Enjoy complimentary access to top ideas and insights — selected by our editors.
As some state and local governments and their agencies look to redeem or refund their Build America Bonds (BABs), some questions have come up regarding the legality of doing so, especially as current interest rates may likely lead to an increase in Build America Bonds being called by issuers this year, according to market professionals.
Issuers have moved
Read more:
J.P. Morgan has identified 14 “unique” issuers that have either called BABs, posted conditional calls or announced that they are considering financing plans. The six in California have outstanding BABs totaling $6 billion, according to J.P. Morgan.
The Regents of the University of California closed its deal that redeemed outstanding
This debate centers on whether issuers are legally authorized to trigger the extraordinary redemption provision following cuts to BABs’ 35% subsidy under the government sequestration process, starting in 2013. The current sequestration level is 5.7%. BABs refundings through the extraordinary redemption provision only recently entered the conversation in a prominent manner, following a 2023 court opinion stemming from Indiana Municipal Power Agency v. United States.
After the ruling, Orrick partners Charles C. Cardall and Barbara Jane League said
Read more:
Washington state refunded some of its outstanding BABs, despite pushback due to these debates.
James Pruskowski, chief investment officer at 16Rock Asset Management and a market participant who holds no BABs, told the Bond Buyer these extraordinary redemption provisions are mostly concentrated in “these big sophisticated issuers with densely populated areas and mostly on the coastal regions, such as
Bondholders have enjoyed several years of strong income and stable prices, so it can be “painful to lose that premium to an ERP being exercised,” Pruskowski said.
Norfolk, Virginia, became the first issuer to cancel its
Read more of the latest Build America Bonds news in our coverage below.