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ANATOMY OF A BOND ISSUE:


THE PARTICIPANTS AND THE
STEPS

Authors
Donna Kreiser
David Unkovic

Related Services
Financial Services

March 2014

Public Finance

ANATOMY OF A BOND ISSUE: THE PARTICIPANTS


AND THE STEPS
This article was published in the Winter 2014 edition of the Municipal Law Section
Newsletter of the Pennsylvania Bar Association.
For many local government officials and solicitors in Pennsylvania, a bond issue is
a rare occurrence perceived to be shrouded in mystery. Like most things in life, it
is only mysterious because it is unfamiliar. Once you understand the participants
and the steps, the process makes more sense.
In recent years, the securities and tax regulations governing municipal bonds
have grown increasingly complex. More so than ever before, it is important for
the issuer to understand what it is getting into and what its responsibilities are
when it undertakes a bond issue.
A.

The Participants.

Issuer. The most important participant in a bond issue is the municipal issuer of
the bonds. The issuer is undertaking the financing for the purpose of financing
capital projects or for the purpose of refunding existing debt. All of the other
participants are there to assist the issuer in the process of raising the money.

Solicitor. The issuer's regular lawyer is referred to as the solicitor. The solicitor
represents the issuer in the financing and delivers a legal opinion at the closing.
The solicitor's opinion usually covers the following matters: that the issuer is
validly existing, that the issuer's officers validly hold their offices, that the public
meeting at which the bond issue is approved was properly called and held and
that there is no material litigation pending against the issuer which would
adversely impact upon the bond issue.
In many cases, the solicitor is not an expert in public finance. But the solicitor is
usually an experienced lawyer who understands the issuer's operations better
than any of the other professionals involved in the bond issue. Therefore, the
solicitor should be diligent in protecting the interests of the issuer by asking
questions. If the solicitor and the issuer are not comfortable with anything
related to the bond issue, then the solicitor should slow down the process until he
or she is comfortable. It is particularly important that the solicitor reviews the
description of the issuer in the disclosure document for the bonds (commonly
called the official statement, or "OS"), and that the solicitor makes sure the issuer
is prepared to comply with the issuer's post-issuance responsibilities (described
below).

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Bond Counsel. Because the solicitor is often not an expert in public finance, the
issuer usually also retains a law firm which specializes in public finance to work
with the solicitor on the legal aspects of the bond issue. This lawyer is commonly
referred to as bond counsel. The issuer should make sure that bond counsel
identifies the issuer as its client in its engagement latter.

Bond counsel cooperates with the issuer and the financial advisor or underwriter
in structuring the transaction, with particular emphasis on legal matters related to
state law approvals and compliance with the federal tax and securities laws. Bond
counsel also delivers an opinion at the closing which covers the following points:
the issuer has properly authorized and issued the bonds; the bonds are
enforceable under the law; and interest on the bonds is exempt from federal
income tax and certain state taxes (to the extent applicable). Bond purchasers
rely on the bond counsel opinion when they buy the bonds.

Financial advisor and/or underwriter. There are two financial functions that
take place in a bond issue. First, the issuer may hire a financial firm to advise it
on the structuring of the bond issue. Second, the issuer may hire a financial firm
to buy the bonds with the intent to sell them to purchasers.
The rules governing what types of firms can perform these two functions are
currently in flux.

Traditionally, the issuer could hire an underwriter (also called an investment


banker) to perform both of these functions in a negotiated offering.

The

underwriter would provide structuring advice and then market the bonds to
purchasers.

Or, the issuer could hire a financial advisor solely to advise the

issuer on structuring the bond issue. (The financial advisor would not sell the
bonds.) The issuer would then, with the advice of the financial advisor, sell the
bonds either through a competitive sale in which multiple underwriters bid, or
through a negotiated offering in which a selected underwriter agrees to buy the
bonds and then sell them to purchasers.

Financial advisors were seen as having a fiduciary duty to the issuer, but financial
advisors were largely unregulated. Underwriters did not have a fiduciary duty to
the issuer (just an obligation to deal fairly), but underwriters were heavily
regulated.

In response to the financial crisis of 2008, Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Dodd-Frank created a new category
of "municipal advisors" and invested the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the SEC) and the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (the MSRB) with
jurisdiction over financial advisors and other participants in municipal bond
transactions.

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In 2010, the SEC required municipal advisors to register with it. On September
20, 2013, the SEC published final regulations which are over 700 pages long and
are very confusing. Suffice it to say that underwriter groups and financial advisor
groups are debating with each other and with the SEC and the MSRB over who
can provide what structuring advice to issuers.

Stay tuned for further

developments in this area.

Paying agent or trustee. Once the bond issue has closed, debt service
payments are made by the issuer to the bondholders through a paying agent or
trustee, which is a commercial bank chosen by the issuer. Depending on the
structure of the bond issue, the paying agent or trustee may also hold certain
moneys of the issuer in a reserve fund or other funds.

If the bond issue ever

goes into default, the paying agent or trustee often represents the bondholders in
remedial proceedings against the issuer.

Credit Enhancers. It sometimes makes economic sense for the issuer to utilize
a third party to guarantee the bond issue -- this is called credit enhancement. For
instance, a municipality may agree to guarantee the bonds of a municipal
authority; an insurance company may issue an insurance policy guaranteeing
payment of debt service on the bonds; or a bank may issue a letter of credit to
guarantee the bonds.
B.

The Steps.

