When credit costs are very close • 02.15.10
Peter had met with the labor council and brought a proposal back to John. “John, the labor costs on this project are very close. We’ll subsidize the labor cost one cent per labor hour. But if we do this, we want you to sign a project agreement with us. As you know, in a project agreement we’ll ensure that you have the needed labor and we’ll provide you with a no-strike clause. And in return you’ll agree to make this an all-union work site.Additionally,we’ll help reduce the labor cost to make the job cost-competitive with nonunion contractors. Your client needs to have this job completed on time. Going with a nonunion contractor opens you up to risk in this area. Our record proves that if you sign a project agreement with us, you won’t be held up by labor problems.Will you commit to a project agreement?” John thought about it for a few minutes.While the labor would cost slightly more than he wanted, he knew Peter was right about getting the job completed on time. The trades had the resources needed to complete the job. Some nonunion contractors were excellent, but getting enough people on site was always an issue. John asked Peter: “What would I need to do if I were to commit to using all-union labor on this project?” Peter suggested they review a project partnering agreement that the Building and Construction Council had used on other projects. Then, they could decide what to include in or exclude from their agreement. John liked the idea, so they proceeded. The project partnering agreement that Peter showed him was five pages long and included thirteen articles. Each article addressed a term of the agreement. John took a minute to review each article.
Almost all bonds of companies being upgraded into investment grade show a significant spread tightening long before the actual rating action. Of course at the time of the upgrade technical factors (new previously restricted buyers emerge) tighten the spreads further.
Adowngrade into high yield may have the following effects: