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Weekend EditionA serious warning about muni bondsSaturday, September 18, 2010 So explained Linda Thompson, the mayor of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. She was explaining the city's refusal to repay part ($3.29 million) of the $288 million it owes for an incinerator it bought. The total obligation for the incinerator comes to roughly $6,000 per citizen of the city. It is a debt that can't be repaid and should have never been lent.
Unless you happen to live in Harrisburg, you probably didn't see this item in your local paper. And you probably wonder why we'd bother writing about it. After all, why should the impending bankruptcy of a small Pennsylvania city matter to you?
It should matter to you because it represents the next leg of the debt crisis – the failure of municipal finance. We were also struck by the logic of the mayor... who clearly views paying the city's debts as optional.
She knew the state of Pennsylvania would be forced to bail out her city. (If the state didn't intervene, it would be impossible for any other city in Pennsylvania to issue bonds.) And even if the state refused, the bonds are insured by Ambac, which means, in the eyes of the mayor, it's likely that no one will get hurt by her decision.
And sure enough, Pennsylvania stepped in last weekend. On Sunday, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell announced a $4.3 million bailout for Harrisburg, saying missing the bond payment was "not an option." Rendell continued... "Harrisburg's financial future is still very cloudy, and difficult decisions still need to be made to return this city to financial stability. Allowing a missed bond payment, however, would not be a good decision."
That's how a $288 million loss can become irrelevant to an elected local official. Like a subprime borrower living in a house without paying his mortgage, the mayor of Harrisburg thinks paying for its debts is someone else's problem. She's bringing Obamanomics to city finance.
We have this warning to offer: When our elected officials no longer care about repaying hundreds of millions of dollars, the entire system of municipal finance is going to collapse. And the damage that's going to occur will be material to our entire country.
You can think of this system as similar to the subprime-credit bubble. No banker in his right mind would loan money to a person with no credit and no job who was buying a house in a slum. But once you took the credit risk away from that banker, he was happy to lend billions on deals like that because the risk became someone else's problem. Billions in bad debts piled up. Suddenly, it was the banker's problem again because he'd destroyed the entire system.
Harrisburg is small potatoes. Mass transit systems are a much, much bigger problem. Almost every local politician in America has promised a subway, a train, or a bus to take his constituents to work for next to nothing – but running these systems is incredibly expensive. In Boston, the mass transit authority is now $8.5 billion in debt and has been paying $500 million per year in interest. Does that sound sustainable?
The New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority (aka the State of New Jersey) borrowed $302 million to build it and never repaid the debt. Today, it owes more than $800 million and spends $100 million per year on interest for a stadium that no longer exists. California has 380 different local redevelopment agencies, which collectively owe $29 billion.
This money will never be repaid.
You see, all of this credit was only made available because lenders believed (foolishly) that there was no risk in lending to cities and states... just like they handed out all those subprime loans, believing they would never default because "home prices never decline." But after a few city bankruptcies, that thinking is going to change – forever.
With less (or no) additional credit available, how will cities and states be able to refinance at a reasonable price? Just like when the subprime credit markets shut down, the whole system collapsed because no one could refinance. The same thing is going to happen with the cities and the states.
There's a very good chance that once the dominoes start falling, there won't be any way to stop them without a massive federal bailout.
A much safer – and more profitable – strategy is to avoid the usual income investments, like muni bonds, and look for high-yield opportunities your broker will never tell you about. We've put together a website detailing our favorites right now. Click here to learn more.
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
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Date Range:9/13/2010 to 9/18/2010
Date Range:9/13/2010 to 9/18/2010
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