CLO Debt Investing: AAA to BBB Tranches

CLO debt tranches—from AAA to BBB and below—offer institutional investors floating-rate credit exposure with structural protections unavailable in traditional corporate bonds. With yields ranging from SOFR + 120 bps (AAA) to SOFR + 600+ bps (BB), CLO debt serves diverse investment mandates across the risk spectrum.

This guide covers the strategies, risks, and best practices for investing in CLO debt tranches, from ultra-conservative AAA allocations to yield-focused mezzanine positions.

Overview: CLO Debt Tranche Profiles

Tranche Rating Typical Spread (SOFR+) % of Structure Subordination Primary Investors
Class A AAA 120-150 bps 60-65% 35-40% Insurance companies, pension funds, banks
Class B AA 165-200 bps 7-9% 25-32% Insurance companies, asset managers
Class C A 200-240 bps 5-7% 18-25% Asset managers, insurers, funds
Class D BBB 285-350 bps 5-7% 11-18% Credit-focused funds, crossover buyers
Class E BB 500-600 bps 4-6% 6-12% High-yield funds, hedge funds

Note: Spreads as of Q4 2024. Actual spreads vary by manager tier, market conditions, and deal structure.

AAA Tranches: The Conservative Core

Investment Profile

  • Rating: AAA by Moody's, S&P, and/or Fitch
  • Yield: SOFR + 120-150 bps (absolute: 6.2-6.5% when SOFR = 5.0%)
  • Default history: Zero AAA CLO defaults since 1994
  • Subordination: 35-40% of capital structure absorbs losses before AAA is impaired
  • Typical minimum: $250K-$1M per tranche

Why Institutions Buy AAA CLOs

1. Yield Premium Over AAA Corporates

  • AAA CLO tranches yield 40-80 bps more than AAA-rated corporate bonds of similar duration
  • Example (Q4 2024): AAA CLO at 6.3% vs. AAA corporate bond at 5.7% = 60 bps pickup

2. Floating-Rate Exposure

  • CLO coupons reset quarterly based on SOFR
  • Natural hedge against inflation and rising rates
  • Low duration risk (typically 0.25-0.5 years modified duration)

3. Structural Protection

  • 35-40% subordination cushion
  • Coverage tests divert cash flows to AAA if portfolio deteriorates
  • Diversification across 150-300 loans in underlying portfolio

4. Regulatory Treatment

  • AAA CLOs qualify as High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) for banks (Level 2B)
  • Favorable capital treatment for insurance companies under RBC/Solvency II

AAA Risk Considerations

While AAA CLOs have never defaulted, investors face:

  • Mark-to-market volatility: Secondary market prices can decline 5-15% during stress (March 2020: AAA CLOs fell to 85-92 before recovering)
  • Spread widening risk: AAA spreads can widen 50-150 bps during dislocations
  • Refinancing risk: Equity may refinance AAA at lower spreads, forcing reinvestment at worse terms
  • Extension risk: If portfolio deteriorates, early amortization may be delayed

AAA Strategy: Tier 1 Managers vs. Tier 2/3

Factor Tier 1 Managers Tier 2/3 Managers
AAA Spread SOFR + 120-135 bps SOFR + 140-160 bps
Liquidity Highly liquid; tight bid-ask (10-20 bps) Less liquid; wider bid-ask (30-50 bps)
Risk Marginally lower (better underwriting) Marginally higher (less track record)
Strategy Accept lower yield for liquidity/brand Capture 15-25 bps premium; hold to maturity

Investor choice: Conservative buyers prefer Tier 1 managers (Ares, Blackstone, Oak Hill) for liquidity and reputation. Yield-focused buyers may target Tier 2/3 for spread pickup, accepting lower liquidity.

AA and A Tranches: The Mezzanine Sweet Spot

AA Tranches

  • Yield: SOFR + 165-200 bps
  • Subordination: 25-32% (slightly less cushion than AAA)
  • Default history: Near-zero defaults; extremely rare downgrades
  • Investor appeal: Higher yield than AAA with minimal additional risk

A Tranches

  • Yield: SOFR + 200-240 bps
  • Subordination: 18-25%
  • Historical performance: Very low default rates; occasional downgrades during severe stress
  • Investor appeal: Investment-grade rating with high-yield-like returns

Why AA/A Tranches Are Popular

Risk-Adjusted Returns: AA/A tranches historically offer the best risk-adjusted returns in the CLO capital structure:

  • Yields 40-100 bps higher than AAA
  • Still maintain substantial subordination (20-30%)
  • Investment-grade ratings (satisfy regulatory requirements)
  • Very low default risk (coverage tests protect these tranches almost as well as AAA)

Institutional Fit:

  • Insurance companies seeking yield without exiting investment-grade mandates
  • Pension funds targeting 6-7% returns with moderate risk
  • Asset managers building diversified credit portfolios

BBB Tranches: The Crossover Zone

Investment Profile

  • Yield: SOFR + 285-350 bps (absolute: 7.9-8.5% when SOFR = 5.0%)
  • Subordination: 11-18%
  • Rating: BBB (lowest investment-grade tier)
  • Risk: Moderate; payment deferrals possible during severe stress

BBB Investor Considerations

Advantages:

  • Still investment-grade rated (satisfies many mandates)
  • Yields approach high-yield bond territory (7-9%)
  • 11-18% subordination provides meaningful cushion
  • Floating-rate exposure (hedges inflation/rate risk)

Risks:

  • Coverage test sensitivity: BBB tranches are often the first to experience interest payment deferrals if OC/IC tests fail
  • 2008-2009 precedent: Some BBB tranches had interest payments diverted to senior tranches for 12-24 months
  • Refinancing risk: Equity may call deal early, forcing reinvestment at lower yields
  • Downgrade risk: BBB tranches are more likely to be downgraded to BB during stress (losing investment-grade status)

BBB Strategy: New Issue vs. Secondary

Approach Pricing Advantage Risk
Primary (New Issue) Par (100) Select Tier 1 managers; structural protections Must commit before final portfolio assembled
Secondary (Seasoned) 85-105 Buy at discount if stressed; see actual performance May inherit poor portfolio or weak manager

BB and B Tranches: High-Yield Territory

Investment Profile

  • Yield: SOFR + 500-700+ bps
  • Rating: BB / B (non-investment grade)
  • Subordination: 6-12% (only equity below)
  • Risk: High; vulnerable to coverage test failures and payment deferrals

Who Buys BB/B CLO Debt?

  • High-yield bond funds (treating CLO BB/B as HY bond alternatives)
  • Hedge funds seeking leveraged credit exposure
  • Credit opportunity funds buying distressed tranches at discounts

Why BB/B Over Equity?

BB/B tranches offer a middle ground between equity and investment-grade debt:

  • Fixed coupon: Unlike equity (residual), BB/B have contractual coupons (though deferrable if tests fail)
  • Priority over equity: BB/B are paid before equity in the waterfall
  • Lower risk than equity: 6-12% subordination cushion protects against some losses
  • Yield approaching equity: 9-12% all-in yields approach equity returns with less volatility

BB/B Risk: Payment Deferrals

Scenario: Portfolio deteriorates → OC/IC tests fail → Cash diverted from BB/B to AAA/AA.

  • 2008-2009 experience: Many BB tranches had interest payments deferred for 12-36 months
  • Eventual recovery: Most BB tranches that deferred payments eventually paid accrued interest once tests cured
  • Principal risk: If losses exceed subordination, BB/B can experience principal impairment

Primary Market vs. Secondary Market Strategies

Primary Market (New Issue) Strategy

Process:

  1. Participate in roadshow; review preliminary portfolio
  2. Submit orders during book-building (indicate tranche and size)
  3. Receive allocation based on demand and investor relationships
  4. Fund at closing (typically 100 cents on the dollar)

Advantages:

