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Bonds 101
Presentation to
AWWA by
Zions Public Finance
Zions Public Finance
Our Primary Services Financial Advisory Services
Municipal Studies
Underwriting Services
Direct Purchaser Services
Additional Services Continuing Disclosure
Equipment Lease Financing
Bond Election Services
Capital Facilities Planning
Impact Fee Analysis
Special Assessment Area Administration
6
1902 $2.1 billion 1927 $14 billion 1960 $66 billion 1981 $361 billion 1998 $1.3 trillion 2011 $3.7 trillion
Growth of the U.S. Municipal Market
Source: Article on Municipal Bonds by Mayraj Fahim, 20 March 2012
7
1812 – First U.S. Municipal Bond
The first U.S. municipal bond was issued in 1812 by New York City as a general obligation bond to construct a canal.
8
Who Borrows in the US Municipal Market?
Infrastructure
State and Local Government
State and Local Authorities
Transportation
Water and Sewer
Non-Profit Entities
Healthcare Institutions
Private Schools
Colleges and Universities
Student Loan Authorities
Museums
Private Sector Entities for Limited Purposes
Pollution Control
Industrial Development
Airports & Seaports
Housing
State and Local Housing Authorities
Housing Developers
Public Power
Public Utilities
Resource Recovery
Independent Power Projects
9
Who buys bonds?
*Figures for 2013 are as of March 31, preliminary, and seasonally unadjusted. Dollar amounts are in billions of dollars. Components may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: Federal Reserve Board, Flow of Funds Accounts, Flows and Outstandings; First Quarter, 2013.
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Characteristics of Different Types of Bonds
Source: Zions Bank Public Finance
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Section 3. [Debts of counties, cities, towns and school districts not to exceed revenue—Exception.] No debt in excess of the taxes for the current year
shall be created by any county or subdivision thereof, or by any school district therein, or by any city, town or village, or any subdivision thereof in this State; unless the proposition to create such debt, shall have been submitted to a vote of such qualified electors as shall have paid a property tax therein, in the year preceding such election, and a majority of those voting thereon shall have voted in favor of incurring such debt.
January 4, 1896
Constitution of Utah Article XIV, Public Debt
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Constitution of Utah Article XIV, Public Debt
Section 3. [Certain debt of counties, cities, towns, school districts, and other political subdivisions not to exceed revenue—Exception.] No debt issued by a county, city, town, school district,
or other political subdivision of the State and directly payable from and secured by ad valorem property taxes levied by the issuer of the debt may be created in excess of the taxes for the current year unless the proposition to create the debt has been submitted to a vote of qualified voters at the time and in the manner provided by statute, and a majority of those voting thereon has voted in favor of incurring the debt.
November 6, 1999
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Illegal Municipal Debt in Utah
Debt with payments beyond one fiscal year, unless:
A majority of voters have approved it; Subject to annual appropriation; Secured by an Enterprise Fund’s
revenues;
14
Participants in Issuing Municipal Bonds
15
Issuer (Borrower) Selects financing team members
Approves financing terms and documents, and ultimately issues the debt instruments
Responsible for repayment of debt (unless Issuer is “conduit” issuer)
Responsible for the accuracy and completeness of the debt offering document (i.e., Official Statement, Private Placement Memorandum)
Responsible for complying with terms and covenants in financing documents
16
Top 10 Utah Issuers in 2014
Utah State Board of Regents Utah County Utah Housing Corporation Utah Transit Authority Jordan School District Cache School District Intermountain Power Agency Utah Charter School Finance Authority North Davis County Sewer District Jordan Valley Water Conservancy District
$639,800,000 238,100,000 210,500,000 142,400,000 104,700,000 90,000,000 84,800,000 79,400,000 50,000,000 50,000,000
Source: Thomson Reuters
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Financial Advisor
Has a fiduciary duty to the Issuer (acts in the Issuer’s best interests) (MSRB Rule G-17 and proposed Rule G-36)
Assists Issuer in the selection of other financing team members
Advises on wide range of financial issues; may be specific to an issuance of debt, or ongoing
Quarterbacks the bond issuance process; runs the calendar; coordinates other team members
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Financial Advisor
Position of Trust
Recent SEC definition of Municipal Advisor
Strong GFOA Recommendation
19
National FA Rankings - 2014
Firm Volume (000s)
1 Public Financial Management Inc. 48,517.2 2 Public Resources Advisory Group 27,663.73 First Southwest 26,763.34 Estrada Hinojosa & Co 8,748.6 5 KNN Inc., ZBPF ID, ZBPF NV, ZBPF UT 7,471.4 6 Acacia Financial Group Corp. 6,368.67 A C Advisory 5,773.08 Piper Jaffray 5,105.29 Lamont Financial Services Corp. 4,167.710 RBC Capital Markets 3,942.2
(Source: Thomson Reuters.)
