here.

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We're, what are we, eight weeks into hostilities overseas,

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and we are at an epic pace in terms of

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supply at this moment.

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So let's just kick it right off, start with you, Colby.

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We're sitting here, end of February, beginning of March,

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hostilities kick up over the world.

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We see an initial reaction that seems familiar, right?

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Volatility kicks up, spreads widen out to begin with, but

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then now we stand here roughly four months almost into

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the year, record-setting supply pace, $775 plus minus

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billion of supply.

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We're on a record, we're on a pace for, what,

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$2.2 trillion if we kept this, even when you

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take out some of the holidays.

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Spreads are within, back to within seven basis points of

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three decade tights.

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Market seems to be, every time something goes on in

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the world, market seems to be seeing light at the

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end of the tunnel.

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They seem to be seeing, you know, that there's a

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point where it's going to be all rainbows and roses

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at some point, and it's held together extraordinarily well.

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Technicals on new issues, plus minus five basis points, new

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issue premiums over subscriptions four plus times.

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Why, what is it, what's the dynamic going on right

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now that's just kept us pretty much intact, except for

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a couple of bumps along the road, and maybe a

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few days that aren't issuer-friendly, but able to digest

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that kind of supply, in good fashion, mind you?

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Yeah, no, I think you hit on a lot of

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the points that we've been making over
the last couple of weeks.

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Concessions are slightly elevated.

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We've gone from a zero to, call it two or

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three basis point average concession, to something that's

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more, on average, about five basis points, which, sure,

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it's a little elevated, but not by big,

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large standards by any means.

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What's been driving it?

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I think, one, there were, coming into the year, there

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were huge expectations for supply.

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Yep.

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So I don't think the fact that we're running 25%

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ahead versus last year is really catching people off sides.

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Right.

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If you look at the average expectation for the year,

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it was really somewhere between $1.9 and $2 trillion.

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If you take 25% above where we finished last

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year, it gets you right to, effectively, a $2 trillion number.

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So I think that's one positive factor that has helped

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us manage this supply.

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Two, as far as the Iran war goes,

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I think the market investors have certainly been looking

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towards it being more of a short-term versus a long-term.

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Expectations that there would be some form of an

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off-ramp in the, you know, call it more short versus

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medium or certainly not a long-term type thing.

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I think that's been very supportive.

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I think, to some extent, a lot of investors in

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our market view our market as a —

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We were out with an investor last night, and they mentioned

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how the IG is very much a mean reversion type

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market where you may have swings, high or low, but

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we tend to kind of move back to the middle.

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And so I think whenever we saw that widening, we

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saw investors kind of step in and move us back lower.

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I think this is part of the importance, or one

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of the more important, is where we are from a

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yield perspective, right?

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If you look at where we are on the index,

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we've been over 5% of the index since the

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beginning or since about the middle part of March.

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We're about 25 or 30 basis points higher on the

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year from a yield perspective.

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We really haven't been at these types of yields on

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the IG index since about July of last year.

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And so I think that's been very helpful for spreads

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as you have yield buyers come into the market.

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I've been fascinated with the fact that supply for the

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year, net supply for the year, right?

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We've talked about this.
Up 60%, which to me says this

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supply is being taken down by new money.

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Where is that money coming from?

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Where do you see it?

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Because it's not just, we knew we came in this

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year with large maturity towers increasing over the next

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five years, but that's not what's driven the demand over

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the first four months.

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When you think about net supply up 60%, up over

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100% net supply for financials.

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Right, so I think some of that is kind of

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a calendar or a timing thing as far as the

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net numbers because if you look at net issuance in,

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call it the first quarter or the first four months

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of last year, and particularly the start of the second

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quarter, there was very high redemption numbers because

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there was a lot of the five-year paper that

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was issued in the early days of Covid, right?

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March, April, etc., May, which were the largest months

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we've ever had from an issuance perspective.

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And so last year's net issuance, kind of in this

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part of the calendar, right where we are right now,

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is a little bit suppressed because there were such high

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redemptions last year.

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So technically lower.

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Technically lower.

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As we get into the later part of this year,

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I think that will normalize because we do see higher

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redemptions in this year kind of more evenly balanced

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throughout the year.

