from NYT:
The State of Illinois is still paying off billions in bills that it got  from schools and social service providers last year. Arizona recently stopped paying for certain organ transplants for people in its Medicaid  program. States are releasing prisoners early, more to cut expenses  than to reward good behavior. And in Newark, the city laid off 13  percent of its police officers last week.
While next year could be even worse, there are bigger, longer-term  risks, financial analysts say. Their fear is that even when the economy  recovers, the shortfalls will not disappear, because many state and  local governments have so much debt — several trillion dollars’ worth,  with much of it off the books and largely hidden from view — that it  could overwhelm them in the next few years.        
“It seems to me that crying wolf is probably a good thing to do at this point,” said Felix Rohatyn, the financier who helped save New York City from bankruptcy in the 1970s.        
Some of the same people who warned of the looming subprime crisis two  years ago are ringing alarm bells again. Their message: Not just small  towns or dying Rust Belt cities, but also large states like Illinois and  California are increasingly at risk.        
Municipal bankruptcies or defaults have been extremely rare — no state has defaulted since the Great Depression, and only a handful of cities have declared bankruptcy or are considering doing so.        
But the finances of some state and local governments are so distressed  that some analysts say they are reminded of the run-up to the subprime  mortgage meltdown or of the debt crisis hitting nations in Europe.         
Analysts fear that at some point — no one knows when — investors could  balk at lending to the weakest states, setting off a crisis that could  spread to the stronger ones, much as the turmoil in Europe has spread  from country to country.        
Mr. Rohatyn warned that while municipal bankruptcies were rare, they  appeared increasingly possible. And the imbalances are so large in some  places that the federal government will probably have to step in at some  point, he said, even if that seems unlikely in the current political  climate.        
“I don’t like to play the scared rabbit, but I just don’t see where the end of this is,” he added.        
Resorting to Fiscal Tricks        
As the downturn has ground on, some of the worst-hit cities and states  have resorted to fiscal sleight of hand to stay afloat, helping them  close yawning budget gaps each year, but often at great future cost.         
Few workers with neglected 401(k)  retirement accounts would risk taking out second mortgages to invest in  stocks, gambling that the investment gains would be enough to build  bigger nest eggs and repay the loans.        
But that is just what Illinois, which has been failing to make the  required annual payments to its pension funds for years, is doing. It  borrowed $10 billion in 2003 and used the money to invest in its pension  funds. The recession sent their investment returns below their target,  but the state must repay the bonds, with interest. The solution?  Illinois sold an additional $3.5 billion worth of pension bonds this  year and is planning to borrow $3.7 billion more for its pension funds.         
It is the long-term problems of a handful of states, including  California, Illinois, New Jersey and New York, that financial analysts  worry about most, fearing that their problems might precipitate a crisis  that could hurt other states by driving up their borrowing costs.         
But it is the short-term budget woes that nearly all states are facing that are preoccupying elected officials.        
Illinois is not the only state behind on its bills. Many states,  including New York, have delayed payments to vendors and local  governments because they had too little cash on hand to make them. California paid vendors with i.o.u.’s last year. A handful of other states, worried about their cash flow, delayed paying tax refunds last spring.        
Now, just as the downturn has driven up demand for state assistance, many states are cutting back.        
The demand for food stamps has been rising significantly in Idaho, but  tight budgets led the state to close nearly a third of the field offices  of the state’s Department of Health and Welfare, which take  applications for them. As states have cut aid to cities, many have  resorted to previously unthinkable cuts, laying off police officers and closing firehouses.        
Those cuts in aid to cities and counties, which are expected to  continue, are one reason some analysts say cities are at greater risk of  bankruptcy or are being placed under outside oversight.        
Next year is unlikely to bring better news. States and cities typically  face their biggest deficits after recessions officially end, as  rainy-day funds are depleted and easy measures are exhausted.        
This time is expected to be no different. The federal stimulus money  increased the federal share of state budgets to over a third last year,  from just over a quarter in 2008, according to a report issued last week by the National Governors Association  and the National Association of State Budget Officers. That money is  set to run out next summer. Tax collections, meanwhile, are not expected  to return to their pre-recession levels for another year or two, given  that the housing market and broader economy remain weak and that  unemployment remains high.        
Scott D. Pattison, the budget association’s director, said that for  states, next year could be “the worst year of this four- or five-year  downturn period.”
And few expect the federal government to offer more direct aid to  states, at least in the short term. Many members of the new Republican  majority in the House campaigned against the stimulus, and Washington is  debating the recommendations of a debt-reduction commission. 
So some states are essentially borrowing to pay their operating costs,  adding new debts that are not always clearly disclosed.        
Arizona, hobbled by the bursting housing bubble, turned to a real estate  deal for relief, essentially selling off several state buildings —  including the tower where the governor has her office — for a $735  million upfront payment. But leasing back the buildings over the next 20  years will ultimately cost taxpayers an extra $400 million in interest.         
Many governments are delaying payments to their pension funds, which  will eventually need to be made, along with the high interest — usually  around 8 percent — that the funds are expected to earn each year.         
