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On Meredith Whitney, Munis and Leaks
Warning: Wonkish
When you stick your neck out and make prognostications about the future, sometimes you're going to be wrong. I’m certainly no exception. But when it comes to really big misses, I think Meredith Whitney’s call for a monster blow-out of the Municipal Bond market is on top of the list.
Meredith is a smart lady. That being the case, it’s worth looking into why she was so wrong. A report this weekend from the Bond Buyer provides a partial answer:
A 32% ($138B) YoY decline is a very big relative change. The drop in long-term financing was not offset by increases in short-term debt; that category fell by 7.4% ($5B).
The drop in total borrowings is almost exclusively a result of the 46% ($129B) in the “New Money” category. The drop in New Money debt issuance is a consequence of hundreds of cities and states collectively saying:
We’re in a pinch on revenues. Let’s not spend any money we don’t have to for the time being. We’re going to have put off the construction of the new (Sewer plant, overpass, water treatment facility, school, whatever). The last thing we want to do is go to the Muni market and borrow any more.
As a result of many individual decisions to defer infrastructure projects, the Munis have kicked the can down road. They have eliminated the current and future expenses related to these projects. With that, they have stabilized the trajectory of their debt growth and improved short-term cash liquidity (by having less ST debt). In the process, they have created a shortage of muni bonds (relative to expectations) in the market.
Thus, all may appear well in muni land. A successful re-balancing has taken place, for the time being. If the munis can continue to push off infrastructure projects, they will not suffer the fate that Ms. Whitney feared they might.
I said that the munis had “kicked the can down the road”. In this case, it’s quite a different form of can kicking. When the Federal government raises the debt ceiling, we all say, “They kicked the can”. But the munis are doing (pretty much) the exact opposite, so Can Kicking would appear to be an improper/unfair description of what is happening with Munis. I think it's still valid, deferring infrastructure investments is another form of kicking.
Like most Kicking efforts, it will end badly sooner or later.
I’m looking at a potential example as I write. One of NYC’s reservoirs is about a half mile away. A $60mm NYC/NYS funded construction plan was shelved a month ago. Could this become one of those examples where Kicking goes badly? Consider this daisy-chain.
The Croton Reservoir is part of a chain of reservoirs that provide water for NYC. It’s large (22 miles), but it’s small in comparisons to the big man-made lakes further upstate. Croton is important because it connects directly to those upstate reservoirs via an underground tunnel. That tunnel goes north, and then west. It is 1,000 feet deep where it meets the Hudson River.
A bit of physics. The upstate reservoirs are 1,000 feet above the sea and the tunnel is 1,000 below. The tunnel is (was) large enough to drive a truck through so the water pressure at the lowest part of the tunnel is enormous. What might you expect from a 75 year old tunnel under that much pressure? A leak? Sure.
This is one hell of a leak. As much as 35 million gallons a day was the estimate seven years ago. There is evidence that rate has since accelerated. That comes to 13 billion gallons a year, which is sufficient for 250,000 average Americans. Think Orlando, Madison, Winston-Salem or Reno. Each of these cities uses about as much water as NYC is leaking. In China, this much water would meet the needs of 1.7mm people, In Bangladesh it would be sufficient for 3mm. It's enough to fill 650,000 in-ground swimming pools. That’s a leak.
It gets worse. The leak was first detected in 1988. Therefore something like 15 million swimming pools worth of drinkable water have been pissed into the ocean. It’s so bad that areas on either side of the tunnel have sinkholes. People have been forced to move. Properties have been condemned. And the sinkholes keep getting bigger.
There are already dozens of lawsuits on this. They are after the State and the City who own and maintain the reservoirs. The judges have all sided against the City and State, and there have been promises to fix the damn leak for years. A few years ago, a formal plan was put together.
This is no small engineering matter. A new tunnel will be built that connects the old tunnel before and after the break. Once completed, the old tunnel will be cemented closed. The diversion tunnel will be ½ mile long. Recall that this is 1,000 below sea level, any construction/mining this deep is both difficult and dangerous (the bends). Those normal risks are, however, trumped by risks that the nearby existing tunnel breaches during construction of the diversion tunnel. The water pressure in the tunnel is sufficient to crush a submarine.
The only option is to stop the flow of water in the tunnel from the source, and then pump out what is left. The supply of water would be cut for about a year while the diversion tunnel is completed. This takes us back to the Croton Reservoir and the cancelled construction at this location. The plan was to raise the spillway by four feet. This change would have added a permanent storage to the NYC system of 11B gallons (11 days of consumption). It was intended that this expansion of storage would be completed before the leaking water tunnel is closed. It would have provided an additional level of comfort on available water for the City. Not any longer.