20
Bond Counsel Nationally recognized law firm with experience in municipal debt financing
(Red book)
Works with the Issuer and the financing team on behalf of bondholders (for whom does bond counsel work?)
Has primary responsibility for preparation of legal documents (resolutions, indentures, security documents, trust agreements, tax certificates, etc.)
Renders opinion concerning the validity of the bond issue with respect to statutory authority, constitutionally, procedural conformity and, if tax-exempt, exemption of interest from Federal and State income taxes
21
Bond Counsel – Utah 2014
Firm Volume (millions)
Ballard Spahr $ 579.4 Chapman and Cutler 432.4 Orrick Herrington 84.8 Blaisdel & Church 0.0 Chamberlain & Associates 0.0
* (Source: Thomson Reuters)
22
Underwriter
Investment bank (broker-dealer) hired to sell the bonds into the marketplace. Initially purchases the bonds for immediate resale
May provide input into structuring the financing and drafting the Official Statement and related documents
Directs the pre-sale marketing efforts to investors
Proposes interest rates and offering terms based on market feedback; accepts orders from investors, and may commit capital to underwrite unsold bonds
Inherent conflict with the Issuer
23
Top 10 U.S. Underwriters(Market Share in 2014)
Bank of America Merrill Lynch JP Morgan Chase Citi Morgan Stanley Wells Fargo RBC Capital Markets Barclay’s Capital Raymond James Goldman Sachs & Co Stifel Nicholaus
14.1%11.9 9.8 8.7 6.8 6.3 4.8 4.0 3.9 3.5
(Source: Thompson Reuters)
24
Top 5 Utah Underwriters(Par Amount in 2014)
JP Morgan RBC Capital Markets Morgan Stanley Goldman Sachs George K. Baum
$246,800,000 208,400,000 147,100,000 142,400,000 65,300,000
(Source: Thompson Reuters)
GFOA Recommended Practices
“There is a lack of understanding among many debt issuers about the appropriate roles of underwriters and financial advisers and the fiduciary relationship that each has, or does not have, with respect to state and local government issuers.”
GFOA Debt Committee Draft “Best Practices” Document Dated June 9, 2007
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GFOA Recommended Practices
“The relationship between issuer and financial advisor is one of ‘trust and confidence’ which is in the ‘nature of a fiduciary relationship’. This is in contrast to the relationship between the issuer and underwriter where the relationship is one of some common purposes but also some competing objectives, especially at the time of bond pricing.”
GFOA Debt Committee Draft “Best Practices” Document Dated June 9, 2007
26
Municipal Bond Teeter Totter
Price
Interest Rate
27
28
Underwriters An Underwriter is not necessarily your friend!
Their interests are not aligned with yours Prohibition from Financial Advisors underwriting your
bonds in a negotiated sale (Rule G-23) Underwriters may push you into a negotiated sale.
Why? Follow GFOA recommendations:
Use a Financial Advisor to look out for your interests Hire underwriters using RFPs Use Competitive Sales whenever possible Don’t use the same underwriter over and over
29
Trustee/Paying Agent/Registrar
Retained by Issuer, but represents bondholders’ interests
Manages trustee-held bond funds (reserves, construction funds, etc.)
