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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Municipal Revenue Bonds 13 Views
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Description:
Municipal revenue bonds are municipal (city-issued) bonds that pledge the revenues generated from a project with the amount borrowed.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop.. municipal revenue bonds alright well
- 00:07
maybe these should be called running a city like a real business that produces [Bond name changes]
- 00:11
cash flow bonds how about that for a name
- 00:15
crickets okay well why the big difference in a revenue bond versus any
- 00:20
other kind of bond well revenue bonds have specific
Full Transcript
- 00:24
revenues behind them municipalities issue revenue bonds to fund facilities [Municipal revenue bond definition]
- 00:28
that actually produce revenue things like airports and bridges with a toll [Cars driving by a toll booth]
- 00:32
and yes, parking lots..oh, and hospitals too hospitals generate revenue and bonds
- 00:38
used for Hospital purposes pay interest and principal from those revenues while [Money transfers from bond to hospital]
- 00:42
the distinguishing feature here is that there simply exist many municipal
- 00:46
projects that are worth doing but don't produce direct revenue for the city a
- 00:51
parking structure is the best example here so think about the subtle
- 00:55
difference in certainty of payment as it relates to a bond backed by revenues
- 00:59
versus a bond just generally backed up by The Full Faith and Credit of a
- 01:04
city like their promise to pay based on prayer the revenue bonds may be safer [Man praying in church]
- 01:09
because they're direct assets and cash flows that come from them, or more profits
- 01:13
associated with them but for example if teleportation really becomes a thing [Woman teleports]
- 01:17
well then the usefulness of those parking structures and/or storage
- 01:20
facilities might go away so what happens if a parking structure
- 01:24
backed only by its real estate assets goes belly-up well the debt holders of
- 01:29
the parking lot get the lot and only the lot back they don't get to own City Hall [City Hall appears]
- 01:34
they don't get to own the sewage system of the city...
- 01:37
nor the garbage collecting [Lots of garbage]
- 01:40
franchise even in New Jersey instead they just take ownership of the parking
- 01:46
lot could they then put a condo on it and sell it and make their debt money
- 01:50
back and maybe a whole lot more well in theory yes but unfortunately for them
- 01:55
they have to first apply to yep the city for permits to build that condo and it's
- 02:01
highly likely that the city will point to a rainbow haired squirrel that eats [Rainbow colored squirrel appears]
- 02:05
only nuts from a blue oak tree right on that parking lot right through the
- 02:10
center of it and it's endangered in the region
- 02:12
if the debt holders build well that squirrel will be harmed so you know no soup
- 02:17
for you at least no condo permit so the debt holders own the debt on the lot but
- 02:22
there isn't much they can do with it at that point unless the city cooperates so
- 02:26
if you were the lender in this situation loaning money to the city knowing that [Lender giving money to the city]
- 02:31
they've got you by the short hairs if they ever don't pay well you'd want a
- 02:34
fair amount more interest payment to make up for that grief and hassle and
- 02:39
illiquidity or said differently a higher interest rate is what you would demand
- 02:43
to account for the risk you believe that exists for the parking lot to go
- 02:47
bankrupt and then you not getting paid or being able to sell it or do something [Person hands over a check]
- 02:51
with it that gets you your money back if the debt on that parking lot is then
- 02:55
incrementally backed up by The Full Faith and Credit of the city well then
- 02:59
the parking lot separately from the city would first have to go bankrupt and then
- 03:04
the city itself would have to go bankrupt or become insolvent before
- 03:07
there was any issue in the lender meaning you collecting your money in
- 03:11
practice this manifestation of the b-word rarely happens and I meant [Dog appears on a video]
- 03:16
bankruptcy but when it does usually the politicians around are tossed out in the [Politician tossed out into corridor]
- 03:20
next election they're blamed and maybe even sued for malfeasance among other
- 03:25
things and the new politicians flow to new revenue backed muni bond which pays
- 03:28
off the old parking lot people plus interest and generates a new bond to new
- 03:33
more hopeful investors maybe this time parking in the parking lot won't be [Cars parking in a large parking lot]
- 03:37
cheap it'll cost more than a dollar every time you come into it and leave
- 03:41
the parking lot and to park in the lot all day well five bucks, maybe a hundred [Electric cars parked in Palo Alto]
- 03:45
bucks in Palo Alto the basic idea is that user fees are what pay off revenue
- 03:50
bonds not the city's coffers from their general collections from property and
- 03:54
income taxes and there's another key difference between revenue
- 03:58
and general obligation or GO bonds because the city is basically giving the
- 04:03
deed to the city when it puts its full faith and credit behind a GO bond the [Deed goes to GO bond]
- 04:08
city has to get everyone or rather a majority to agree that this debt is a
- 04:13
good idea that is they need voter approval usually in a revenue bond where
- 04:18
the asset itself ie the 37 storeys of parking structure is backing up the loan [Man pointing to 37 storey parking structure]
- 04:23
and nothing else well, no vote is needed to raise money
- 04:25
against that asset as collateral the credit
- 04:28
ratings for revenue bonds are thus much simpler to PEG than those for general
- 04:32
obligation bonds like give away more finite set of inputs in just a parking [Car parked in a lot]
- 04:36
lot than you do a whole city because only the items specified is collateral a
- 04:41
simple analysis of the value of that property ie the parking lot determines
- 04:44
most of the core pricing of the debt associated with it...Here's some
- 04:48
quick math our parking structure has a thousand slots and it'll be open three
- 04:53
hundred days a year it has a simple pricing structure such that you can park
- 04:56
there one minute or 24 hours and it cost the same 12 bucks so at a hundred
- 05:01
percent occupancy the potential total revenues from this parking structure are [Cars going in and out of parking structure]
- 05:04
a thousand times three hundred times twelve bucks or three point six million
- 05:08
dollars a year the total cost to manage clean bill and deal with problems and
- 05:13
like this is a hundred grand a year so the parking lot itself after having
- 05:17
cost five mil to build is enormously profitable three point six million of
- 05:23
revenues - 100 grand of cost, yeah three point five million of operating profit
- 05:26
so it would make back essentially all of its capital invested in the first [Green, blue and red cars parked]
- 05:31
year and a half or so at a hundred percent occupancy realistically it might
- 05:35
carry only two-thirds of that number so maybe it takes two years to make all of
- 05:39
its money back that's pretty good regardless the parking structure is [Cash falling]
- 05:42
enormously profitable with highly likely recurring revenues like gee what
- 05:46
are the odds people want to park downtown and it has enormous cash flow [Money transferring from parking lot to piggy bank]
- 05:50
so it remains an ideal candidate to take on debt or said another way many lenders
- 05:55
would line up to throw money at the parking lot at low interest rates
- 05:58
because they would believe that the odds of them being repaid their interest in [Person shakes magic 8 ball]
- 06:03
principle are very high and they're not too worried about teleportation at least
- 06:07
they're not anytime soon who knew parking lots are where the real money is
- 06:11
at...Eat your heart out there Warren Buffett...
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