Leveraged Loan Index (LLI)

Leveraged Loan Index (LLI)

A leveraged loan index (LLI) is a market-weighted index that tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans. An LLI serves as a benchmark for performance measurement of fund managers dedicated to leveraged loan investment strategies and as a basis for passive investment vehicles such as exchange traded funds (ETF). For example, the Invesco Senior Loan Portfolio (ticker: BKLN) is based on the S&P/LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 Index. A leveraged loan index (LLI) is a market-weighted index that tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans. According to Invesco, the asset management company that offers BKLN, the fund invests at least 80% of its total assets in the constituent securities that make up the leveraged loan index, which tracks the market-weighted performance of the component loans based on market weightings, spreads, and interest payments. A leveraged loan index (LLI) tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans on a market-weighted basis.

A leveraged loan index (LLI) tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans on a market-weighted basis.

What Is a Leveraged Loan Index (LLI)?

A leveraged loan index (LLI) is a market-weighted index that tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans. Several indexes for the market exist, but the most widely followed one is the S&P/LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 Index.

A leveraged loan is a senior secured debt obligation that is rated below investment grade (i.e., part of the high-yield or "junk" bond market). Leveraged loans are issued to finance leveraged buyouts (LBOs), and most of the loans are traded in the secondary market. The leveraged loan index tracks the prices of the loans.

A leveraged loan index (LLI) tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans on a market-weighted basis.
A leveraged loan is a type of credit facility that is extended to companies or individuals that already have considerable amounts of debt or a poor credit history
The fixed-income securities tracked by an LLI will be riskier and higher-yield than investment-grade benchmark bond indices.

How a Leveraged Loan Index Works

A leveraged loan is structured, arranged, through a process known as syndication. Loan syndication is the process of bringing together a group of lenders in funding various portions of a loan for a single borrower, often to diversify the credit risk exposure of any single lender. This version of a leveraged loan index is a common benchmark and represents the 100 largest and most liquid issues of the institutional loan universe.

The most popular leveraged loan index (LLI) was developed by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) and the Loan Syndications and Trading Association (LSTA). A sub-index assembled by S&P and LSTA is the U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 B/BB Rating Index, while S&P has a Global Leveraged Loan 100 Index on its own to include major issuers in Europe. The indexes are rebalanced twice per year. IHS Markit Ltd. and Credit Suisse also maintain proprietary leveraged loan indexes.

Leveraged Loan Indices in Practice

An LLI serves as a benchmark for performance measurement of fund managers dedicated to leveraged loan investment strategies and as a basis for passive investment vehicles such as exchange traded funds (ETF).

For example, the Invesco Senior Loan Portfolio (ticker: BKLN) is based on the S&P/LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 Index. According to Invesco, the asset management company that offers BKLN, the fund invests at least 80% of its total assets in the constituent securities that make up the leveraged loan index, which tracks the market-weighted performance of the component loans based on market weightings, spreads, and interest payments. If less than 100% of the assets are invested in the component securities of the index, there will be variability in the performance of the ETF versus the index.

LLIs and CDSs

Some LLIs are tailored to derivatives products that utilize leveraged loans. For instance, the iTraxx LevX are a pair of two tradable indexes that hold credit default swaps (CDSs) representing a diversified basket of the 40 (formerly 35) most liquid European companies that have tradable debt offerings in the secondary market.

The LevX indices track what are known as leveraged loan credit default swaps (LCDS). The iTraxx LevX Senior Index represents only senior loans, while the iTraxx LevX Subordinated Index represents subordinated debt including second- and third-lien loans.

Related terms:

Ba2/BB

Ba2/BB are ratings by Moody's Investor Service and S&P Global Ratings, respectively, for a credit issue or an issuer of credit below investment grade. read more

Bond Market

The bond market is the collective name given to all trades and issues of debt securities. Learn more about corporate, government, and municipal bonds. read more

Credit Default Swap (CDS) & Example

A credit default swap (CDS) is a particular type of swap designed to transfer the credit exposure of fixed income products between two or more parties. read more

Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) and Overview

An exchange traded fund (ETF) is a basket of securities that tracks an underlying index. ETFs can contain investments such as stocks and bonds. read more

Highly Leveraged Transaction (HLT)

A highly leveraged transaction (HLT) is a bank loan to a company that already carries a huge debt load. read more

iTraxx LevX Indexes

iTraxx LevX is a set of indexes that hold credit default swaps (CDSs) issued by European companies. read more

iTraxx

iTraxx is a family of indices that track the credit derivatives market in Europe, Japan, non-Japan Asia and Australia. read more

Junk Bond

Junk bonds are debt securities rated poorly by credit agencies, making them higher risk (and higher yielding) than investment grade debt. read more

Loan Credit Default Swap Index (Markit LCDX)

The Loan Credit Default Swap Index (Markit LCDX) is an index of loan-only credit default swaps (CDS) covering 100 individual companies in North America. read more

Leveraged Buyout (LBO)

A leveraged buyout is the acquisition of another company using a significant amount of borrowed money (debt) to meet the cost of acquisition. read more