Receives interest and principal payments from Issuer/Borrower and distributes to Bondholders
Maintains the list of owners of the bonds
Holds liens and security interests and exercises remedies, for bondholders, in the event of a default
30
National Trustee Rankings 2013
Firm Volume (millions)
1. Bank of New York Mellon $66,628.32. U.S. Bank 54,145.33. Wells Fargo Bank 15,646.44. Manufactures & Traders Trust 4,458.95. Huntington National Bank 4,187.7 6. California State Treasurer 2,438.6 7. Regions Bank 2,366.6 8. UMB Bank 1,734.49. BOKF, NA 1,463.710. Hancock Bank 1,362.4
(Source: Thomson Reuters)
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Counsel to the Issuer
May be internal (City Attorney, County DA, AG’s Office) or outside or general counsel; not hired specifically for bond issue
Reviews all legal documents on behalf of Issuer
May assist in drafting an Offering Statement and additional disclosure documents, and may opine as to accuracy
Issues the required local counsel’s opinion
32
Underwriter’s Counsel Nationally recognized law firm representing the underwriters, with
experience in debt financing
Advises and opines on matters relating to the Offering Statement, including matters relating to disclosure under SEC regulations and other standards; may have the principal role in drafting Offering Statement
Prepares underwriting documents – Blue Sky Survey, Legal Investment Memorandum, Agreement Among Underwriters, Selling Group Agreement, and the Bond Purchase Contract
Responsible for participating in “due diligence” before the bond issue is offered to investors
33
Rating Agencies
National organizations that provide rating on debt of public and private organizations
Standard & Poor’s Corporation Moody’s Investor Service, Inc. Fitch Ratings
Authoritative sources that assess a borrower’s ability to repay
Ratings have direct impact on cost of borrowing
34
Bond Ratings
35
Moody’s Rating Distributions
Moody’s rates 8,300 local government GO credits In June 2014 ratings ranged from Aaa to Caa3
Sector median is Aa3 Only 2% rated Baa1 or below
Source: Moody’s Investor’s Service
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Moody’s G.O Bond Rating Criteria
Source: Moody’s Investor’s Service
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Economy
Income as a % of nation Per capita and median household
figures Compare against local cost of living
indexes
Market value per capita
Rate payer concentration Percent of assessed value or total
revenue in the top 10 payers
Very Diverse <15%
Diverse 15% to 25%
Moderately Concentrated
26% to 40%
Concentrated >40%
Low ≤65%
Adequate 90%
Good 110%
Strong 130%
Very Strong
≥130%
Low $35,000
Adequate $55,000
Strong $80,000
Very Strong $100,000
Extremely Strong
+$100,000
38
Rate covenants – designed to protection for the investor that the water and sewer issuer will maintain and collect rates, charges and fees sufficient to cover D/S requirements. Typically minimum levels are 1.00 X to 1.25 X
Debt service reserve fund (DSRF) – temporarily support to make D/S payments and is typically sized as the lesser of 1) 10% of principal, 2) 125% of average annual D/S, or 3) the maximum annual D/S
Additional bonds test (ABT) – prevents an issuer from using too much leverage and weakening the ability to meet D/S coverage levels
Flow of funds – Outlined in the indenture and typically the funds flow is REVENUE FUND O&M FUND BOND FUND DSRF
Credit Ratings
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• Operating Performanceo Revenue trends o Chargeso Operating margin
• Leverageo Too much debt can be a burdeno Long-term debt to capitalizationo Higher debt to capital ratios are common with older systems
upgrading aging assets or newer systems expanding capacity
• Liquidityo Annual D/S coverage at least 1Xo Max annual D/S coverageo Failure to keep covenants triggers a technical default
Credit Ratings
40
Debt Profile Debt per customer is $1,500 or less Debt per capita is $500 or less Debt funding of capital projects is 50% or less 90% of more of debt is amortized in 20 years Rate covenant is 1.25x annual debt service (or
more) Additional Bonds Test is 1.25x maximum
annual debt service (or more) Cash-funded debt service reserve fund is at its
legal maximum
Strong Ratings for Water/Sewer Bonds
41
Financial Profile Total debt service coverage is 2.0x or more 365 days (or more) of cash on hand Residential charges for utilities are less than
1.2% of median household income Significant percentage of revenues are
recovered through base charges (rather than volumetric charges)
Strong Ratings for Water/Sewer Bonds
42
Operating Profile Number of customers is stable or growing at
less than 1% annually Top 10 customers account for less than 5% of
total revenues No single customer accounts for more than
2% of revenues Treatment capacity is greater than 40% of
demand Annual renewal of 100% or more of
depreciated assets Full compliance with regulations
Strong Ratings for Water/Sewer Bonds
43
Management Extensive utility sector experience Objective, engaged, knowledgeable board Strong communication skills from
management For wholesalers – coordinated members Frequent and accurate forecasting/planning Well-developed and documented policies and
procedures
Strong Ratings for Water/Sewer Bonds
Disclosure
44
45
Preliminary & Final Official Statement
Legal Documents– Resolutions, General and Supplemental Indentures, etc.
