Credit crisis fuels bond deals

Posted on May 6, 2009 16:52 by Janet Conley

Though the financial crisis has managed to gut some practice areas—venture capital, anyone?—it’s proving a boon to others.

One beneficiary is bond work created when cash-strapped banks decide not to renew letters of credit. That’s the situation that pushed the Atlanta City Council on Monday to adopt a Series 2009 bond ordinance for funds not to exceed $750 million. A portion of that money will be used to refinance commercial paper issued for the city’s water and sewer department.

“That’s an example,” says Earle R. Taylor III, a partner in Kilpatrick Stockton’s public finance practice and counsel for the city on this deal. “The financial crisis has really been the majority of what I’ve worked on in the past year.”

He explains that three primary situations resulting from the credit crisis have boosted the need for refinancings. “It’s either the market for the bonds, in the case of auction-rate paper—the city had some of that—and the market seized up,” he says. “Or you’ve got bonds backed by an insurance company or a bank that gets into financial trouble and gets their credit rating downgraded and investors no longer want them, so the bonds get put back [to the lender]. Or you get a letter of credit that is not renewed or is terminated simply because capital is scarce and banks aren’t interested in providing those products anymore.”

In the case of the city’s water-sewer deal, he says Atlanta’s near junk-bond rating was not a factor in the banks’ decision not to renew their letters of credit. Rather, he says, just the availability and price of credit changed.

The banks which elected not to renew their letters of credit on the city’s water-sewer deal are J.P. Morgan Chase NA; Bank of America NA; Dexia Crédit Local and Lloyds Bank TSB plc.

Taylor says he hopes the bonds, which are slated to be sold in June, will bring in $600 million to $700 million.

Another recession-fueled deal: The city had about $441 million in variable rate demand bonds backed by a liquidity facility from Dexia, a European bank, Taylor says. But the renewal date was Friday, and Dexia elected not to renew. The bonds were set to amortize over 40 years, Taylor says, and if the city can’t get them refinanced, the amortization will shrink to a seven-year term starting in November. A shorter term would mean much higher payments for the city.

He says the city plans to remarket those bonds as long-term, fixed-rate bonds later this summer.

Taylor inked another credit-crisis-related deal because of an insurer’s downgraded rating.

In that deal, municipal bond insurer Ambac Financial Group was AAA rated when it insured the Georgia State University Foundation’s deal to purchase the old SunTrust headquarters at Five Points.

The deal was financed by variable rate demand bonds backed by Ambac, says Taylor, with J.P. Morgan Chase under a standby bond purchase agreement.

“Ambac is now downgraded as junk because of the financial crisis,” Taylor says. “So all those bonds are back at J.P. Morgan and bonds payable over 30 years are now due in five.”

Taylor says he’s in the middle of trying to restructure that $70 million to $80 million deal and get it refinanced. He says he hopes to close in early June.

“These are perfect examples of things we never thought would have happened in a million years, and they’ve happened,” he says. “It’s caused us to look at our documents and contracts in ways we never thought we would.”


More about:
E-mail | Share on Facebook | del.icio.us | Permalink | Add a comment | Comments (2) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

Comments

Add comment


 

biuquote
  • Comment
  • Preview
Loading



ADVERTISEMENT
An Affiliate of the Law.com Network
Sign up to receive Legal Blog Watch by email
From the Law.com Newswire

[about RSS] Law.com Privacy Policy

Categories

Recent posts

Archive

About this blog

Janet ConleyThe Deal Watch Blog is devoted to bringing you the latest news in business law in Atlanta, the Southeast and the U.S. The lead writer is Daily Report associate editor Janet L. Conley.

Janet L. Conley is an attorney who returned to journalism after practicing law with Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld in Washington and with the Georgia Legal Services Program in Atlanta.

During her tenure at the Daily Report, Janet, now the paper's associate editor, has covered law firm economics and management, business and federal courts. In 2007, she received the Georgia Associated Press Story of the Year award and the Atlanta Press Club’s Journalist of the Year award, both for small circulation newspapers, for "Green to Gold," a series of articles on how climate change will alter business and the law.

Janet has written for The American Lawyer magazine and the National Law Journal, among other publications. She also served as managing editor of GC South magazine.

Janet holds a journalism degree from Southern College and a juris doctor degree from the University of Pennsylvania. She lives in Decatur with her husband Mark Harper, also an attorney, and their three children.

She can be reached at jconley@alm.com.

Andy PetersThe contributing writer is Daily Report staff reporter Andy Peters.

Andy Peters has been a journalist since graduating from Furman University in 1992. A short list of the subjects he’s covered includes the Georgia state Legislature, the U.S. semiconductor industry, the Alabama-Florida-Georgia “water wars” litigation, the 1999 American Airlines pilots strike, Coca-Cola and PepsiCo’s battle to acquire the Gatorade sports-drink brand, indie rock music and high school football. Andy has written for Bloomberg News, the New York Times Web site, the Macon Telegraph, the Spartanburg (S.C.) Herald-Journal and the Atlanta Business Chronicle.

Andy has written the Deal Watch column for the Daily Report since March 2006. He was born in Chattanooga, Tenn. in 1971 and grew up in Ringgold, Ga. He lives in Decatur with his wife and two children.

He can be reached at apeters@alm.com.

Blogroll







Sign in