To get ahead this year, distressed investors found themselves looking at increasingly unusual opportunities for returns, a trend that’s set to continue in 2022.

Many of the juiciest opportunities this year illustrated how the distressed debt business is evolving: Supply chain crises plunged new companies into chaos but also helped Hertz Global Holdings Inc. redefine bankruptcy success. Retail stock investors essentially tore up the playbook for trading troubled companies like AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. Late this year, panic in China’s property market sucked U.S. funds into unexplored territory.

“Money is out there, and it has to be put to work,” said Thad Wilson, a restructuring partner at King & Spalding. “But there are fewer options in which to put it to work that make economic sense, so people start betting on riskier and riskier and riskier debt instruments and alternative investments. Some of those may ultimately end up in bankruptcy.”

Blame year two of the pandemic, when the steady flow of government stimulus and central bank liquidity ignited investments across asset classes. The pile of traded distressed bonds and loans was sitting at just $66 billion as of last week, and an index of troubled U.S. bonds is up nearly 21% for the year through Wednesday.

Remember it all? Here, Bloomberg recaps the deals that were make-or-break for investors this year, and what they tell us about what to expect in 2022.

Hertz
The story of Hertz might as well encapsulate the credit markets in the first half of the year.

Felled by the sudden lack of demand for travel in the early days of the pandemic, the rental car company became an early meme stock sensation. Later, when travel demand rebounded and the chip shortage sent used car values soaring, the company became the target of dueling takeover bids out of bankruptcy.

The end result? Its exit handed healthy returns to even equity holders that are typically wiped out in a restructuring—challenging the precedent for distressed investors that specialize in gaming out bankruptcy scenarios.

The deal gave wins to Apollo Global Management Inc., Knighthead Capital Management and Certares Management, and of course the retail renegades over on Reddit. Hertz raised $1.3 billion in a stock listing in October, handing profits to selling shareholders including Cougar Capital and Oaktree Capital Management.

Retail’s Recovery
A long-time distressed punching bag, the beleaguered retail industry staged a surprise comeback in 2021.

After enduring a punishing bankruptcy wave in 2020, companies that cut debt in court or managed to avoid filings altogether entered 2021 willing to make overdue changes, adopt new e-commerce technology and embrace new business models, which seemed to pay off: an index of high-yield retailer debt jumped 6.6% this year through Tuesday, besting the broader market’s 5.3% return.

Supply chain disruptions turned out to be a blessing for some chains, which like Hertz saw sky-high demand and were able to reduce discounts. Selling at full price boosts borrowing limits on the asset-based loans that power most retailers, so they’re ending this year with in surprisingly good shape, said Perry Mandarino, co-head of investment banking at B. Riley Financial Inc.

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