Investors Crave Long-Term Debt, But Firms Don’t Want to Sell

Investors are clamoring to buy the one kind of security that few companies want to sell now: long-dated bonds.

When blue-chip companies have sold debt maturing in 30 years or more in the US, they’ve found heavy demand, with money managers placing orders equal to about five times the notes for sale on average. That ratio is higher than in any other period dating back to 2021.

Drugmaker Eli Lilly & Co drew $14.7 billion of orders earlier this week for just $2 billion of 30- and 40-year bonds. Investors are eager to lock in yields above 5.5%, a relatively high level, especially as money managers enjoy robust inflows and the Federal Reserve gets closer to cutting rates.

“Being able to buy high quality investment-grade credit near 5% is something that for a long time was not available,” said David Brown, global co-head of investment grade at Neuberger Berman. “People are trying to lock in these rates.”

Companies, meanwhile, are reluctant to commit to paying elevated coupons for decades by selling debt with far-out maturities, and a quiet market for acquisitions has limited the supply of offerings. Those dynamics have spurred even more of a frenzy for the long-term debt that is available.

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