Hung Convertibles

Hung Convertibles Hung Convertibles

Investopedia / Laura Porter

What Are Hung Convertibles?

Hung convertibles are convertible securities where the share price of the underlying security is well below the conversion price, making it unlikely that the securities will be converted into common stock. Since unconverted securities must be repaid at face value, most issuers wish to prevent their convertibles from being hung.

Key Takeaways

  • Convertible securities are securities that can be repaid in money or the stock of the issuing company, with certain conditions.
  • Hung convertibles are convertible securities where the share price of the underlying security is well below the conversion price, making it unlikely that the securities will be converted into common stock.
  • Due to their limited prospects for conversion, hung convertibles, also known as busted convertibles, trade more like debt instruments.
  • Most companies prefer not to have hung convertibles, since these obligations must be repaid in money.
  • To solve the issue of a hung convertible, a company would need to improve its fundamentals to spur the common stock high enough to reach the conversion price.

Understanding Hung Convertibles

Convertible securities are a type of bond, note, or preferred stock that can be converted into the common shares of the issuing company at a fixed price and date in the future. Many companies with low credit choose to issue convertible securities as an inexpensive way to raise money.

When convertible securities are unlikely to be converted to stock, they are referred to as hung convertibles. This is most common when the cost of conversion is greater than the price of the underlying stock.

Due to their limited prospects for conversion, hung convertibles, also known as busted convertibles, trade more like debt instruments than quasi-equity securities. Hung convertibles can also refer to two other instances where the likelihood of conversion is low:

  1. If the issuer is unable to force conversion until the underlying common stock reaches a pre-defined price level.
  2. Because the call date is still far away.

Hung convertibles tend to trade like other debt instruments, due to the low probability of conversion. When the price of the underlying security is high enough to justify conversion, they tend to behave more like equities.

Example of a Hung Convertible

Hung convertibles can take the form of bonds, which are backed by collateral, or debentures, which are dependent on the promise of the issuer to pay its obligations. For example, consider a convertible debenture with a face value of $1,000 that can be converted into 100 shares, for a conversion price of $10. If the price of the underlying stock is $4, this debenture would be considered a hung convertible, especially if it matures in a relatively short period.

Such a debenture would therefore be priced as a debt instrument, with its pricing determined by several factors including its coupon rate, maturity, current market interest rates and yields, and the issuer's credit rating.

To solve the problem of a hung convertible, a company, therefore, would need to improve its fundamentals, such as revenue growth, operating margins, or return on invested capital, to spur the common stock high enough to reach the conversion price. 

Convertible securities share many of the advantages of both bonds and stocks. However, they typically pay lower coupon rates than regular bonds.

Benefits and Limitations of Hung Convertibles

Some investors view hung convertible securities as the best of both worlds. They have the income-producing and stable price qualities of a bond plus the conversion feature that can provide the potential to gain shares of common stock, which have historically provided greater capital appreciation and been less sensitive to interest rates than bonds.

In other words, an investor gets paid to wait by earning coupon payments up until maturity or conversion into common equity. For an equity investor, convertibles can offer a degree of participation in up markets and more downside protection in turbulent markets than owning the common stock outright.

Hung convertibles come with drawbacks as well. Due to the conversion feature, convertibles pay lower coupon rates than bonds of the same maturity and credit quality. Convertibles investment manager Calamos Investments pegs this difference at 300 to 400 basis points, quite a spread in today’s low-interest-rate environment. And if the stock of the issuer performs poorly, the investor will be left with a lower-paying bond.

Special Considerations

Valuing convertibles is a complex exercise since factors that impact bonds, such as interest rates, and factors that impact stocks, such as earnings growth, must be analyzed in tandem. When a convertible bond is trading close to its investment value, or the value of an equivalent non-convertible bond, its price behavior will be more influenced by interest rates than one trading closer to its conversion value. In general, however, a change in the fundamentals of the issuing company will have the greatest impact on a convertible’s price.

Article Sources
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  1. Calamos Investments. "Convertible Securities." Accessed Oct. 24, 2021.

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