Leveraged Loan Index (LLI)
A Leveraged Loan Index (LLI) is a market-weighted benchmark that tracks the performance of institutional leveraged loans. These indexes summarize price movements, spreads, and interest payments of a basket of loans and are used to measure market performance and to underlie investment products.
What is a leveraged loan?
- A leveraged loan is a senior, typically secured, debt obligation issued to borrowers with significant existing debt or below-investment-grade credit ratings.
- These loans commonly finance leveraged buyouts (LBOs) and are usually syndicated—meaning multiple lenders share portions of the loan to diversify credit exposure.
- Leveraged loans are frequently traded in the secondary market and typically carry higher yields and higher credit risk than investment-grade bonds. Many have floating-rate coupons, which reduces interest-rate duration but leaves credit exposure to economic cycles.
How an LLI is constructed and maintained
- An LLI aggregates the most liquid institutional leveraged loans and weights them by market value.
- Index providers apply eligibility and liquidity screens; commonly referenced LLIs represent the largest and most tradable issues in the loan universe.
- Major leveraged loan indexes are rebalanced periodically (commonly twice a year) to reflect issuance, repayments, and changes in liquidity or credit quality.
Major indexes
- The most widely followed U.S. benchmark is the S&P/LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 Index, which tracks 100 large, liquid loans.
- Variants include rating-based subindexes (e.g., B/BB-rated loans) and global versions that include major issuers outside the U.S.
- Other firms such as IHS Markit and Credit Suisse publish proprietary leveraged loan indexes and related products.
Uses of LLIs
- Performance benchmark: Fund managers focused on leveraged loans use LLIs to measure relative performance.
- Basis for passive products: Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other passive vehicles track LLIs or their components to offer credit exposure. Replication can be partial (e.g., an ETF may invest a specified minimum percentage in index constituents), which can create tracking difference.
- Market analysis: Traders and risk managers use LLIs to gauge market liquidity, spread movements, and credit conditions in the leveraged loan sector.
LLIs and credit derivatives
- Some indexes are tailored to derivatives markets. For example, tradable indexes that represent baskets of leveraged loan credit default swaps (LCDS) track default-risk exposure for a set of liquid issuers.
- These derivative-based indexes may have separate series for senior versus subordinated exposures.
Risks and considerations
- Higher yield comes with higher credit risk and greater sensitivity to economic downturns.
- Floating-rate coupons reduce interest-rate risk but do not protect against borrower default.
- Liquidity in stressed markets can be limited, increasing volatility and potential pricing disparities between the index and underlying instruments.
- ETFs and other products may not fully replicate index holdings, leading to tracking error.
Key takeaways
- An LLI provides a market-weighted measure of institutional leveraged loan performance and is widely used as a benchmark.
- Leveraged loans are below-investment-grade, typically syndicated, and often have floating coupons.
- LLIs support active and passive investment strategies and can be linked to derivatives; they offer higher yield potential but carry elevated credit and liquidity risks.