New York balanced its budget this year by shortchanging its pension fund. And in New Jersey, Gov. Chris Christie deferred paying the $3.1 billion that was due to the pension funds this year.        
It is these growing hidden debts that make many analysts nervous. States  and municipalities currently have around $2.8 trillion worth of  outstanding bonds, but that number is dwarfed by the debts that many are  carrying off their books.        
State and local pensions — another form of promised debt, guaranteed in  some states by their constitutions — face hidden shortfalls of as much  as $3.5 trillion by some calculations. And the health benefits that  state and large local governments have promised their retirees going  forward could cost more than $530 billion, according to the Government Accountability Office.        
“Most financial crises happen in unpredictable ways, and they hit you  when you’re not looking,” said Jerome H. Powell, a visiting scholar at  the Bipartisan Policy Center who was an under secretary of the Treasury for finance during the bailout of the savings and loan  industry in the early 1990s. “This one isn’t like that. You can see it  coming. It would be sinful not to do something about this while there’s a  chance.”        
So far, investors have bought states’ bonds eagerly, on the widespread  understanding that states and cities almost never default. But in recent  weeks the demand has diminished sharply. Last month, mutual funds that invest in municipal bonds  reported a big sell-off — a bigger one-week sell-off, in fact, than  they had when the financial markets melted down in 2008. And hedge funds  are already seeking out ways to place bets against the debts of some  states, with the help of their investment banks.        
Of course, not all states are in as dire straits as Illinois or  California. And the credit-rating agencies say that the risk of default  is small. States and cities typically make a priority of repaying their  bond holders, even before paying for essential services. Standard & Poor’s issued a report this month  saying that the crises that states and municipalities were facing were  “more about tough decisions than potential defaults.”        
Change in Ratings        
The credit ratings of a number of local governments have improved this  year, not because their finances have strengthened somewhat, but because  the ratings agencies have changed the way they analyze governments.         
The new higher ratings, which lower the cost of borrowing, emphasize the  fact that municipal defaults have been much rarer than corporate  defaults.        
This October, Moody’s  issued a report explaining why it now rates all 50 states, even  Illinois, as better credit risks than a vast majority of American  non-financial companies.        
One reason: the belief that the federal government is more likely to bail out a teetering state than a bankrupt company.        
“The federal government has broadly channeled cash to all state  governments during recent recessions and provided support to individual  states following natural disasters,” Moody’s explained, adding that  there was no way of being sure how Washington would respond to a bond  default by a state, since it had not happened since the 1930s.        
But some analysts fear the ratings are too sanguine, recalling that the ratings agencies also dismissed the possibility that a subprime crisis was brewing.  While most agree that defaults are unlikely, they fear that as states  struggle with their growing debts, investors could decide not to buy the  debt of the weakest state or local governments.        
That would force a crisis, since states cannot operate if they cannot  borrow. Such a crisis could then spread to healthier states, making it  more expensive for them to borrow, if Europe is an example.        
Meredith Whitney, a bank analyst who was among the first to warn of the  impact the subprime mortgage meltdown would have on banks, is warning  that she sees similar problems with state and local government finances.         
“The state situation reminded me so much of the banks, pre-crisis,” she said this fall on CNBC.        
There are eerie similarities between the subprime debt crisis and the looming municipal debt woes. Among them:        
¶Just as housing was once considered a sure bet — prices would never  fall all across the country at the same time, conventional wisdom  suggested — municipal bonds have long been considered an investment safe  enough for grandmothers, because states could always raise taxes to pay  their bondholders. Now that proposition is being tested. Harrisburg,  the capital of Pennsylvania, considered bankruptcy this year because it  faced $68 million in debt payments related to a failed incinerator,  which is more than the city’s entire annual budget. But officials there  have resisted raising taxes.        
¶Much of the debt of states and cities is hidden, since it is off the  books, just as the amount of mortgage-related debt turned out to be  underestimated. States and municipalities often understate their pension  liabilities, in part by using accounting methods that would not be  allowed in the private sector. Joshua D. Rauh, an associate professor of  finance at Northwestern University, and Robert Novy-Marx, an assistant professor of finance at the University of Rochester, calculated that the true unfunded liability for state and local pension plans is roughly $3.5 trillion.        
¶The states and many cities still carry good ratings, and those issuing  warnings are dismissed as alarmists, reminding some analysts of the lead  up to the subprime crisis.        
Now states are bracing for more painful cuts, more layoffs, more tax  increases, more battles with public employee unions, more requests to  bail out cities. And in the long term, as cities and states try to keep  up on their debts, the very nature of government could change as they  have less money left over to pay for the services they have long  provided.        
Richard Ravitch,  the lieutenant governor of New York, is among those warning that states  are on an unsustainable path, and that their disclosures of pension and  health care obligations are often misleading. And he worries how long  it can last.        
“They didn’t do it with bad motives,” he said. “Ninety-five percent of  them didn’t understand what they were doing. They did it because it was  easier than taxing people or cutting benefits. We’re getting closer and  closer to the point where we can’t do that anymore. I don’t know where  that is, but I know we’re close.”
Sunday, December 26, 2010
The Looming Bond Crisis
Labels:
bond market,
bonds,
debt crisis