A Zombie Stock Apocalypse Is Coming for Your Robinhood Portfolio

  • The number of “zombie stocks” – companies whose cash flow can’t cover the interest on their debt payments – is surging.
  • Zombie stocks currently account for 15.1% of publicly-traded companies, a record high.
  • An apocalypse is inevitable – and it could annihilate your Robinhood portfolio.

In Hollywood horror flicks, it’s not rare for a virus to sweep the globe and trigger a zombie apocalypse. In the real world, the coronavirus pandemic is creating a very different breed of living dead: the “zombie stock.”

Why a Zombie Hoard Is Invading the U.S. Stock Market

A company becomes a zombie when it can no longer service the interest on its debt.

When it can’t cover its interest payments with earnings before interest, taxes, deprecation, and amortization (EBIDTA), the company either risks a debt default, or it has to start making some fire sales to raise capital.

Video: Government stimulus is causing the number of zombie stocks to surge

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It’s unsurprising that zombie company numbers are on the rise.

A decade of ultra-low interest rates already made it easy for struggling companies to remain on life support.

Then the pandemic struck. Earnings imploded. Companies responded by taking on even more debt – to the tune of $1 trillion globally in 2020 alone.

The percentage of companies known as zombie stocks hit its highest level since record-keeping began in the 1990s, a sign of how impaired corporate America has become. | Source: Twitter

The latest number puts the size of the hoard at 548 publicly-traded U.S. stocks – or 15.1% of the total. That’s the highest level since analysts began keeping records in the 1990s. And it’s up from 12% as recently as 2018.

What happens when a large number of companies are near bankruptcy but can avoid it indefinitely?

As economists Filippo di Mauro and Chad Syverson write, it creates problems for the entire economy:

Zombie firms might further limit the ability of new, higher-productivity businesses to enter. This highlights the broader issue that business formation rates have been trending downward for several decades in many developed economies.

In short, zombie companies impact more than just themselves. They lock up resources that could be better used elsewhere.

And while zombie stocks don’t feed on brains, they do feast on investors without them.

Robinhood Traders and Zombie Stocks: A Recipe for Disaster

Once a company becomes a zombie, it’s a race against the clock to see if it can turn its fortunes around before the credit spigots slam shut.

With rates this low – seemingly indefinitely – zombies can often muddle along for years before their apocalypse arrives.

For investors, this means a lot of volatility in company shares.

At their calmest, zombie stocks have a beta of 1, in line with the rest of the stock market. But those stocks are rarely that calm. | Source: Factor Research

That’s the kind of recipe that attracts day traders, especially the retail hoard that populates Robinhood.

We observed this with the surge in Hertz Global (NYSE: HTZ). Robinhood traders dove in after Hertz declared bankruptcy, and the stock soared by triple digits – only to crash again.

Rolling crises will continue to create zombie stocks as the economy struggles to recover from the pandemic.

Expect Robinhood traders armed with stimulus checks and little else to catalyze some bizarre moves in these shares going forward.

Disclaimer: This article represents the author’s opinion and should not be considered investment or trading advice from CCN.com. Unless otherwise noted, the author has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

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