Fitch Rates New Hampshire's $47.9MM GOs 'AA+'.Business Editors NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 15, 2002 Fitch Ratings Fitch Ratings An international rating agency for financial institutions, insurance companies, and corporate, sovereign, and municipal debt. Fitch Ratings has headquarters in New York and London and is wholly owned by FIMALAC of Paris. assigns an 'AA+' rating to the State of New Hampshire's $47,860,000 general obligation refunding bonds refunding bond A bond that is issued for the purpose of retiring an outstanding bond. Issuers refund bond issues to reduce financing costs, eliminate covenants, and alter maturities. See also crossover refunding bonds, prerefunding. , 2003 series A (delayed delivery delayed delivery Delivery of a certificate after the day on which delivery would occur with a regular-way contract. Delayed delivery is sometimes specified by the seller when the order to sell is entered. See also seller's option contract. ) expected through negotiation with A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc. on Nov. 21. These non-callable bonds will be due July 15, 2004-2011 and will be dated the expected date of delivery of April 17, 2003. The 'AA+' rating on approximately $610 million outstanding general obligation bonds is affirmed af·firm v. af·firmed, af·firm·ing, af·firms v.tr. 1. To declare positively or firmly; maintain to be true. 2. To support or uphold the validity of; confirm. v.intr. by Fitch. This issue is intended to refund $48.14 million 1993 series bonds maturing 2004-11 for debt service savings. New Hampshire's (the state) economic buoyancy buoyancy (boi`ənsē, b `yən–), upward force exerted by a fluid on any body immersed in it. Buoyant force can be explained in terms of Archimedes' principle. and resilience
as well as its conservative debt and financial policies underpin its
credit standing. The national downturn has had a relatively mild
economic impact on the state, but business taxes have significantly
underperformed projections resulting in a deficit in the combined
general and education funds. Reserves currently exceed the deficit but
revenue performance and measures taken to maintain balance will
determine credit direction.
In 1997 the state Supreme Court found the state to be responsible for providing adequate education. The initial plan was underfunded un·der·fund tr.v. un·der·fund·ed, un·der·fund·ing, un·der·funds To provide insufficient funding for. underfunded adj → infradotado (económicamente) and the major revenue source, a statewide property tax, was valid only until Jan. 1, 2003. A new school funding plan was implemented last year which retained existing dedicated funding sources (including previous business tax increases)and provided for further increases in business taxes and other measures as well as higher general fund transfers to the Education Fund. The statewide property tax rate was reduced but the sunset was removed. Such measures would provide for largely balanced operations, however, the funding measures increased the state's reliance on less predictable revenue sources, particularly business taxes, at the same time that the assumption of education as a state responsibility has reduced spending side flexibility. This aspect of school funding remains vulnerability. For fiscal 2002 revenues underperformed by approximately $44 million, and spending exceeded the budget by about $20 million, resulting in an unaudited $40 million deficit on June 30, 2002, subsequently increasing to $50 million with later adjustments. The revenue shortfall was primarily due to lower than expected business tax collections. The widening of the deficit in fiscal 2003 to at least the $70.4 million level projected in May is still estimated for the June 30, 2003 biennium bi·en·ni·um n. pl. bi·en·ni·ums or bi·en·ni·a A two-year period. [Latin : bi-, two; see bi-1 + annus, year; see at- close, which could be larger as business tax weakness continued through October. Total general and education fund revenues were$11 million or 1.5% below revised expectations for the four months, and the state is also exposed to additional federal Medicaid assistance losses which could also increase the revenue short fall; $14.8 million is under appeal but an additional $24.6 million payment was recently deferred due to a new challenge of the state's methodology. Existing state reserves still include $55 million in the stabilization fund Stabilization fund may refer to:
|
|
||||||||||||

`yən–)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion