Prop N Neighborhood Improvement Project Gets Final OK With Sale of First $175M in Bonds

  Detroit’s project to rehabilitate 8,000 vacant homes and demolish an additional 8,000 received its first set of funds today as the City of Detroit sold the first $175 million in bonds of a planned $250 million neighborhood improvement effort, according to a press release. In November, over 70% of Detroit voters approved letting the … Continued The post Prop N Neighborhood Improvement Project Gets Final OK With Sale of First $175M in Bonds appeared first on The Michigan Chronicle.

Prop N Neighborhood Improvement Project Gets Final OK With Sale of First $175M in Bonds

 

Detroit’s project to rehabilitate 8,000 vacant homes and demolish an additional 8,000 received its first set of funds today as the City of Detroit sold the first $175 million in bonds of a planned $250 million neighborhood improvement effort, according to a press release. In November, over 70% of Detroit voters approved letting the city sell the bonds. 

The bond funds will allow the city to start the process of stabilizing and securing thousands of vacant Land Bank properties until they can be sold for rehab and demolishing houses that cannot be saved. The city plans to go to the market again in 2022 to sell additional Prop N bonds

Interest among investors was so strong in this series of Detroit Prop N bonds that they could have been sold 20 times over. Specifically, for this $175 million bond sale, there were over $3.4 billion in orders.

“The incredibly strong interest in these bonds is a direct reflection of investor’s confidence in Detroit’s strong financial management and that starts with our Office of Chief Financial Officer,” said Mayor Mike Duggan in a press release. “CFO Jay Rising, Chief Deputy CFOs Tanya Stoudemire and John Naglick, and their entire team have done a tremendous job managing the city’s finances to put us in a strong position, now and for the future.”  

Currently, contracts for the first 1,380 demolition properties are before City Council awaiting approval.  All seven companies selected through the city’s procurement process to perform the work are Detroit headquartered and five of those companies are black-owned.  More than 51% of the employees doing the demolition work for all seven companies will be verified residents of the city of Detroit.  

The city issued a mix of taxable and tax-exempt bonds that will be immediately spent as the first installment on Proposal N programs. Over 60 institutional investors placed orders on the bonds on Thursday, many of which were repeat investors that purchased the city’s 2020 and 2018 bonds demonstrating their continued support and interest in the city, according to CFO Rising. 

That overwhelming level of interest allowed the city to achieve a much lower interest rate than it had initially expected and will translate to much lower repayment costs over time for Detroit taxpayers. 

“Investors took notice of Detroit’s steady progress in building financial strength and swiftly responding to the pandemic driven revenue shortfalls. They saw that while the COVID-19 crisis may have slowed this positive trend, it did not reverse it,” said Rising.

The strong market and demand for Detroit bonds allowed the city to secure a 3.36% interest rate, significantly less than city officials had initially anticipated and 1.28 percentage points less than the interest rate received by the city on its last general obligation bond issue in October, 2020.  Detroit marketed these bonds with the “Social Bond” designation to attract Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) focused investors that are interested in financing socially beneficial projects.

In bringing Detroit’s outlook to “Stable” two weeks ago, Standard & Poors referenced the city’s strong fiscal management and the vision behind Proposal N:  “We view the passage [of the $250 million Proposal N] as significant in that it will further a key component of the administration’s long-term vision for strengthening the tax base and do so with a dedicated debt millage as opposed to funding through reserves or the operating budget.”

This is the third time since 2018 that Detroit sold municipal bonds backed solely on the city’s ability to repay. During the prior 20 years, the city could only sell bonds that were either backed by the state of Michigan or with insurance to the bondholder, which greatly added to the cost for Detroit.

  • Investor interest in Detroit bonds so strong they could have been sold 20x over
  • City leverages intense interest to achieve low 3.36% interest rate
  • Sale comes on the heels of S&P boosting Detroit’s rating outlook to “Stable” 

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