NYC’s has numerous sources of water. The Croton reservoir system could be eliminated for a period of time without a real shortage. However, that would not be true if the tunnel was closed for an extended period, particularly if there was a drought in the northeast.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the cut off in supply were much longer than the one-year projection. The North East has been blessed/cursed with above average rainfall for years due to the long running La Nina, but rainfall is impossible to predict. Could we be in a full-blown El Nino (dry in the NE) when the construction starts? Maybe. If so, NYC will regret not having upgraded the storage capacity at the Croton system.
I don’t want to leave the impression that NYC is headed for trouble. The possibility of a hard landing is small. But there are risks, and those risks are increased as a result of the cancellation of the Croton project. Caswell Hollowy, the NYC commissioner on the tunnel repair project said in 2010:
“You want to know how long the water is going to be off so you know where the supplemental water is going to come from. It’s absolutely critical to get it right.”
When Hollowy said this, the plan to upgrade the Croton system was still on. Now it is has been shelved (Budget concerns were the reasons cited). It's now more "critical" to get that timing right. I'm laying 4 to 1 they don't.
The Bond Buyer reported a drop of $129B in New Money bonds. If you consider the $60mm Croton project as being representative, about 2,200 projects got cancelled last year. With that big a number, it is just a matter of time before something falls through the cracks (literally) and economic consequences follow.
Will NYC or some other city have water supply problems?
Will some municipality have a breakdown in its water treatment capacity that results in huge sewage leaks?
Will a bridge collapse that restricts important commerce?
Will there be a blow-out of the electrical grid due to underinvestment?
The answers to these questions (and more) is that infrastructure breakdowns will occur. If we don’t invest, the resulting “leaks” will come back and bite us in the ass.
So far, the munis have reacted to their changed financial circumstances and have avoided the fate that Whitney saw coming. If they (collectively) continue doing what they did in 2011, they will probably avoid a financial crisis. But that doesn’t preclude problems sometime soon. Some big “things” are going to break. When they do, large communities will be affected. In the end, Whitney might be right that some munis will run into trouble. If that trouble is the consequence of a significant infrastructure failure, Meredith Whitney will be right, for the wrong reasons.
Notes:
*I’m sorry this went on and on. I just love big construction projects.
*Why did the tunnel under the Hudson fail? It went through a section of limestone. The water from the reservoir is filled with acid rain. The acidic water dissolves limestone. The original tunnel designers had no clue what acid rain was, so the limestone section was not sealed during construction.
*The 138B drop in New Money is equal to 0.9% of total GDP. This lack of borrowing was a drag on total output. Another good example of Debt = Growth.
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Tax free Yield in a ZIRP World, but Greece and Portugal have a nice Yield too.
So many places to lose ones capital to chose from...
The fools in California borrowed big time when the economy was booming. Now the economy of the state is a mess, they have no ability to borrow, and all the previous loans have to be paid off. So much for the "flywheel effect" of government spending.
And Cali only missed January revenue projections by a measly half billion.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-02-10/calif-jan-tax-revenue-528m-below-estimate.html
And it's a good thing all those state and muni workers pensions are funded and that tax revenue is as dependable as our thriving economy.
As of September 2011, that's no longer true.
As the son of a man who's small business has ben infrastructure buildout and repair for forty years, as of September 2011, his business is over.
The money funding local, state, and federal projects evaporated - fiscal year end, 2011.
So while the defense and DHS business is booming, our water treatment plants, pipelines, steam lines, and not-so-sexy or profitable other infrastructure needs are getting cancelled, delayed, or dropped into big bucket no-bid contract work to be done eventually by some large companies with great inside connections.
And the bonus: All those muni workers and pensions are getting demonized, raided, and privatized and getting tossed under the big umbrella of a company that can buy it's way in, take over and do, all with the added markup of a mangement team complete with golden parachutes, coffins and benefits, lawyers, accountants, and whatever else it takes to make taxes and big government "shrink." Same set of workers under new mangement.
And we bought it all.
So I don't really get pissed off at a highway worker in an orange vest leaning on a shovel smoking a cigarette anymore. I get pissed off at the guy driving a Mercedes that runs the company that poor sot works for, complaining about the orange vested "leech."
The real leech is that fucker in the Mercedes making out like a bandit on our tax dollars and bitching about it.
My father still wears his 501's and drives a beat to shit Suburban to work every day, never had a lawyer, an accountant, a college degree, or a paid team of lobbyists to help him win the business. In his prime he generated six to eight million dollars a year. His take home pay was less, but sufficient.
