AHF LIVE CONFERENCE COVERAGE

AHF LIVE: NEWS

The Boom in Bond Financing Options

By Liz Enochs

Developers looking to use tax-exempt bonds to help finance their projects have many more options than just a few years ago when it comes to structuring their transactions and choosing which providers to use, said participants in a panel titled “Bond Financing: Finding the Right Structuring Options for Your Deal” at this year’s AHF Live conference in Chicago.

“There’s been a tremendous amount of change over the past three or four years in this field,” said Chris Tawa, a senior vice president at MMA Financial, who moderated the panel. Some of the changes: Major banks have begun offering long-term letters of credit on tax-exempt bonds, competing with the credit enhancement offered by agencies such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae; private-placement bond-purchase programs have proliferated; and a variety of derivatives contracts such as variable-to-fixed-rate swaps and total return swaps have emerged as options for borrowers.

Perhaps that’s one reason panelist Wade Norris warned that developers interested in using tax-exempt bonds may soon be competing for a scarce resource. As recently as the early 1990s, multifamily housing made up just 7 percent of the total tax-exempt bond volume cap available to states; now that figure is closer to 30 percent, he said. “This is a gathering storm,” Norris said, adding that the competition for tax-exempt bonds is likely to only get tougher over the next year.

Chris Tawa, a senior vice president for MMA Financial, moderated the session “Bond Financing: Finding the Right Structuring Options for Your Deal.” “There’s been a tremendous amount of change over the past three or four years in this field,” he said.


Photo by Matt Serlin




Unauthorized duplication of articles in AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE, APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY, or HousingFinance.com is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved and all copyrights held by Hanley Wood, LLC. Reproduction of this publication in whole or in part in any form, on paper or electronically, without written permission from the publisher is prohibited by law.