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Now, to answer your question about where the demand's

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coming from, I think one of it is we are

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seeing some yield buyers that have been maybe a little

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bit more cautious because of where
coupons were, come back

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into the market.

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So we've seen, if you look at insurance participation over

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the first quarter of the year and something that we

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track in our new issues, we've seen their order sizes

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from insurance companies or percent of the orders go up

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from 10% to 15% during the first quarter.

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We also saw their percent of allocations go from

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15% to 20%.

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So I think that's part of it.

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We've also, outside of two weeks, a couple of weeks

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ago, had seen pretty good inflows into our market.

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Right.

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Two weeks before tax day, actually.

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Before tax day.

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Think about it.

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And so we were sitting at about $37 billion if

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you look at one of the providers.

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At this point last year, we were only at $8

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billion by that same metric.

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We didn't get to the $37, $38 billion type number

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until really kind of the middle of the year.

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And so I think that's been helpful as well.

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I'm going to switch to Moshe.

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I'm going to switch to you on the issuer side

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of the equation.

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So there is a truce taking effect.

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We can all debate whether it's going to be durable

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or not, but let's for a second say that it's

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relatively durable.

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The last two months, we've come through in pretty good

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stead, as you heard Colby go through.

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The demand is there.

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Do you think now that there's more of an official

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attempt at a truce, do you think issuers have the

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ability now to sit back?

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Do you think issuers have the ability to wait to

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see if oil prices come back down, we get a

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grind back in rates lower because the Fed now maybe

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has more leeway?

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Although I will say right now, you look at the

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World Interest Rate Probability (WIRP) index,
it's saying there's only maybe a third of

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an ease built into the system by the end of

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the year even.

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I mean, we at one time were at two and

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a half eases.

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Right now we're back at maybe a third of an ease.

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Do you think it gives issuers an ability to wait

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now and be a little more selective?

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Or do you still think there is a reason to

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move forward, get your financing done in this window and

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not take chances?

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I'm more of a no chance guy to be completely

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candid with you.

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So if you just take a step back, so before

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February, right before February, tens were trading at 4.20%.

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Then we kicked into February.

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Then you started to see yields fall and oil rise.

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So the market was already starting to bake in some

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geopolitical premium into crude and some flight to safety

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factor into rates.

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It turned out to be the wrong bet, but that's

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what ended up happening.

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So when I think about, like in terms of a

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valuation reference point, kind of pre-war, post-war,

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I don't look at 4% tens.

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I look at more 4.20% tens.

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And that's basically where we are.

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So I think, sure, all our clients have financial

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flexibility that they could sit back and wait.

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At least from where I sit, I think the risk

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reward profile is somewhat asymmetric, at least on the risk.

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So you don't think the view changes if the war

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starts going behind us?

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Fed testimonies, Fed hearing has started, confirmation

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hearings have just started.

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And obviously people have a view that the new Fed

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chair is more of a dove or at least maybe

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wants to get what the administration wants done.

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You don't think that necessarily bleeds into the market

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where an issuer should be waiting for 4% or the 3.95%?

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I mean, if that bleeds into the market, it'll bleed

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into the front end, right?

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If you're looking to go out the curve, then you go.

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If you're dead set on doing a two-year fixed

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rate paper, then maybe you wait, but most of our

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clients aren't just doing a two-year fixed rate paper.

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Now talk to me about going forward here.

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You try to get the war behind you.

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A lot of people ask when do, when or if,

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I'm not going to say when, when or if do

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midterms become maybe a question mark,
a point of volatility?

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When do we start getting into that where maybe it

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becomes an issue to talk about with issuers and do

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you want to finance earlier or later?

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Do you want to wait to the third quarter to

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do things?

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My conversations about the midterms haven't been

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necessarily about it being as this pivot point in either

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the rate backdrop or risk sentiment.

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My point in the conversation I'm having with my clients

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is about the M&A impact of the midterms because

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I think most CEOs, if not all CEOs, will see

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a progressive wave in the midterms
as a potential precursor to 2028.

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And so as a result, any big ticket M&A

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that they're thinking about, they're going to want to hit

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the fast-forward button on it.

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So that's really where the midterm conversation comes into

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the dialogue with the clients, not as much of what's

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going to happen in the market.

