Coinbase Is Set To Increase Corporate Bonds Amid Rising Demand

In a recent development, Coinbase issued a junk bond, and the market seemed to be hungry for the instrument. Currently, the US crypto exchange is recording more demands for these bonds every day. With these demands, the crypto exchange’s sales have grown from $1.5B to $2B.

Bonds are fixed investments that yield interest monthly. But when we talk of junk bonds, investors make higher returns but face higher risks as well. Companies usually issue junk bonds to raise capital very fast for a major project.

Corporate Bond Orders Keep Rising

The orders have continued to troop in for the Coinbase junk bond. One of our sources reveals that the orders amounting to $7 billion are competing for 7 and ten-year bonds, with interests of 3.375% & 3.625% each. From our sources, we also learned that some claims have risen that the interest rates were lower than what Coinbase offered in the first quotes.

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This increasing demand proves that the exchange didn’t know the extent to which the public regarded its creditworthiness. If they offered higher rates in the quotes, it meant that Coinbase was unsure that many people would invest in the bonds.  So, the high demand showed them their worth, and the company reduced the rates.

Moreover, an analyst with Bloomberg stated that this high demand shows that debt investors have endorsed the exchange positively. But these bonds rank a bit lower than investment-grade bonds, according to Bloomberg bond indexes showing that debts offerings like what Coinbase issued get an average of 2.86% yield.

Coinbase And The Junk Bond Journey

The US-based crypto exchange announced this junk-bond issue on September 13. According to that announcement, the company aims to use the capital for its products developments. Also, they aim to acquire other technologies, companies, and products that they might find in the time to come.

Coinbase is the second crypto company to offer this debt instrument. Before now, MicroStrategy issued Notes worth $500M to invest in Bitcoin following the June market crash.

So, the crypto community has seen the likes of junk-bond offerings before now. This might be the reason for the surging demand plus the popularity of Coinbase in the industry.

On its opening day, the bond traded at $342 while the company’s COIN Stock sold for $243. But the COIN has managed to gain 20% since the end of June. What surprised the community more is that the exchange is facing a lot of threats from the SEC, yet the investors pushed money into the bond.

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The Securities and Exchange Commission threatens the crypto exchange with possible legal action if it launches a USDC lending product. Before this threat, Coinbase planned to launch the USD Coin. But it seems that the company is keeping the plans at bay for the time being.

Currently the USD Coin is trading sideways | Source: USDCUSDT on TradingView.com
Featured image from Business Insider, chart from TradingView.com

MicroStrategy Receives Over $1.5B In Orders For $500M Notes To Fund Bitcoin Purchases

MicroStrategy is one of the loudest crypto advocates listed on Wall Street. Now, the Michael Saylor-led company is engaging in one of the first-ever corporate bond sales that specifically earmarks the proceeds for Bitcoin purchases.

MicroStrategy’s Strategy? Buy The Dip

After initially planning to issue $400M of the debt, by the time the deal was launching on Monday, the company saw immense demand. Saylor and team elected to up that amount to $500M with Tuesday’s junk bond sale. These type of bonds generally offer more aggressive yields, while running a higher risk of default. The secured notes where reportedly sold at a yield of 6.125%, according to reports, after earlier pricing discussions around 6.25% and 6.5%. Investment bank Jeffries led the offering.

The news comes after a bevy of Bitcoin purchases throughout this first half of the year. To start the year, MicroStrategy locked in 20,000 BTC with a hefty price tag in excess of $1B. The company grabbed a few hundred more in recent weeks at around $55K per coin. After a weekend at Miami’s Bitcoin 2021 Conference, Saylor is ready for more.

To date, the firm owns in excess of 90,000 BTC with an average per coin price just shy of $25K. Nonetheless, Bitcoin’s second quarter dip is evident; MicroStrategy reported in a filing this week a roughly quarter billion dollar hit in it’s next earnings report from the crypto’s fluctuating price. After issuing convertible bonds in the past to make crypto purchases, Saylor seems to be set on buying the dip with this first-ever corporate bond sale.

Related Reading | There’s Zero Chance Of Bitcoin Being Replaced Says Saylor

Corporate Bonds Garnering Some Attention

This isn’t MicroStrategy’s first “first”. The company was also one of the first to pay their board of directors in Bitcoin, and Saylor was led the firm to be the first to have a modified corporate strategy integrating Bitcoin. Saylor’s hyper-fixation on Bitcoin in particular has drawn a fair share of critics, but all that aside, MicroStrategy’s business intelligence products are still seeing success with substantial Fortune 500 customers in their wheelhouse.

This week’s bond offering is also notable not just for being the first of it’s kind, but also from the response it drew. The company upped their offering to $500M in notes, but received in excess of $1.5B in orders for the offering – including a large number of hedge funds, according to reports. Despite the recent Bitcoin dip, many major investors still seem to be chomping at the bit. The weeks to come could be particularly telling around their aggressive perspective.

MicroStrategy has come back to earth after yielding substantial attention earlier this year with Bitcoin purchases. | Source: $MSTR-NASDAQ on TradingView.com

Related Reading | Saylor: North American Bitcoin Miners To Form Coalition After Meeting With Elon Musk

Featured image from Pixabay, Charts from TradingView.com