Continuing Disclosure
Disclosure
46
Preliminary (“POS”) and Final Official Statements (“OS”)
Distributed to “Wall Street” via email and web sites
Disclosure
47
Disclosure
What does the OS contain?
48
Continuing Disclosure Beginning in January 1996, municipal entities issuing debt
(subject to certain exemptions) were required to comply with Rule 15c2-12, Municipal Securities Disclosure of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Internet web site, www.emma.msrb.org
Disclosure
Tax Exemption
49
50
Municipal Securities are “Tax-Exempt” Investments.
Comparison of Equivalent After-Tax Returns to Investors
Taxable XYZ Company
Debentures
Tax-ExemptABC Municipality
General Obligation Bonds
9%
10
11
12
13
14
4.80%
5.34
5.87
6.41
6.94
7.47
51
1819 - The Roots of Tax Exemption
Hamilton Jefferson McCullough Marshall
52
1819 - The Roots of Tax Exemption
McCullough –vs- Maryland
“The power to tax is the power to destroy…”
John MarshallChief Justice, US Supreme Court
Initiated the doctrine of “intergovernmental tax immunity”.
53
1895 - Pollock v. Farmer’s Loan & Trust Co.
The U.S. Supreme Court held in 1895 that the federal government had no power under the U.S. Constitution to tax interest on municipal bonds.
(In 1988, the Supreme Court stated that Congress could tax interest income on municipal bonds if it so desired on the basis that tax exemption of municipal bonds is not protected by the Constitution. In South Carolina v. Baker, the Supreme Court stated that the contrary decision of the Court 1895 in the case of Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. had been "effectively overruled by subsequent case law.“)
54
The Threat to Tax-Exemption
Most hostile threat since the 1986 Tax ActFactors include:
Deficit reduction Tax reform (simplification) Progressive argument about fairness
(Obama administration’s proposed cap of 28%)
55
Federal Deficit Reduction $2 Trillion Deficit Reduction
Elimination of tax-exemption on municipal bonds helps fill 15% of a $2 trillion deficit reduction goal.
Source: Morgan Stanley, Office of Management and Budget estimates of February 2012
56
The Threat to Tax-Exemption
What would be the effect on local governments? Higher borrowing rates (about 1/3) Fewer public projects (not enough revenue) Tax increases to pay for new projects?
Current Rates
57
Fed Fund Rate, Inflation, and Unemployment
Sources: U.S. Federal Reserve, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsNote: PCE is total personal consumption expenditures
59Source: Municipal Market Data
60
61
Marching Down the Yield CurveY
ield
Maturity
1 5 10 15 20
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Refinancing Analysis Factors and Metrics
NPV Savings as a % of refunded principal “3%” is the general rule (but this can be arbitrary)
How “efficient” is the ratio of savings to negative arbitrage – what is your savings compared to your negative arbitrage
How much is your savings compared to your costs of issuance to issue refunding bonds?
How many more years of bond payments do you have? How close is your bond call date?
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Zions Bank Public FinanceOne South Main Street, 18th FloorSalt Lake City, UT 84111-1904
801-844-7373