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Okay.

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Colby, so back to you.

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You know, we talked about spreads.

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I think it's the Bloomberg Index
spreads right now, are what,

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78, 79?

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I think maybe during the height of the situation here

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over the last eight weeks, we got as high as

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the mid-90s, low mid-90s, somewhere in 93.

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Given where we are right now and given the backdrop,

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where do you see spreads going?

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What I would say is it does feel

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like the market, to your point, has moved

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past the war at this point, right?

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And so we've kind of returned back to

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the things that we were worried about or

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talking about pre— you know, middle of February.

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So obviously the economy, earnings, private credit,

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although that's caught in kind of a bid over

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the last couple of days here.

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I think the other big factor is supply.

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It kind of goes back to that again.

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As far as kind of where we are

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from a spread perspective, as you pointed out,

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we're in that high 70s type number.

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I think, quite frankly, I think it's going

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to be hard to go much tighter than

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where we are right now.

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I think if anything, there's probably a little bit of

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a bias to move higher, but I still believe, particularly

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if we sit where we are from a rates perspective,

00:11:00:00 - 00:11:02:10
to Moshe's point, kind of around a 4.20% plus or

00:11:02:10 - 00:11:05:22
minus, I think anytime you move into the low to

00:11:05:22 - 00:11:08:14
mid-80s, you're going to find some more support from

00:11:08:14 - 00:11:09:06
the investor base.

00:11:09:19 - 00:11:11:20
And so I think it's a boring answer to say,

00:11:11:23 - 00:11:14:04
but unfortunately I think it's the answer I believe in,

00:11:14:15 - 00:11:16:03
is that we're going to be in some kind of

00:11:16:03 - 00:11:19:23
a range between maybe as best in mid-70s and

00:11:19:23 - 00:11:22:23
probably as wide as call it mid-to-high 80s

00:11:23:16 - 00:11:25:03
for the next couple of weeks here.

00:11:25:10 - 00:11:30:18
So take that spreads are relatively
in a band, treasuries maybe

00:11:30:18 - 00:11:31:20
relatively in a band.

00:11:32:05 - 00:11:35:06
We've seen the effect with the VIX coming down below

00:11:35:06 - 00:11:37:13
20, the MOVE Index is back down at 70.

00:11:37:16 - 00:11:39:07
We're all at levels that were well before the war.

00:11:39:20 - 00:11:42:17
Hybrids, which are coupons, forget spreads for a second,

00:11:42:19 - 00:11:46:01
those are coupon, resurgence of demand in that product.

00:11:46:09 - 00:11:49:03
We saw a couple of issuers recently do non-call

00:11:49:03 - 00:11:50:22
seven that went extraordinarily well.

00:11:51:03 - 00:11:53:01
We saw an issuer who for the first time put

00:11:53:01 - 00:11:57:07
the floor product on their dual-tranche transaction, $9,

00:11:57:10 - 00:11:59:10
$10, $11 billion book for that trade.

00:11:59:17 - 00:12:02:10
We saw some of the BBs get done recently.

00:12:02:21 - 00:12:04:13
That product seems to have caught a bid.

00:12:04:15 - 00:12:05:15
It kind of faded for a little bit.

00:12:05:16 - 00:12:06:08
Now it's got a bid.

00:12:06:11 - 00:12:08:21
If we're going to stay at such a kind of

00:12:08:21 - 00:12:11:16
dull, I'll say band in terms of spreads and yields,

00:12:11:22 - 00:12:13:10
should that not help that product?

00:12:13:12 - 00:12:15:07
And do you see it returning to the types of

00:12:15:07 - 00:12:18:04
coupons we saw before where the five-year product is

00:12:18:04 - 00:12:20:13
coming in at the 5.75 to 5.78 type

00:12:20:13 - 00:12:22:16
coupon ranges, or do you think there's still going to

00:12:22:16 - 00:12:25:12
be a little bit of indigestion as we get back

00:12:25:12 - 00:12:26:00
down to fives?

00:12:26:01 - 00:12:27:23
Because we couldn't fully hold them for a long period

00:12:28:11 - 00:12:29:18
when we got there last time.

