Monday, January 26, 2015

Fwd: (BN) Record Green Bond Issuance Bolsters Chicago Sewers: Muni Cr



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(BN) Record Green Bond Issuance Bolsters Chicago Sewers: Muni Cr
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Record Green Bond Issuance Bolsters Chicago Sewers: Muni Credit
2015-01-26 01:00:00.0 GMT


     (For more credit-market news, click on TOP CM. For
Municipal Credit Markets column alerts, see SALT MUNCREDIT.)

By Elizabeth Campbell
     (Bloomberg) -- U.S. municipalities are selling a record
amount of debt earmarked for environmental projects as a growing
appetite for the bonds pulls in issuers from the nation's
capital to Chicago's water district.
     States and localities issued $2.5 billion of obligations in
2014 that they tagged with the green label, up from $100 million
the year before, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Globally,
issuers such as governments, banks and companies offered about
$39 billion of the securities last year, an all-time high,
according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data.
     A $350 million tax-free sale by Massachusetts in September
to restore waterways and save energy in public buildings shows
how borrowings for environmental needs are attracting money to
the $3.6 trillion municipal market. The issue drew five first-
time institutional buyers of the state's debt, and about a third
of the orders from individuals came from people who don't
typically buy munis, according to Morgan Stanley, the
underwriter.
     "We're hearing more and more that folks want to invest in
environmentally friendly projects," said Colin MacNaught, the
Massachusetts assistant treasurer.

                           2014 Batch

     There's no universal standard for a green bond. Issuers use
the label in offering documents to help market a deal. Having an
independent second opinion evaluating a bond's environmental
credentials gives investors more confidence, Tess Olsen-Rong, a
market analyst in London at Climate Bonds Initiative.
     Seventeen muni issuers assigned the green tag to sales last
year, after Massachusetts was the sole entry in 2013, Bloomberg
data show. The label designates a project as having an
environmental benefit, from clean water to energy efficiency.
     The European Investment bank issued debt for climate
improvement in 2007, and the World Bank followed with a labeled
green bond in 2008, according to Climate Bonds Initiative, a
nonprofit promoting low-carbon investment.
     Massachusetts sold $100 million of bonds with the green
label in June 2013 in what it called a first for a U.S. state.
Proceeds went toward projects such as flood control and land
acquisition, according to offering documents.
     Last year's sale will help pay for the New Bedford Marine
Commerce Terminal, which will support offshore wind projects.
The District of Columbia sold $350 million of green obligations
last year to build tunnels about 10 stories deep as part of a
project to reduce overflow into rivers and neighborhoods.
     Raul Pomares, founder of San-Francisco-based Sonen Capital,
said he advises clients, including tax-exempt foundations that
typically don't buy munis, that this segment of local-government
debt has a role to play.

                           Local Hero

     "They are an attractive contributor from a total financial
return perspective, and deliver this clear, meaningful,
measurable social, environmental impact," he said.
     Ellen Friedman, executive director of the Compton
Foundation, a Sonen client, said that the muni tax exemption
isn't a priority for the San Francisco-based based organization,
started after World War II to promote peace. The securities are,
however, because they help communities, she said.
     Green-bond sales by municipalities will keep climbing, said
Olsen-Rong. Environmentally conscious investors often want to
know where proceeds are going, and municipal offering documents
provide transparency, she said.
     The first-time buyers of Massachusetts bonds show that
investment advisers have clients asking for the debt, said Brian
Wynne, managing director and co-head of Morgan Stanley's public-
finance group in New York.
     "If you had an increase in green-bond issuance that would
bring in more investors to the market," Wynne said. "And that
would provide the potential for green bonds to price at a
premium versus non-green bonds."

                          Demand Check

     Demand hasn't reached that level, said Scott McGough,
director of fixed income in Philadelphia at Glenmede Trust Co.,
which manages about $2.7 billion of munis.
     John Flahive, Boston-based director of fixed income at BNY
Mellon Wealth Management, which oversees about $20 billion in
munis, said that while he has more clients who want holdings
with a socially responsible slant, he probably would've bought
the Massachusetts debt anyway because of its credit quality. The
state has an Aa1 grade from Moody's Investors Service and AA+
from Standard & Poor's, one step below the top.
     Issuers say the green tag brings attention. The
Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago sold
about $225 million of the securities in December, its first such
issue, said Mary Ann Boyle, the district's treasurer.
     The label helped distinguish the agency's first muni issue
in three years, Boyle said.
     The district, which oversees wastewater plants, is using
proceeds for work including more sewer tunnels and reservoirs to
curb overflow. Some money will go toward a system to convert
waste into environmentally friendly fertilizer.
     "We had much more excitement and much more investor
interest related to the green bonds than we've seen in the
past," Boyle said.

For Related News and Information:
D.C. Water Bonds Ride Best Long-Debt Gain Since '12: Muni Credit
Massachusetts Emulating World Bank With Green Bonds: Muni Credit
Munis Face 2015 Headwind as Record Market Contraction Set to End
Top muni-bond news: TOPM <GO>

--With assistance from Sowjana Sivaloganathan in Princeton.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Elizabeth Campbell in Chicago at +1-312-443-5941 or
ecampbell14@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Stephen Merelman at +1-212-617-3762 or
smerelman@bloomberg.net
Mark Tannenbaum



--
Monty Bannerman
ArcStar Energy
+1 646.402.5076
www.arcstarenergy.com

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