  • Access to Tier 1 managers before paper trades in secondary
  • Full due diligence access (manager meetings, detailed portfolio review)
  • Structural protections negotiated upfront
  • No liquidity discount

Disadvantages:

  • Must commit before portfolio is finalized (warehouse risk)
  • New issue spreads may tighten in secondary if market improves
  • Competing with other institutional investors for allocations

Secondary Market Strategy

Opportunities:

  • Distressed buying: Purchase BBB/BB tranches at 70-85 cents when coverage tests fail but recovery is expected
  • Upgrade plays: Buy A-rated tranches at 98-99 if manager is likely to cure tests and refi
  • Yield maximization: Buy Tier 2/3 manager AAA at wider spreads than Tier 1

Risks:

  • Information asymmetry: Seller may know something you don't
  • Liquidity: Hard to exit if wrong—secondary market can freeze during stress
  • Structural traps: May inherit deals with poor covenants or weak managers

Portfolio Construction: Diversification Strategies

Strategy 1: All-AAA Core

  • Allocation: 100% AAA tranches
  • Diversification: 15-30 different CLOs
  • Manager mix: 70% Tier 1, 30% Tier 2 (for yield pickup)
  • Expected return: SOFR + 125-140 bps
  • Use case: Conservative institutions; pension funds; insurance general accounts

Strategy 2: Mezzanine Ladder

  • Allocation: 50% AAA, 30% AA, 20% A
  • Expected return: SOFR + 150-170 bps
  • Use case: Moderate risk-takers seeking yield without exiting investment grade

Strategy 3: Crossover Portfolio

  • Allocation: 40% A, 40% BBB, 20% BB
  • Expected return: SOFR + 280-350 bps
  • Use case: Credit-focused funds; high-yield allocators seeking structural protections

Due Diligence Checklist for CLO Debt Investors

Manager Evaluation

  • Historical default rates vs. market (lower = better)
  • Coverage test failure frequency (fewer failures = stronger manager)
  • Tier classification (Tier 1 preferred for liquidity)
  • AUM and vintage diversity (larger, more experienced = better)

Portfolio Quality Metrics

  • Weighted Average Rating Factor (WARF): Lower = higher quality. Target: 2700-3000.
  • CCC exposure: Should be < 7.5%. Lower = safer.
  • Weighted Average Spread (WAS): Higher spread portfolios generate more cushion. Target: 425-475 bps.
  • Diversity Score: Higher = more diversification. Target: 70+.

Structural Protections

  • OC/IC cushions: How far above trigger levels? More cushion = safer.
  • CCC haircuts: How are CCC loans valued in tests? Conservative = 70-85 cents.
  • Call protection: Non-call period (typically 2 years) protects against early refinancing.
  • Reinvestment period: Longer = more manager trading flexibility.

Tax Considerations

  • Interest income: CLO debt payments are ordinary income (not qualified dividends)
  • Tax-deferred accounts: Best held in IRAs, 401(k)s, or pension accounts to avoid annual income tax
  • UBTI: Generally not an issue for debt (unlike equity)
  • Non-U.S. investors: May face withholding taxes unless treaty provisions apply

Key Takeaways by Tranche

AAA: Core Holding

  • Zero default history
  • Yield premium over corporates
  • Floating-rate exposure
  • Best for: Conservative institutions

AA/A: Best Risk-Adjusted

  • 40-100 bps more than AAA
  • Still IG-rated
  • Strong structural protections
  • Best for: Yield-focused IG buyers

BBB: Crossover Play

  • HY-like yields, IG rating
  • Moderate subordination (11-18%)
  • Deferral risk in severe stress
  • Best for: HY/credit opportunity funds

BB/B: Equity Alternative

  • 9-12% yields
  • Priority over equity
  • High deferral risk
  • Best for: HY allocators, hedge funds

Further Reading

Disclaimer

Educational content only. CLO debt investing involves risks including potential loss of principal, payment deferrals, and illiquidity. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult qualified advisors before investing.