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Could California Really Default? (Bond holders beware)
Real Clear Markets ^ | 01/27/2010 | Steve Malanga

Posted on 01/27/2010 7:05:00 AM PST by SeekAndFind

After Standard & Poor's downgraded California's bond rating yet again earlier this month, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and members of his administration sounded practically schizophrenic, on the one hand warning the legislature that the state had to get its fiscal house in order while simultaneously deriding the notion that California would ever fail to pay its obligations.

The ever-colorful Terminator had the harshest message for the bond market: How could you rate the state's bonds as no better than some African nation's? Echoing the remarks of the state's treasurer, who said last year that nothing short of nuclear war would prompt the state to default, Schwarzenegger pointed out in the Wall Street Journal that the state "has never, ever defaulted on its debts." Defenders of the state even opined that some of the budgetary criticism of it was unwarranted and politically motivated, not based on economic and fiscal reality.

Watching all of this unfold, I couldn't help thinking how little some of us have learned in the last few years, and I wondered whether investors were taken in by these assurances. What struck me in particular was the extent to which the Governor's bluster, his treasurer's assurances, and the defenders of California ignored the complex nature of government finance and the way that municipal defaults unfold when they do occur. There may be good reasons why California won't default, but neither the state nor its defenders are addressing them sufficiently.

Let's start with this simple, broad observation that if there is one thing that we should all have learned in the last few years, it is to be extremely skeptical of any salesmen of financial products (this includes state officials hawking and defending munis) who assure us that because something has never happened before it will never happen. Our entire financial system was brought to its knees by underwriters and salesmen on Wall Street, by sophisticated investors around the world, and government regulators who all averred that there were sufficient protections against systemic risk simply because the system had never melted down in the precise way that it ultimately did. Amid such assurances it was easy for the supporters of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to scoff at the notion that either could fail because they had never failed, and scandalously easy for their supporters to dismiss criticisms of these institutions as politically motivated, just as California supporters now dismiss worries about its credit rating as partisan politics.

If there is something else investors have learned the hard way, it is that protections, including "insurance," are only as good as the entity or entities backing them. As part of their assurances to investors, California's officials argue that there are protections in the state's constitutions and covenants which make bondholders among the first to be paid in any financial crisis. The cynic in me wonders if these covenants are as solid as, say, the senior position that General Motors' bondholders thought they had before the federal government sent them to the back of the line when it bailed out the giant auto maker and in one fell swoop upset decades of bankruptcy precedents.

But there is a more important point here, which is that assurances to bondholders about their place in the pecking order ignore the reality of how municipal default can unfold over time, especially when politicians seem unwilling or unable to fix their government's fiscal woes. To understand what I mean it's worth looking at the whopping New York City default in the mid-1970s. Like California, New York spent years building up a spending regime that went beyond its resources, built on locked-in costs like employee pensions and municipal debt obligations that are not so easily cut or deferred, and which ultimately left city leaders with the politically unpopular choice of cutting services sharply or reneging on their other obligations.

Like California, New York addressed these problems initially by rolling them over into future years with accounting gimmicks and mounting borrowing that did nothing to fix the underlying, structural nature of the problem. When the end came, it was not because the city could not meet some single big debt payment. Rather, it was when officials recognized that enough investors had fled the city's debt instruments that New York could no longer float even short-term financing notes, the sort of borrowing that many governments engage in to smooth over the cycles in tax collections and other revenue streams that make paying bills tough.

One reason these investors had fled new issues, of course, is because munis are supposed to be conservative investments that offer only a modest return to their holders in exchange for being able to sleep peacefully at night. A loss of confidence in this market doesn't occur quickly but is a long-term process, and politicians can exacerbate the uncertainty when their rhetoric becomes more and more bombastic and their assurances steadily more unrealistic, something that's now becoming commonplace among California officials.

After this latest downgrade, for instance, one argument advanced by the state's officials is that it would never stiff bondholders because they are (by the very nature of tax-exempt investments) California residents. This argument is so politically naïve that any savvy investor should see right through it. For one thing, when a budget crunch gets so severe that bondholders start to worry about their investments, it usually means that politicians are facing the choice between paying off a government's senior obligations and cutting services to the bone. Yes, the state's bondholders might be citizens, but under budget duress they will inevitably be characterized (rightly or wrongly) as rich citizens whose demands for payment are being made at the expense of those getting their programs and services cut.

Investors also can't be reassured by the actions and pronouncements of Schwarzenegger who, even as he browbeats the legislature for not acting responsibly, is looking desperately for a bailout from the feds. He's even resurrected the tired, specious argument that California deserves a handout because it sends more money to Washington than it gets in return, a claim advanced for years by so-called balance of payments studies that the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan sponsored.