Selection of participants and structuring the transaction. The first step is


for the issuer to select bond counsel and the financial advisor or underwriter.
This selection should be undertaken almost immediately after the issuer has
identified a project to be financed by a bond issue.
The issuer and the solicitor work with these participants to structure the
financing. Some basic questions need to be answered: (1) what is the purpose of
the issue -- to fund a capital project, to refund prior debt, or a combination of
both? (2) what are the legal parameters involved -- does the capital project serve
a proper legal purpose, can the debt be refunded under the federal tax rules? (3)
how should the bonds be sold -- through negotiation with one underwriter or
through a bidding procedure with multiple underwriters? (4) does credit
enhancement make economic sense (that is, is the cost of the insurance or letter
of credit less than the resulting debt service savings to the issuer)?

Once the structure is formulated, the issuer needs to select the paying agent or
trustee and the credit enhancer, if any, and all the participants begin to prepare
the required documentation. The underwriter or financial advisor and the issuer
prepare the disclosure document which is usually called the preliminary official
statement. Bond counsel drafts the ordinance, resolution or indenture and other
legal documents.

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Marketing the bonds and the bond sale. When the preliminary official
statement is in proper form, it is distributed by the underwriter to potential
purchasers. The marketing period usually lasts about one week.

At the end of the marketing period, the issuer holds a public meeting at which
time the bond sale is held. If the issuer has chosen a negotiated offering with one
underwriter, then the underwriter comes to the public meeting with a firm
purchase proposal. If the issuer has chosen an offering with bids from multiple
underwriters, then the financial advisor collects the bids on the day of the public
meeting usually utilizing an internet bidding process. The issuer then accepts the
purchase proposal at the public meeting by adopting the ordinance or resolution
prepared by bond counsel.

The purchase proposal contains the specific terms of the bond issue: principal
amount of the bonds, interest rates, amortization schedule and prepayment
provisions. If also sets forth the conditions of closing. Once the deal is "cut" at
the bond sale, a final official statement is prepared and sent by the underwriter to
the purchasers, and the participants proceed toward the closing.

DCED approval and the closing. If the issuer is a municipality or school


district, bond counsel will prepare a package to be filed with the Pennsylvania
Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) in accordance
with the requirements of the Local Government Unit Debt Act (LGUDA). DCED
has 20 days to approve the bond issue. Other issuers of debt in Pennsylvania
may have different statutory approval requirements.

Usually the closing takes place about one month after the bond sale. Prior to the
closing, the bond counsel will distribute for review drafts of various agreements,
certificates and legal opinions. At the closing, the participants execute the various
closing documents. The underwriter wires the purchase price for the bonds to
the paying agent or trustee. The paying agent or trustee, at the direction of the
issuer, pays the costs of issuance and applies the balance to fund a construction
or project fund or to refund the prior debt. After the closing, bond counsel
distributes a complete set of the closing documents to each participant (often on
a CD).

Post-issuance compliance. After a bond issue closes, there are requirements


under the tax code and under the securities laws that continue to apply to the
bonds. On the tax side, there are regulations governing the investment and
spending of bond proceeds and the use of the bond-financed facilities. On the
securities law side, there are requirements to make annual financial disclosures
and special event disclosures with the MSRB.

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Both the Internal Revenue Service and the SEC strongly encourage issuers to
adopt and follow written post-issuance compliance policies. And all of the
regulators are becoming more and more aggressive in supervising the postissuance requirements. Before the bond issue closes, the issuer and solicitor
should work closely with bond counsel and the financial advisor or underwriter to
help the issuer develop these post-issuance compliance policies. After the
closing, the issuer and its solicitor should make sure the issuer takes these
policies seriously and follows them.
C.

Miscellaneous Points

Now that we have reviewed the participants and the steps, here are a few
miscellaneous points to consider:

Sometimes the issuer is acting as a "conduit" issuer. In such a case, the issuer
issues the bonds and loans the proceeds to a third-party borrower, which is often
a nonprofit corporation such as a hospital or university. The borrower is
responsible for paying the debt service on the bonds. Both the issuer and the
borrower need to be concerned with the procedural, tax and securities law
aspects of the bond issue.

Although the financial advisor or underwriter usually prepares the draft of the
preliminary official statement and the final official statement, it is really the
issuer's disclosure document. The issuer and its solicitor should carefully review
its contents. The official statement should contain no misstatement of a material
fact, and no material fact about the issuer should be omitted from the official
statement.

If the issuer plans to issue bank-qualified bonds at some point during the year,
this consideration should be communicated to bond counsel during the structuring
process.

If the bonds are being issued to finance a capital project, the issuer should focus
well before the closing on the investment strategy for the bond proceeds.

Sometimes an issuer may want to adopt an ordinance or resolution, as applicable,


which approves "parameters" and delegates approval of the final pricing of the
bonds to a specific municipal official or to the borrower. In such a case, the bond
sale occurs after the governing body takes its official action.

If the issuer plans to enter into an interest rate swap agreement in connection
with a bond issue, the issuer should retain an experienced financial advisor to

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advise it on the swap, and the issuer should make sure it understands the risks
involved in the transaction.

Good luck on your bond issues!

Donna Kreiser ( dkreiser@mwn.com) and David Unkovic ( dunkovic@mwn.com)


are public finance lawyers with McNees Wallace & Nurick LLC with offices in
Harrisburg, Lancaster, Scranton and State College, Pennsylvania. The firm
regularly serves as bond counsel for state agencies, local governments,
authorities and school districts. Donna Kreiser formerly served as deputy general
counsel to the Pennsylvania Governor's Office of General Counsel, and David
Unkovic formerly served as the first state appointed receiver for the City of
Harrisburg.

http://www.mwn.com/anatomy-of-a-bond-issue/

5/18/2015

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