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The Next Sovereign Debt Crisis (It will be here in the USA and it will be in municipal bonds)
The American ^ | 08/03/2010 | Jay Weiser

Posted on 08/03/2010 7:07:42 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Europe’s PIIGs are in a poke, but U.S. states and municipalities risk their own sovereign debt crisis.

Europe’s PIIGs are in a poke, but U.S. states and municipalities risk their own sovereign debt crisis, with a huge liquidity risk from short-term debt. According to the Federal Reserve, at the end of the first quarter of 2010, state and local governments had $2.8 trillion in outstanding debt. This massive figure doesn’t count unfunded pension liabilities (which, except for a few governments in immediate distress, face a longer-term solvency crisis), but does include $465 billion of debt issued on behalf of nonprofits and private industrial revenue bond borrowers, many of whom are politically connected. Of the $2.8 trillion, perhaps 25 percent effectively consists of short-term obligations, much of which was purchased based on questionable ratings resting on doubtful guarantees. Even if only a few financially stressed municipal debt issuers default, anxious short-term debt holders could suddenly demand cash and trigger a liquidity crunch.

Traditionally, municipal debt was long term and self-amortizing, so risks decreased over the life of the bonds. Today, much municipal debt is long term only in theory. According to the Fed, only $134 billion of municipal debt (or about 6 percent of the outstanding total) technically originated as short-term debt (having an original maturity of 13 months or less). But at the end of the first quarter of 2010, tax-exempt money market funds held $369 billion of assets. This means that almost 66 percent of tax-exempt money market fund assets are short-term debt dressed in long-term drag. These are better known as Variable Rate Demand Obligations (VRDOs) or Variable Rate Demand Notes (VRDNs)—two acronyms for the same instrument (I’ll use VRDNs here). In addition, VRDNs are presumably a significant portion of the $1.9 trillion in municipal securities held by households and entities such as property-casualty companies.

So how do VRDNs work? As T. Rowe Price, whose $844 million Tax-Exempt Money Fund was 45 percent in VRDNs as of February 28, 2010, explains it, a VRDN holder “has the right to sell the security to the issuer … at a predetermined price (generally par) on specified dates (generally daily or weekly)” [italics added].

In other words, the bond may technically mature in 20 years, but the interest rate resets weekly and the buyer can put it back to the issuer at any time. Based on a selective review of large tax-exempt money market funds, high VRDN allocations are typical.

Regulations generally limit money market funds to high-rated securities, so one might think VRDNs are safe. But the ratings agencies are subject to the same pressures from originators as in the subprime glory days: if the rating isn’t high enough to do the deal, the ratings agency doesn’t get paid. The agencies typically don’t re-rate securities for financial strength after origination unless they receive information on a change in condition. The result, as in the infamous Enron case, is that downgrades usually follow rather than lead the market’s valuation, and troubled securities can retain high ratings until just before default. In rating individual securities at origination, the agencies gave little weight to liquidity risk: whether the VRDN market has the capacity to handle a wave of redemptions.

As with home mortgages, many high ratings are based on credit enhancement (a guarantor’s credit) rather than the quality of the revenue stream that is expected to pay off the security itself. Of the two major pre-bust municipal bond insurers, AMBAC is gradually liquidating under state supervision after functional insolvency, while MBIA is still in financial difficulty and is writing only limited new municipal bond insurance. Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp., a new entrant, was rapidly downgraded by the ratings agencies. VRDNs are often backstopped by bank letters of credit—often required in case the bond insurers are downgraded, and requiring municipal securities issuers to pay a high interest rate if drawn on—but this merely transfers the risk of nonpayment from municipal bondholders to the banking system.

As Manhattan Institute Senior Fellow Steven Malanga has noted, state and local politicians around the country have issued municipal debt to fund vanity projects and hide shortfalls. The New York Times recently reported that the New York City Housing Development Corporation lent political powerhouse pastor Floyd Flake $14 million for his no-bid, no-money-down acquisition of a federally funded housing complex from a nonprofit he controlled. The total financing package apparently exceeded 100 percent of the property value. Back in 2004, the Times reported that a senior South Jersey legislator forced cash-strapped NJ Transit to incur $1 billion in debt to build the River Line light rail, currently serving just 8,200 riders a day from Trenton to Camden at a huge deficit. While the maturity structure for these specific obligations is unclear, municipal money market fund portfolios contain many industrial development, hospital, and housing securities, suggesting a substantial amount of politically connected debt.

The 2008 meltdown was triggered by Lehman’s reliance on short-term debt for funding. When Lehman cratered, so did the commercial paper markets (led by the failure of the Reserve Funds), requiring rescue by a Fed commercial paper facility that has now closed. Municipal debt issuers are increasingly stressed, needing to place $435 billion in debt and fund an aggregate $200 billion deficit this year. Given all the poorly underwritten, politically connected municipal debt, it is hard to gauge whether any major issuers—like Christmas trees still in the living room in the dog days of August—require a single spark to explode in flames. With investors holding billions of dollars in short-term municipal debt at near-zero yields and almost no reward for bearing credit risk, we may find out.