But even Moynihan realized after years of analyzing this problem that the biggest cause of the deficit between some states and Washington was not federal spending, but taxation. Californians (and residents of other states with such a deficit like New York) pay so much more to the feds in taxes than their states get back in spending because our progressive system of taxation taps more of their incomes. And as Moynihan came to understand, those states that sent more to Washington were in large part responsible for creating and maintaining the very system of taxation that fleeced them. After all, Californians voted strongly for President Obama, whose next budget will sharply raise the country's two top income tax rates, thereby further exacerbating the balance of payments deficit between California and Washington. Sorry, Arnold, but you don't get to complain about a system your voters have been instrumental in perpetuating.

Of course, what the Governor wants is not lower federal taxes but more money coming this way from Washington. And yet, there is absolutely no basis for the rest of us to assume that a state which has acted irresponsibly with its own money will be any more responsible with more of it from Washington.

Still, Arnold's hectoring is certainly going to make things uncomfortable for the Obama administration, which has lots of political allies in California and will come under further pressure to bail out the Golden State. The problem for the administration is that it senses that anger everywhere else is rising against California, which is viewed as the author of its own problems, even as New York City was of its.

No doubt Washington will first try to help surreptitiously, as it did last year when it granted states the right to issue federally subsidized, taxable Build America Bonds, which my colleague Nicole Gelinas called a "backdoor bailout" of California because the state rushed out so much debt under the program. As Nicole explained about this flood of taxable federally backed paper from the Golden State, "If California's usual debt purchasers - tax-exempt investors - are saturated, maybe that's a sign that the state should dial back on its borrowing. Instead, the feds have given it an end-run around normal market signals," which California gladly took advantage of.

California legislators might make a better case for more federal aid if they showed some progress in solving their long-term structural problems by trimming public pensions (including their own) back to levels more consistent with the private sector, by attempting to resurrect parts of their private economy smothered by special interests (like the formerly glorious agricultural economy of the Central Valley being destroyed by environmental extremism), and by seeking to refocus some of the state's enormous government spending on infrastructure projects that secure the future, as the state once did.

Or legislators could continue kissing off the problem and allow us to test the notion of whether our biggest state could, in fact, ever default.

-- Steven Malanga is an editor for RealClearMarkets and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bonds; california; default; economy
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1 posted on 01/27/2010 7:05:02 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
At this point a default would actually be in the interest of the State of California.

It would also be a much needed dose of reality for those idiots in Sacramento.

2 posted on 01/27/2010 7:10:52 AM PST by Lurker (The avalanche has begun. The pebbles no longer have a vote.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Didn't California already default when they were unable to pay cash for employees' wages and tax payers' refunds last year and had to issue some type of scrip? Or was that too focused and short term to count as a real default?
3 posted on 01/27/2010 7:11:09 AM PST by KarlInOhio (Gore is the fifth horseman of the apocalypse. He rides an icy horse bringing cold wherever he goes.)
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To: Lurker

Unfortunatly I agree. The Golden State is in such a mess that anything other than default or bankruptcy won’t get Sacrementos attention. Even at that I have my doubts.


4 posted on 01/27/2010 7:16:23 AM PST by blastdad51 (Typical middle-aged white patriot.)
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To: SeekAndFind

“How could you rate the state’s bonds as no better than some African nation’s?.....

Did he say that?...Hilarious!....It’s all by design you friggin dummy!.....America’s decent to Turd World status....Just ask the Kenyan in the White House!


5 posted on 01/27/2010 7:17:43 AM PST by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: SeekAndFind
Truth is a bitch when she shatters your delusions.

If the American people don't wake up--and fast!--Truth is going to shatter more than their delusions.

If the Left gets its way--the entire U.S.A. will got the way of California--and Detroit--and Zimbabwe! Fast!

6 posted on 01/27/2010 7:19:30 AM PST by Savage Beast (Politics is corrupt.. Politicians are corrupt.)
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To: SeekAndFind

a default and bankruptcy means outlandish pensions salaries benefits get renegotiated which would help tremendously

If I were the bankruptcy judge I would slash all the above across the board immediately by 30% for six months

Then over those six months all pensions would be looked at and the real ripoff pensions would be slashed more and others slashed less than 30%

Another way is to make no state pension over $35,000....that would solve a lot. If you counted on getting $50,000 or $70,000 per year then tough!


7 posted on 01/27/2010 7:20:03 AM PST by dennisw (It all comes 'round again --Fairport)
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To: SeekAndFind
Since it is a left wing State I do not see that being bankrupt and not paying their bonds will have any effect on their raising spending to support their anti-American left wing Progressive brothers.
8 posted on 01/27/2010 7:23:36 AM PST by YOUGOTIT (The Royal 100 Club is Acting the Same as the Roman Senate When the Republic Collapsed)
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To: KarlInOhio

Technically it was indeed a default. But people got paid back eventually. I think what they’re talking about here is no payback.


