CLO Interest Rate Risk

CLOs are floating-rate securities with near-zero duration risk. Both assets (leveraged loans) and liabilities (CLO tranches) reset quarterly based on SOFR, creating a natural hedge against interest rate movements. This makes CLOs dramatically less sensitive to rate changes than fixed-rate high yield bonds—a key structural advantage that became especially valuable during 2022-2024's rapid rate increases.

Why CLOs Have Minimal Interest Rate Risk

Floating-Rate Structure

Assets (leveraged loans): SOFR + spread (e.g., SOFR + 450 bps), reset quarterly

Liabilities (CLO tranches): SOFR + spread (e.g., SOFR + 150 bps AAA), reset quarterly

Example: What happens when SOFR increases

Scenario SOFR Rate Asset Yield (SOFR+450) AAA Cost (SOFR+150) Net Spread
Low rates (2021) 0.05% 4.55% 1.55% 3.00%
Rising rates (2022) 3.00% 7.50% 4.50% 3.00%
High rates (2024) 5.35% 9.85% 6.85% 3.00%

Key insight: Net spread (asset yield minus liability cost) remains constant at 300 bps regardless of SOFR level. Both sides of the balance sheet move in parallel.

Duration Comparison: CLOs vs. Bonds

Security Type Duration Price Change if Rates ↑ 1% 2022 Performance (Rates ↑ 3%)
AAA CLO 0.1 years -0.1% +1.5% (rates helped)
BBB CLO 0.2 years -0.2% -2.8% (credit spread widening)
HY Bonds (BB) 4.5 years -4.5% -12.5% (duration + credit)
Investment Grade Corporates 7.2 years -7.2% -18.2% (worst since 2008)
10Y Treasury 8.5 years -8.5% -16.4%

Real-world example (2022 rate shock): When Fed raised rates 425 bps in 2022, AAA CLOs returned +1.5% while IG corporate bonds fell -18%. CLO floating-rate coupons increased, offsetting modest credit spread widening.

The 2022-2024 Case Study

What Happened

Federal Reserve raised rates from 0.25% (March 2022) to 5.50% (July 2023) to combat inflation—fastest hiking cycle since 1980s.

Impact on Different Securities

Asset Class 2022 Return 2023 Return 2-Year Cumulative
AAA CLOs +1.5% +7.2% +8.8%
BBB CLOs -2.8% +11.5% +8.4%
Leveraged Loan Index -0.5% +13.2% +12.6%
High Yield Bonds -11.2% +13.4% +0.7%
Investment Grade Corporates -15.8% +5.5% -11.1%
Aggregate Bond Index -13.0% +5.5% -8.2%

Key takeaway: AAA CLOs posted +8.8% cumulative returns while IG corporate bonds fell -11.1% during identical period. Floating-rate structure insulated CLO investors from duration risk.

Components of Interest Rate Risk

1. Base Rate Risk (SOFR Changes)

Definition: Risk that changes in SOFR affect security value.

CLO impact: Near-zero. Both assets and liabilities move with SOFR, preserving spread.

Exception: SOFR floor benefit. If SOFR falls below floor (typically 0-50 bps), asset yields stay at "SOFR floor + spread" while liabilities continue to fall. This benefits equity holders in low-rate environments.

2. Credit Spread Risk

Definition: Risk that the spread over SOFR (e.g., +150 bps for AAA) widens or tightens due to credit market conditions.

CLO impact: Moderate. Spread widening reduces market value; spread tightening increases value.

Historical AAA CLO spread ranges:

What drives spread movements:

3. Prepayment Risk

Definition: Risk that loans prepay early (refinance), shortening effective maturity.

Impact on CLO debt holders:

CLO structural protections:

4. Extension Risk

Definition: Risk that effective maturity extends beyond expectations.

When this happens:

Impact: Investors must hold positions longer than anticipated, creating opportunity cost.

Who Benefits from Rising Rates?

CLO Equity Holders: Big Winners

Rising rates dramatically benefit CLO equity through increased cash flow:

Example: $500M CLO with $50M equity (10% of capital)

SOFR Environment Asset Yield Debt Cost Net Spread Equity Cash Flow Equity Yield
Low (0.05%, 2021) 4.55% 1.75% 2.80% $8.1M 16.2%
Rising (3.00%, 2022) 7.50% 4.70% 2.80% $8.1M 16.2%
High (5.35%, 2024) 9.85% 6.85% 3.00% $8.8M 17.6%

Additional benefit - SOFR floor: When SOFR was 0.05% (2021), many loans had 0.50% floors. Effective asset yield = SOFR floor (0.50%) + spread (4.50%) = 5.00%, while liability cost = actual SOFR (0.05%) + spread (1.70%) = 1.75%. This created 40-50 bps of "excess spread" benefiting equity.

CLO Debt Holders: Neutral to Positive

Who Loses from Rising Rates?

Fixed-Rate Bond Holders: Big Losers

High yield bonds and investment-grade corporates suffered double-digit losses in 2022:

Strategic Implications for Investors

When to Favor CLOs Over Bonds

Rising rate environment (like 2022-2024):

Falling rate environment (like 2019-2020):

When to Favor Bonds Over CLOs

Stable rate environment with falling credit spreads:

LIBOR to SOFR Transition (2021-2023)

What Changed

CLO market transitioned from LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) to SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) as benchmark:

Impact on CLOs

Key Takeaways

CLO debt investment strategies →

How rising rates boost equity returns →