00:12:30:04 - 00:12:32:00
Yeah, well, I'll give you my view, and certainly love

00:12:32:00 - 00:12:33:09
to hear your view as well.

00:12:33:12 - 00:12:36:20
I think, you know, when you talk about stability, right?

00:12:36:22 - 00:12:39:14
And what does that usually mean for spreads if you

00:12:39:14 - 00:12:40:22
think about it historically, right?

00:12:41:05 - 00:12:43:23
In that type of scenario, you usually see duration

00:12:43:23 - 00:12:46:21
outperform and quality arguably underperform.

00:12:47:11 - 00:12:49:13
And so if we believe, and we've kind of talked

00:12:49:13 - 00:12:51:13
about it, you pointed out the MOVE Index has moved

00:12:51:13 - 00:12:54:20
back below to the levels that we were pre-war, and

00:12:54:20 - 00:12:59:11
quite frankly, lower than where we were for most of 2025.

00:12:59:22 - 00:13:02:20
Outside of a couple of weeks in the fourth quarter,

00:13:03:15 - 00:13:05:22
that should be positive for hybrids.

00:13:06:04 - 00:13:10:00
You know, it's certainly lower rated, not AA, single A

00:13:10:00 - 00:13:10:16
type paper.

00:13:10:16 - 00:13:14:13
So as we've seen kind of spreads continue to compress,

00:13:15:01 - 00:13:16:23
I would put hybrids in that category.

00:13:17:06 - 00:13:18:19
You know, I was having a conversation with our index

00:13:18:19 - 00:13:21:11
trader the last couple of days, 13 of the last

00:13:21:11 - 00:13:25:13
14 days, high yield has outperformed the IG CDX index.

00:13:25:17 - 00:13:29:01
As that compression trade just continues to grind tighter,

00:13:29:04 - 00:13:30:10
and I think that's part of the reason you're seeing

00:13:30:10 - 00:13:31:06
it in hybrids.

00:13:31:18 - 00:13:33:18
If that continues, there's no reason to think that it

00:13:33:18 - 00:13:37:05
won't kind of maintain a very good market for hybrid issuance.

00:13:37:05 - 00:13:39:09
I have to admit, I'm with you on that.

00:13:39:09 - 00:13:42:10
I've always had that belief that, and when I look

00:13:42:10 - 00:13:44:16
back and you look at the MOVE Index, whether one

00:13:44:16 - 00:13:46:16
is cause for the other, it's the other way around.

00:13:47:05 - 00:13:50:06
When the MOVE Index got to its lows, our index

00:13:50:06 - 00:13:51:21
spreads got to their lows, right?

00:13:51:23 - 00:13:53:00
In January, February.

00:13:53:08 - 00:13:56:02
But I always maintain that when treasury volatility comes

00:13:56:02 - 00:13:59:19
down, that the bid for product that prices in coupon

00:13:59:19 - 00:14:02:06
or trades in price always seems to get better.

00:14:02:07 - 00:14:05:02
And that's high yield is compressing, and we see the

00:14:05:02 - 00:14:05:23
hybrids compressing.

00:14:06:00 - 00:14:07:19
And if you take a look, we've done some deals

00:14:07:19 - 00:14:10:01
lately where some of the big buyers have been high

00:14:10:01 - 00:14:14:10
yield buyers, going up and buying BB hybrids, BBB hybrids.

00:14:14:13 - 00:14:18:08
They're getting high BBB or weak A credits in

00:14:18:08 - 00:14:21:12
hybrid format, but they're getting yields they can't get in

00:14:21:12 - 00:14:23:13
the BB range even in the shorter end.

00:14:24:00 - 00:14:26:23
And so we've seen that bid, I think, just been

00:14:26:23 - 00:14:30:04
a resurgence with the lower volatility in treasuries.

00:14:30:10 - 00:14:31:00
I'm with you.

00:14:31:02 - 00:14:32:14
I think if we stay here, if we don't get

00:14:32:14 - 00:14:35:06
a big sell-off in rates and rates stay in

00:14:35:06 - 00:14:37:04
this band, I do think we're going to get the

00:14:37:04 - 00:14:39:07
best of the best, the real high quality hybrid issuers

00:14:39:07 - 00:14:42:05
are going to be pricing between five and five eighths

00:14:42:05 - 00:14:43:23
and five and three quarters on the five, non-call

00:14:43:23 - 00:14:45:12
five stuff, and the non-call ten stuff will be

00:14:45:12 - 00:14:47:08
hovering around six at some point.

