The klaxon horn went off this evening for California municipal bondholders when Moody’s credit rating service issued a report
stating that the plummeting financial condition of many California
counties, cities, school districts and other government agencies will
soon result in large numbers of municipal bankruptcy filings.
Concerned about their own potential liability for providing high ratings that encouraged conservative elderly Americans to invest in risky bonds; Moody’s announced they will undertake a wide-ranging review of municipal finances because of the growing insolvencies.
Concerned about their own potential liability for providing high ratings that encouraged conservative elderly Americans to invest in risky bonds; Moody’s announced they will undertake a wide-ranging review of municipal finances because of the growing insolvencies.
Moody’s is especially concerned with the growing attitude among many cash-strapped cities that filing bankruptcy to avoid paying bondholders, is politically more advantageous than cutting spending. As a result, Moody’s will re-assess the financial condition of all California cities, which issues about 20 percent of the municipal bond volume nationwide, “to reflect the new fiscal realities and the governmental practices.”
The Moody’s report said the credit rating service will also examine the outlook for municipal bonds in other troubled states. Robert Kurtter, Managing Director of public finance at Moody’s, would not say which states they will review, though Kurtter mentioned Michigan and Nevada as possibilities.
Tonight’s report noted that many cities across the nation are in financial distress, but emphasized that a greater share of bankruptcies are expected to come from California. Local officials were quick to try to downplay this grim forecast. Chris McKenzie, Executive Director of the League of California Cities responded: “Moody’s has an obligation to review changing circumstances, but we would just suggest that their assessment of the framework and ground activities is perhaps exaggerated.”
Tom Dressler, spokesman for California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, cautioned against overacting to only three bankruptcies from California’s 482 cities: “No city’s going to blithely skip into bankruptcy court to avoid its obligations.” Mr. Dressler called the report “a little hyperbolic.” Read more>>MOODY’S WARNS OF MASS CALIFORNIA MUNICIPAL BANKRUPTCIES