--- description: "Passively buy a diversified portfolio of deeply discounted distressed debt (yield spread >1,000 bps over Treasuries) and hold through reorganization, expecting high returns on the subset of positions that recover." tags: [distressed-assets, credit, fixed-income, value] --- # Buying and Holding Distressed Debt (Passive) **Section**: 15.1 | **Asset Class**: Distressed Assets (Fixed Income / Credit) | **Type**: Value / Passive ## Overview Distressed securities are those whose issuers are undergoing financial or operational distress, default, or bankruptcy. A common definition of distressed debt is when the yield spread between the issuer's bonds and Treasury bonds exceeds a preset threshold (e.g., 1,000 basis points). This passive strategy buys distressed debt at a steep discount and holds it, expecting (hoping) the company will repay its debt. The portfolio is diversified across industries, entities, and debt seniority levels. ## Construction / Mechanics - **Definition**: distressed debt = yield spread over Treasuries > ~1,000 basis points - **Diversification**: spread across industries, issuers, and debt seniority levels (senior secured, senior unsecured, subordinated) - **Entry timing**: two common approaches: 1. At the end of the default month 2. At the end of the bankruptcy-filing month — both aim to exploit overreaction in the distressed debt market at these key dates - **Hold**: position is held passively through the reorganization/recovery process Passive strategies may also use models (see Section 15.3) to pre-screen assets and predict which companies are likely to declare bankruptcy, selecting only those positioned for successful reorganization. ## Return Profile Only a small fraction of held assets are expected to have positive returns, but those that do provide high rates of return (e.g., full par recovery from a deeply discounted purchase). Returns are highly skewed and non-normal. The driver of returns is successful company reorganization — either an out-of-court debt restructuring or a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. ## Key Parameters / Signals - **Yield spread threshold**: typically >1,000 bps over comparable-maturity Treasuries as a distress indicator - **Entry timing**: end of default month or end of bankruptcy-filing month captures the overreaction premium - **Debt seniority**: senior secured debt has higher recovery rates; subordinated debt offers higher upside if the company fully recovers - **Industry and issuer diversification**: essential due to high idiosyncratic default risk; a single large default can dominate portfolio returns - **Bankruptcy prediction models**: logistic regression or similar models on financial ratios to pre-screen for likely successful reorganizations (see Section 15.3) ## Variations - **Focus on defaults**: buy at the end of the default month, targeting market overreaction to default events - **Focus on bankruptcy filings**: buy at the end of the bankruptcy-filing month, targeting overreaction to Chapter 11 filings - **Seniority-focused**: concentrate in senior secured debt for higher recovery certainty (lower return, lower variance) ## Notes - Illiquidity: distressed debt is highly illiquid; exit before resolution may require large price concessions - Workout timeline: bankruptcy proceedings can take years; capital is tied up for an uncertain duration - Legal complexity: debt holders in bankruptcy proceedings face complex intercreditor disputes, cram-down risks, and professional fees - Expected value of total portfolio is positive but heavily dependent on the few positions that recover fully - This is a passive strategy — the investor does not seek to influence the reorganization process (contrast with Section 15.2)