00:14:47:19 - 00:14:49:11
And we'll see how much supply they can take.

00:14:49:23 - 00:14:52:12
When we look at where we were before the war,

00:14:53:05 - 00:14:58:04
Europe in many aspects on hybrids and on a spread

00:14:58:04 - 00:15:00:19
basis for a lot of issuers had an advantage, even

00:15:00:19 - 00:15:04:04
on a swap-back basis to where U.S. levels were.

00:15:04:05 - 00:15:07:17
And we saw a lot of issuers, it wasn't huge,

00:15:07:20 - 00:15:10:16
but enough, an increase in issuers going over and taking

00:15:10:16 - 00:15:14:20
advantage of European credit markets that despite decent

00:15:14:20 - 00:15:17:04
amounts of supply, granted much smaller than we see here

00:15:17:04 - 00:15:20:14
in the States, but were trading at all-time tights.

00:15:20:23 - 00:15:23:02
And we saw a lot of credits that were inverted

00:15:23:02 - 00:15:25:11
compared to their swapped equivalents in the States.

00:15:26:08 - 00:15:28:09
That sold off a little bit more than we did

00:15:28:09 - 00:15:30:02
in the States or hasn't recovered, I should say, as

00:15:30:02 - 00:15:33:02
much as we've gotten what seems to be towards the

00:15:33:02 - 00:15:36:05
end of the hot portion of the war.

00:15:37:01 - 00:15:38:13
Where do you see that going forward?

00:15:38:16 - 00:15:41:02
Do you see that as still a draw for U.S. issuers?

00:15:41:05 - 00:15:43:04
Will it come back to those kind of levels as

00:15:43:04 - 00:15:43:19
it was before?

00:15:44:04 - 00:15:47:12
Or do you think it'll stay where it is and

00:15:47:12 - 00:15:50:07
we've kind of reverted back to a situation where Europe

00:15:50:07 - 00:15:52:16
is better for European names, U.S. is still better for

00:15:52:16 - 00:15:53:12
most of the U.S. names?

00:15:53:18 - 00:15:55:20
Europe's underperformance is due to two things.

00:15:55:23 - 00:15:58:20
First off, their reliance on energy coming out of the

00:15:58:20 - 00:15:59:13
Strait of Hormuz.

00:16:00:01 - 00:16:02:12
And two, the fact that the central bank has a

00:16:02:12 - 00:16:06:02
single mandate, which is price stability, which meant that

00:16:06:02 - 00:16:10:00
the central banks went from potentially cutting rates to

00:16:10:00 - 00:16:11:13
raising rates multiple times.

00:16:12:03 - 00:16:16:01
So you saw a real de-risking in European credit

00:16:16:01 - 00:16:18:10
when the war kicked off.

00:16:18:13 - 00:16:21:03
So definitively lagged what we saw in the U.S.

00:16:21:07 - 00:16:24:17
If we have a true resolution here, we're going to

00:16:24:17 - 00:16:29:01
be seeing a re-risking in European spreads, okay?

00:16:29:10 - 00:16:32:04
And at the same time, we're likely to see a

00:16:32:04 - 00:16:37:00
divergence between European rates and treasuries, just

00:16:37:00 - 00:16:39:21
given the convergence that we've been seeing over the last

00:16:39:21 - 00:16:40:16
month or so.

00:16:41:02 - 00:16:42:21
And I think if you have both those come into

00:16:42:21 - 00:16:47:03
play, you'll definitively see supply being stolen from over

00:16:47:03 - 00:16:48:04
here to over there.

00:16:48:13 - 00:16:49:19
What are the things you're going to be looking at

00:16:49:19 - 00:16:51:14
over the next two or three months that you're going

00:16:51:14 - 00:16:54:13
to be keeping an eye on that issuers should be

00:16:54:13 - 00:16:55:02
thinking about?

