How proposed rules, new issuances are impacting the bond industry
5 min readThe bond markets have undergone significant transformations in recent months, as new technology like artificial intelligence and the shifting economic landscape force issuers and investors alike to navigate new frontiers in debt financing. Between the predictions of industry professionals, and proposed changes in regulations, many firms are forging ahead.
The Securities and Exchange Commission, along with the Treasury Department, the National Credit Union Administration and other federal agencies involved in the
Current estimates for when any final rulemaking would be released land in December. After all the necessary regulatory hurdles are cleared, the agency would issue its final rule by the end of 2026 to take effect the following year or later.
“It’s joint rulemaking, which means our part is the same as [the other seven federal agencies],” Emily Brock, federal liaison for the Government Finance Officers Association, told The Bond Buyer’s
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Team behind New Terminal One project at JFK done issuing until 2026
After successfully closing on $2.55 billion of green special facilities revenue bonds late last month, the team behind the New Terminal One project at John F. Kennedy International Airport will hold off on tapping the market until the first or second quarter of the 2026 fiscal year.
Municipal bonds for the project
Manoj Patel, chief financial officer of the New Terminal One project, told Bond Buyer’s
“Our vision is to basically be one of the top five terminals in the world,” Patel said. “But, you know, it’s great to say it. It’s another thing to be able to see it. So I think when investors were able to see it, you know, it really drove that home that this is real. This is coming.”
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Assured Guaranty set to merge U.S. subsidiaries
Assured Guaranty Ltd. announced July 8 that it plans to combine both of its U.S. financial guaranty insurers into one organization to provide more capital for supporting its insurance policies and foster further expansion.
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. will join Assured Guaranty Inc. effective Aug. 1. Both subsidiaries have AA-plus ratings from Kroll Bond Rating Agency, which confirmed in a statement that its classification would remain unchanged following the merger.
“It will result in more efficient utilization of the combined capital of the two companies, and it will simplify the administration and eliminate duplicative expenses of Assured Guaranty’s U.S. financial guaranty operations,” Dominic Frederico, president and chief executive officer of Assured Guaranty Ltd., said in a
This year, Assured Guaranty Municipal was tasked with
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Private capital is door to infrastructure growth: BlackRock CEO
Larry Fink, founder and longtime chief executive of BlackRock, told investors during the firm’s second-quarter earnings call this month that ongoing energy shifts and a growing focus on artificial intelligence are creating significant opportunities for private infrastructure investment.
“There’s a generational demand for capital and infrastructure, including the [need to] finance data centers for AI and for energy transition,” Fink said during the call. “Private capital will be critical in meeting these infrastructure needs, both stand-alone and through public-private partnerships.”
On a more granular level, he estimated that investors will flock toward fixed-income products like exchange-traded funds and alternative assets like infrastructure debt instead of traditional bond funds.
Fink’s remarks follow in the wake of
“Over six months of feedback of our planned acquisition of GIP [have occurred] and the conversations we’re having with some of the most sophisticated investors worldwide has never been more robust about how we could partner, how we could be trying to develop more things,” Fink said.
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Phoenix ends 12-year issuance lull with new money GO bonds
The city of Phoenix reentered the bond market with its first new money general obligation issue
The $238.8 million deal in which Piper Sandler was lead underwriter, was made up of two types of bonds involving $133.6 million of Series A tax-exempt bonds and $105.18 million of Series B taxable debt. Serial maturities on the bonds are as long as 2047 for Series A and 2032 for Series B.
Kathleen Gitkin, the city’s chief financial officer, told The Bond Buyer’s
“The feedback that we’re getting from the syndicate is that people are incredibly excited for Phoenix paper,” Gitkin said. “I think there is some pent-up demand.”
The funds generated from the bond program will go toward improving the city’s public safety, street, storm drainage, library, park, arts, culture, economic development, environmental, housing, and human services projects.
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