Ch 5 Flashcards

1
Q

General Obligation (GO) Bonds

A

Backed by the full faith, credit, and taxing power of the municipality. Typically requires voter approval
* State GO Bonds backed by income, sales, and excise taxes
* Local GO Bonds backed by ad valorem taxes
* Debt Limit

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2
Q

Capital Appreciation Bonds

A

Municipal zero-coupon bonds

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3
Q

Revenue Bonds

A

Backed by a pledge of revenues from an income generating project
* Self-supporting debt - project pays interest and principal from revenue collections
* Example: toll roads, sewer systems, airports etc
No Debt Limit
* Issuance of revenue bonds requires a feasibility study performed by an independent consultant who projects anticipated revenue collections versus the costs of operating the facility and paying for debt service
REVERENUE BONDS HAVE A GREATER RISK OF DEFAULT THAN GO BONDS - so they will typically pay a higher yield

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4
Q

Special Tax Bonds

A
  • Revenue bonds
  • Bonds of political subdivisions that are backed by a tax other than ad valorem taxes
  • These are typically excise taxes such as alcohol, gas, tobacco taxes
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5
Q

Special Assessment Bonds

A

Bonds of political subdivisions where a localized improvement is made
* Additional taxes are only levied on those in the improved area
*Ex: sidewalks that only benefit certain residents

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6
Q

Moral Obligation Bonds

A

A government entity (such as a state) agrees to cover debt service even though there is no legal obligation to do so
* Revenue Bond
* Coupons are higher than GO Bonds
* Requires legislative approval

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7
Q

Double-Barreled Bond

A

A bond that is backed by both user fees and general taxes
* A revenue bond
* Rated like GO bonds since the taxpayers are ultimately responsible for the debt service

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8
Q

Certificate of Participation (COP)

A

Allows municipality to issue bonds to build facilities like a university dorm, prison, municipality office building, and then lease these facilities
* Lease payments depend on an annual appropriation from tax collections
* Revenue bond
* The governing body is NOT “legally” obligated to make the annual appropriation, so it is not a GO bond

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9
Q

Lease Rental Bond

A

Used to finance office construction where the end-user is a state or city agency
* Revenue bond
* less risky than a COP
* The rents paid are the revenue source. Unlike COP, municipality is generally obligated to appropriate the funds for the lease payments from general tax revenues

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10
Q

Industrial Development Bond

A

Bonds issues to build a facility that will be leased to a corporation
* Revenue bond
* Source of revenue is the corporation’s lease payments
* These bonds are a “non-essential use, private purpose” issue
* INTEREST INCOME IS
FEDERALLY TAXABLE
* Type of Private Activity Bonds (PABs)

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11
Q

Private Activity Bonds (PABs)

A

Federally taxable munis created to fund private activities
* often tax free at the state and local levels

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12
Q

Short-Term Muni Debt

A

Categorizes in 2 types
1) For a building/capital project
2) Used to “pull forward” income source and & use money before collected

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13
Q

BANs - Bond Anticipation Notes

A

1) For a building/capital project
* Used as a “bridge loan” to start a capital project and would be paid off when a long term bond is issued

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14
Q

CLNs - Construction Loan Notes

A

1) For a building/capital project
* Issued to start the building of multi-family housing projects
* Paid off by the proceeds received from the issuance of a long-term bond issue
* Typically mature in 2-3 years

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15
Q

TANs - Tax Anticipation Notes

A

2) Used to “pull forward” income source and & use money before collected
* Issuer can borrow against upcoming expected tax receipts with a TAN
* States typically collect income taxes once a year
* Political subdivisions typically collect property taxes twice a year

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16
Q

RANs - Revenue Anticipation Notes

A

2) Used to “pull forward” income source and & use money before collected
* Issuer can borrow against upcoming revenues expected to be received from the state or from the Fed
* Political subdivisions typically receive payments from the state and from the Fed to support essential services such as public transit