00:16:55:05 - 00:16:57:03
And I'll let you go first Moshe and

00:16:57:03 - 00:16:57:19
Colby, you follow up.

00:16:59:04 - 00:16:59:15
Earnings.

00:16:59:15 - 00:17:03:09
Market is assuming basically 20% earnings growth for the

00:17:03:09 - 00:17:04:08
S&P this year.

00:17:04:13 - 00:17:07:06
Now we've had five consecutive quarters of double-digit

00:17:07:06 - 00:17:09:13
earnings growth, so it may not be as big of

00:17:09:13 - 00:17:10:15
a lift as we think.

00:17:11:15 - 00:17:16:15
But earnings help solidify the floor for all risk markets.

00:17:17:04 - 00:17:20:20
So even if you have massive geopolitical turbulence

00:17:20:20 - 00:17:21:10
whatsoever.

00:17:21:21 - 00:17:23:23
So that's going to be number one for me.

00:17:24:02 - 00:17:28:01
Then given what's going on, oil will clearly be number two.

00:17:28:01 - 00:17:32:09
And then finally, very focused on not only the absolute

00:17:32:09 - 00:17:34:19
level of rates, but the shape of the curve.

00:17:35:11 - 00:17:39:09
Because the fiscal situation here is not getting any better.

00:17:39:12 - 00:17:42:03
We've seen the treasury market, for all intent and

00:17:42:03 - 00:17:44:08
purposes, be dismissive of that.

00:17:44:16 - 00:17:47:10
If that changes, that is a notable development.

00:17:48:01 - 00:17:48:15
Colby.

00:17:48:16 - 00:17:50:05
The only thing I would add, and it's kind of

00:17:50:05 - 00:17:52:19
piggybacking on Moshe's third one around rates, is not only

00:17:52:19 - 00:17:54:22
the shape of the curve, but I would say the

00:17:54:22 - 00:17:56:00
speed of any change.

00:17:56:11 - 00:17:58:06
Because I think that will have an impact not only

00:17:58:06 - 00:18:02:08
on the MOVE Index, but also on investors' behavior and

00:18:02:08 - 00:18:03:23
where they participate on the curve.

00:18:04:02 - 00:18:05:23
Particularly given the amount of supply that we're going to

00:18:05:23 - 00:18:08:07
have to see, or we're expecting to see, I'll say.

00:18:09:06 - 00:18:12:04
And where that issuance will have to come from a

00:18:12:04 - 00:18:12:19
curve perspective.

00:18:13:19 - 00:18:17:09
If some of the big tech data center, large M&A

00:18:17:09 - 00:18:20:03
type transactions do come to market, they're not going

00:18:20:03 - 00:18:21:20
to be able to avoid the long end of the curve.

00:18:22:10 - 00:18:24:17
And if we do start seeing some rate volatility, we

00:18:24:17 - 00:18:29:08
do see some of those concerns around the fiscal situation,

00:18:30:00 - 00:18:32:02
we could see some pretty rapid movement out the curve

00:18:32:02 - 00:18:33:04
and changing in that shape.

00:18:33:05 - 00:18:35:08
And I think that could have an impact on the

00:18:35:08 - 00:18:37:07
flatness of the credit curve that we've been able to

00:18:37:07 - 00:18:40:02
live with and benefit off of over the last couple

00:18:40:02 - 00:18:40:14
of months here.

00:18:40:22 - 00:18:42:06
Well, we'll keep an eye on the data centers.

00:18:42:06 - 00:18:43:16
And we're going to keep an eye on, if your

00:18:43:16 - 00:18:46:17
estimate's right, another two times issuance of what we've

00:18:46:17 - 00:18:48:08
already had during the course of the rest of the year.

00:18:48:10 - 00:18:50:04
We'll see how the market handles it.

00:18:50:04 - 00:18:51:22
But both of you, again, thank you very much for

00:18:51:22 - 00:18:52:09
being here.

00:18:52:15 - 00:18:53:13
We appreciate it.

00:18:53:13 - 00:18:56:18
And to everyone watching on
Markets Mindset, thanks for joining.

00:18:56:23 - 00:18:57:14
We'll see you next time.

00:18:57:17 - 00:18:58:02
Thank you.

00:18:58:05 - 00:18:58:12
Thank you.