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HYBRID SECURITY

Securities

Securities
Bond
Commercial paper
Hybrid security
Stock
Warrant

Markets
Bond market
Stock market
Stock exchange

Stocks
Share
Stock
Warrant

Bonds by coupon
Fixed rate bond
Floating rate note
Zero coupon bond
Inflation-indexed bond

Bonds by collateral
Asset-backed security
Collateralized debt obligation
Collateralized mortgage obligation
Credit linked note
Mortgage-backed security
Unsecured bond

Bonds by issuer
Corporate bond
Government bond
Municipal bond
Sovereign bond


A hybrid security,often referred to as "hybrids", is a security that combines elements of debt and of equity.

Examples One example is a convertible bond, which is a bond (i.e. a loan by the issuer), but can be exchanged into shares.

Usage

Hybrid securities have skyrocketed in popularity since Moody's released a new set of guidelines for treating debt-equity hybrids in late 2004. The new guidelines establish a "debt-equity continuum" and allow institutions to classify part of the hybrid security as equity and part as debt (in a shift from the previous policy, that counted the entire amount as debt). This change allowed companies to issue hybrid securities at a time of record low interest rates (and thus gain access to cheap capital) and then use the proceeds to repurchase equity shares (which have a very high cost of capital). Since only a fraction of the recapitalization would be listed as debt on the balance sheet, hybrids allowed companies to repurchase more shares than previously without negatively affecting their credit rating.

Basket D Security

The most popular hybrid among financial institutions (banks and insurance companies) is the Basket D security. Basket D is a reference to a point on Moody's debt-equity continuum scale that treats the hybrid as 75% equity and 25% debt. In order to qualify, the security must give the issuer the right (or even the obligation) to roll-over the security at expiry to an indefinite or long maturity bond and to suspend dividends (effectively coupon payments, but to reflect the equity nature of the security, the term "dividend" is used). Most Basket D issuances have been structured in a way that also preserves the tax deductible nature of their interest payments, avoiding double taxation/customs.