17
Q

TRANs - TAx & Revenue Anticipation Notes

A

Combination of the TAN and RAN

18
Q

GANs - Grant Anticipation Notes

A

Issues in anticipation of receiving grant monies from the Fed
* for things like pollution control, mass-transit, energy conservation, etc

19
Q

Tax Exempt Commercial Paper

A
  • Mature in less than 270 days
  • Backed by a bank line of credit
20
Q

VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes

A

Also VRDO - Variable Rate Demand Obligation
* aka Step-Up/Step-Down Notes
Renewable note where the interest rate is reset periodically based on a market index
* At the reset date, holder may renew (not guaranteed) for the next time frame (1 day-1 week), or demand payment
* Limited market, often subject to CONSIDERABLE LIQUIDITY RISK

21
Q

Muni Debt Trading

A
  • Thin trading market (liquidity risk)
  • Traded Over the Counter (OTC)
  • Almost all new muni debt issued in book-entry form
22
Q

US Gov Debt

A
  • Federal Tax - Subject
  • State Tax - Exempt
23
Q

Gov Agency Debt

A
  • Federal Tax - Subject
  • State Tax - Exempt
24
Q

Privatized Gov Agency Debt

A
  • Federal Tax - Subject
  • State Tax - Subject
25
Q

Corporate Debt

A
  • Federal Tax - Subject
  • State Tax - Subject
26
Q

Municipal Debt

A
  • Federal Tax - Exempt
  • State Tax - Subject* (only if buying from a state other than your primary residence)
27
Q

Money Market Instrument Characteristics

A
  • mature in 1 year or less
  • Highly liquid
  • Very safe and offer low yields
    *Traded in large units between institutions
28
Q

Treasury Bills

A
  • Money Market Instrument
  • Issued with maturity of 1 year or less
    Any treasury with a remaining maturity of 1 year or less is a money market security
29
Q

Commercial Paper

A
  • Money Market Instrument
  • Maximum maturity is 270 days to avoid having to register
30
Q

BAs - Banker’s Acceptance

A
  • Money Market Instrument
  • Used to facilitate the trading of imports and exports
31
Q

Negotiable/Jumbo CDs - Certificates of Deposits

A
  • Money Market Instrument
  • Minimum $100k face with a maturity of 1-2 years
  • Jumbo CDs of up to $250k receive FDIC coverage if held in the customer’s name
  • Trade in secondary market
32
Q

Repos - Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements

A
  • Repo is when a dealer sells securities with the agreement that the securities will be repurchased at a stated price and date
  • Remember the Fed BUYS under a Repo, and the Fed sells under a Reverse Repo
  • Interest rates on repos track the Federal funds rate which is overnight loan between banks
  • ONLY RATE SET BY THE FEDERAL RESERVE IS THE DISCOUNT RATE - the rate that the Fed lends to the banks
33
Q

Eurodollars

A

Deposits denominated in US dollars held in a bank outside the US with a maturity of 1 day to 5 years
* The interest rate charged is the SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate)
-> short term interest rates for Eurodollar deposits
-> Previously LIBOR - London Interbank Offered Rate

34
Q

Long-Term Certificates of Deposit (CDs)

A
  • Not always money market instruments
  • Can have a longer maturity than 1 year
  • Issued by brokerage firms, not banks
  • Sometimes called “brokered CDs”
  • When a retail customer buys a long-term CD, they MUST BE TOLD THAT:
    -> The security is subject to fluctuations in market price and interest rates
    -> Selling before a maturity may be for less than the purchase price
    -> A secondary market for the instrument may be limited
    -> The CD may be callable and subject to reinvestment risk
  • If its a “step-up” or “step-down” instrument, customer MUST BE TOLD:
    -> The initial CD rate may change
    -> May not reflect the current market interest rates
    -> Does not reflect the yield to maturity
  • Ownership title of the CD determines whether the instrument is FDIC insured
    -> In customer’s name, it is insured
    -> In broker-dealer’s name, it is not insured
  • CD prices on customer statements MUST REFLECT THE CURRENT MARKET PRICE and NOT face value
35
Q
A