9 posted on 01/27/2010 7:29:14 AM PST by jiggyboy (Ten per cent of poll respondents are either lying or insane)
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To: YOUGOTIT

Agreed!


10 posted on 01/27/2010 7:32:18 AM PST by I am Richard Brandon
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To: SeekAndFind

Yes, California *really could* default. In a related story, gravity still works,, dogs still bite,,,etc. And when they do, they will try to force the other 49 states to ante up.


11 posted on 01/27/2010 7:33:55 AM PST by DesertRhino (Dogs earn thi title of "man's best friend", Muslims hate dogs,,add that up.)
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To: blastdad51

States can’t declare bankruptcy.


12 posted on 01/27/2010 7:34:25 AM PST by I Shall Endure
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To: I Shall Endure

Two weeks ago I attended a talk by a Big Bank Economist and she said that neither CA nor the cities/counties of CA would go bankrupt or default on their bonds..impossible she said..since we the tax payers would have to pony up to cover them.
Yesterday..driving in LA..I hear them talking about the financial crisis faced by LA. They may stop paying vendors and will lay off hundreds of city workers. They are broke and can’t spend their reserves or their bond rating will collapse.
Investors are now stepping up to by default insurance on govt bonds...but what good is default insurance if on govt bonds if you ultimately rely on govts to pay the insurance?
Just as AIG was bailed out by TARP.
I have one foot out the door in the stock market right now.


13 posted on 01/27/2010 8:07:01 AM PST by Oldexpat
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To: Oldexpat

Further..you can’t possibly solve the CA financial problem without addressing benefits and education of illegals. The school system is 20% bigger than it needs to be and probably spends 40% more than it needs to, to educate the illegals and their spawn. All encouraged by our Federal Govt.


14 posted on 01/27/2010 8:15:46 AM PST by Oldexpat
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To: SeekAndFind
Could California Really Default? (Bond holders beware)

"Could?"

Are you shifting me?

With the average IQ in the Califonia legislature hovering around 30, and spending like there's no tomorrow, it must default. It's just a matter of when.

They haven't figured out yet that not only must they stop spending money they don't have, but the smoke and mirrors of "borrowing" is pain delayed.
State salaries must not only be arrested, but reversed for all future employees.

Welfare programs redefined and tax cuts for unemployed taxpayers put in place.
Wealth can be created, but never by government at any level.

Just saying.

15 posted on 01/27/2010 8:29:52 AM PST by Publius6961 (He is not America; he is an employee seemingly unable to rise to minimal expectations.)
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To: I Shall Endure
States can’t declare bankruptcy.

Sure they can.

And when they do, the first item, job one, is erasing retirement "benefits" for the most incompetent legislature during my lifetime.

16 posted on 01/27/2010 8:33:12 AM PST by Publius6961 (He is not America; he is an employee seemingly unable to rise to minimal expectations.)
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To: Publius6961
States can’t declare bankruptcy.

Sure they can.

No, they can't. There is no provision in the US Bankruptcy Code to permit a state to file for bankruptcy. That does NOT mean they can't default, however. It just means that when they do, there is no orderly process for handling it, no court that has jurisdiction to sort it out and tell creditors they are legally out of luck. So any default would be followed by hundreds and thousands of court cases as creditors, investors and employye groups try to get their money.

17 posted on 01/27/2010 9:35:33 AM PST by CA Conservative
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To: Lurker

‘It would also be a much needed dose of reality for those idiots in Sacramento.’

Just to be clear ‘those idiots in Sacramento’ are there b/c of the electorate. Yes, the pols do bear some of the blame BUT the people of CA are the real culprits. Until the CA electorate can unstick themselves from stupid the current state of affairs will continue. Even if the state defaults and thing get sorted out the next crop of pols will go down the same path.


18 posted on 01/27/2010 9:36:10 AM PST by 556x45
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To: SeekAndFind
Rather, it was when officials recognized that enough investors had fled the city's debt instruments that New York could no longer float even short-term financing notes,

Kinda like the possible fate Treasuries.

19 posted on 01/27/2010 10:33:23 AM PST by Oatka ("A society of sheep must in time beget a government of wolves." –Bertrand de Jouvenel)
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To: CA Conservative
No, they can't. There is no provision in the US Bankruptcy Code to permit a state to file for bankruptcy. That does NOT mean they can't default, however. It just means that when they do, there is no orderly process for handling it, no court that has jurisdiction to sort it out and tell creditors they are legally out of luck. So any default would be followed by hundreds and thousands of court cases as creditors, investors and employye groups try to get their money.

Would not the most proper legal remedy be for the state of California to be dissolved, and for the land to become a territory? Otherwise if the people who remain in the state would be liable as taxpayers for the bills of those who have fled, it would seem the land could become uninhabitable.

20 posted on 01/27/2010 4:09:55 PM PST by supercat (Barry Soetoro == Bravo Sierra)
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