Those days are gone.
We should get used to the leaky pipes, and the worn out water treatment plants. That fucker in the Mercedes now makes enough to just build his own so he can give us all the finger.
So our shitty attitude about taxes, government spending, and the liberal bashing shit will end up fucking the greater numbers of us while we cheer for the fucker in the Mercedes fucking the whole of us.
As a tax and spend problem, a pension problem, a lazy bunch of fucks problem - idolizing the Sarah Palins and their like minded fucktards that think you can run a country of 310 million people on spit and bailing wire, faith-based problem solving, and bashing anyone that doesn't adhere to our opinion on the matter.
And it ain't like the pensions are bleeding us dry. At least we get the trash taken out, for now.
Whitney who again- A drug addict who could not face lefe and lived in the la la land. Just like the rest of druggies in the USA. American lifestyle will kill. Things, and Things and more things to fill the emptyness.
Yikes!
This is about Meredith Whitney, a well know financial analyst.
Are you thinking of Whitney Houston? That beautiful woman, with the beautiful voice, who died yesterday?
My first title of this was "Whitney, Munis and Leaks". My editor called and says,
"What's this got to do with the lady that died?"
So I changed the title to Meredith Whitney, Munis and Leaks.
I thought that would clear up any confusion. Wrong again......
Great article Bruce.
Thanks Bruce. All I keep hearing this morning was about was Whitney Houston. I have no respect for Hollywood or crap TV shows. Have not watched TV in over 6 years.
Yes, Hollywood does seem to suffer from the "painting the world with a very broad brush" syndrome....Much like your comment.
Speaking of Hollywood and American revolution, or despair in government media manipulation, of interest is this fascinating trailer for a new hit American movie, coming out in a few weeks.
Hilarious, shocking, disturbing, compelling.
In some ways this film is a remake of 1993's 'Falling Down' with Michael Douglas, but now this is a full-blown 'comedy', and the angry middle-aged white man has a 16 year old teen-age girl join him on a killing spree, shooting a whole bunch of people dead when they are obnoxious for trivial reasons.
Why did the Hollywood propaganda machine make this film, almost encouraging having fun by killing people? At first I was puzzled. But two reasons come to mind.
One is that, this is a movie secretly pushing the gun confiscation agenda. Paints gun owners as 'crazy' people, when actually the opposite is usually true.
Secondly, I think it may be getting Americans ready for more casual death, which is brewing as revolutionary forces in America build.
Anyway, this is an astonishing must-see 2 minute movie trailer, whether you laugh or are shocked or both, trailer to 'God Bless America', out in a few weeks:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ul4CZrnEFxU
* * *
Note to Americans: Surprise! We actually have lots of private civilian guns in Europe.
Germany: 25 million civilian privately owned handguns, shotguns, rifles.
France: 19 million civilian privately owned handguns, shotguns, rifles.
Switzerland: Ask Swiss citizen Bruce Krasting, practically a gun in every Swiss house, owning a weapon was long mandatory for Swiss males much of their lives.
And so on.
We do not carry them around, or have as high gun ownership rates as in the US, but 100 million plus private guns in Europe is definitely significant.
Yes, the crazy UK Brit government that confiscated all privately owned handguns in the 1990s - But the Brit regime has crazy moments indeed. It is not like that on the Continent. Here we know the Nazis can come back, they were here before. Guns stay in people's hands and homes.
Facts of gun ownership and policies in countries around the world:
http://www.gunpolicy.org/
I am Jobe
"I have no respect for Hollywood or crap TV shows"
Neither do I. But someone fucking died. Someone with family, with children, with family and friends who loved them.On the human level it is sad.
"Have not watched TV in over 6 years."
I'm so fucking sick of this superior attitude regarding telivision. Maybe you should have just watched the interesting and informative programs. They do exist. Yeah it is so much easier to blame the medium instead of your lax ability to discern QUALITY!
.
Maybe he just doesn't enjoy picking bits of corn out of a river of turds?
"Maybe you should have just watched the interesting and informative programs."
Nope!! Gotta starve the beast!!
The ratio of crap designed to dumb down and decay the culture is 10 to 1, thus most of your cable bill goes to finance the crap and not the good stuff. And if you have children it is impossible to control what they see. They can crack parental controls or go to a friend's house and watch whatever they want.
To save the nation we must starve the beast!!
www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/esp_sociopol_mindcon40.htm
Houston's death reminded you about Meredith and the Muni call, admit it? No? OK fine.
What about them Munis now? [Sigh] ... yeah that market's not fixed... at all [sigh]