-- Jay Weiser is an associate professor of law and real estate at Baruch College.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crisis; debt; municipalbonds; sovereigndebt

1 posted on 08/03/2010 7:07:44 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
"We're talking municipal bonds, Ted. Triple-a rating. Best investment in America!"


2 posted on 08/03/2010 7:12:18 AM PDT by Yo-Yo (Is the /sarc tag really necessary?)
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To: SeekAndFind

The private sector has, for the most part, adjusted spending to account for the recession. Pay cuts, cancelling 401k contributions, layoffs, reduced travel, etc.

Government has not at any level. This government bubble has to burst, and it will be fugly.


3 posted on 08/03/2010 7:13:42 AM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Between the SEIU, AFSCME, etc., the American people fund LAVISH salaries and pensions to every politician, political appointee, and civil service non-producers nationwide. It’s pervasive in local, state, and federal employment. The benefits and salaries are FAR beyond the work produced, and the bulk of the jobs are un-necessary, and merely created to suck taxpayers’ money into the pockets of UN-TOUCHABLE and UNACCOUNTABLE parasitic wealth-redistribution-dependent people who couldn’t survive in a competitive private job.


4 posted on 08/03/2010 7:15:46 AM PDT by traditional1 ("Don't gotsta worry 'bout no mo'gage, don't gotsta worry 'bout no gas; Obama gonna take care o' me!)
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To: SeekAndFind; FARS

Me and Fars talked about this a couple of years ago, different scenario but same action taken by bond holders.

Same outcome, too.


5 posted on 08/03/2010 7:17:47 AM PDT by RaceBannon (RON PAUL: THE PARTY OF TRUTHERS, TRAITORS AND UFO CHASERS!!!)
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To: SeekAndFind

The federal gov’t will take-over municipal and state debt....in return, the federal gov’t gets full legislative control.

I bet its in the financial reform bill, constitution be damned.


6 posted on 08/03/2010 7:20:54 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi (Too many conservatives urge retreat when the war of politics doesn't go their way.)
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To: SeekAndFind

“Full faith & credit” of the government will eventually be reduced to nothing more than the raw power of asset seizure.


7 posted on 08/03/2010 7:29:40 AM PDT by P.O.E. (Compact Theory)
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To: SeekAndFind
...at the end of the first quarter of 2010...

Which means this analysis is based on information before "stimulus" checks were distributed. The shamulus money that was supposed to go to shovel-ready jobs was really used to fund jobs that had already been planned. Money that local and state governments had previously allocated to these projects were then used to shore up some of the bad debt that they had accumulated.

Conclusion: Your tax money has been used to delay the bond crisis that is portrayed in this article. It will happen, but the crisis will happen right along when the rest of the economy goes into the crapper when the shamulus costs have to be paid for.

8 posted on 08/03/2010 7:33:14 AM PDT by kidd
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To: traditional1; All

” Between the SEIU, AFSCME, etc., the American people fund “LAVISH salaries and pensions to every politician, political appointee, and civil service non-producers nationwide. It’s pervasive in local, state, and federal employment. The benefits and salaries are FAR beyond the work produced, and the bulk of the jobs are un-necessary, and merely created to suck taxpayers’ money into the pockets of UN-TOUCHABLE and UNACCOUNTABLE parasitic wealth-redistribution-dependent people who couldn’t survive in a competitive private job. “

WINNER


9 posted on 08/03/2010 7:44:20 AM PDT by stephenjohnbanker (.)
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To: P.O.E.
“Full faith & credit” of the government will eventually be reduced to nothing more than the raw power of asset seizure.

2005: Keelo v. New London

10 posted on 08/03/2010 7:51:29 AM PDT by OneWingedShark (Q: Why am I here? A: To do Justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my God.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bookmark to read later.


11 posted on 08/03/2010 8:21:49 AM PDT by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (California Bankruptcy in 4... 3... 2...)
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To: SeekAndFind

just in case you were counting on those City of Flint Sewage Bonds for your retirement...


12 posted on 08/03/2010 8:31:18 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: SeekAndFind

The standard calculations of U.S. debt as a percent of GDP never take into account this nearly $3 trillion in S&L debt.
If they did, they’d discover we’re already uncomfortably close to 100%.

Likewise, the $107T in unfunded obligations for SS and Medicare only includes the federal obligations. Left unmentioned are both the existing state and local government debts, but also the unfunded liabilities of their retiree pension and health care systems. Of course, to a man destined to drown in his swimming pool, adding another foot to its depth isn’t going to make any difference.


13 posted on 08/03/2010 8:58:55 AM PDT by DrC
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