State of the Muni Markets

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2015 CMTA Annual Conference State of the Muni Markets April 15, 2015

Introductions Tracey Angelo City of Richmond tracey_angelo@ci.richmond.ca.us John Gallagher Multi-Bank Securities, Inc. jgallagher@mbssecurities.com Anna Van Degna Stifel avandegna@stifel.com 2

Disclosure Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated ( Stifel ) has prepared the attached materials. Such material consists of factual or general information (as defined in the SEC s Municipal Advisor Rule). Stifel is not hereby providing a municipal entity or obligated person with any advice or making any recommendation as to action concerning the structure, timing or terms of any issuance of municipal securities or municipal financial products. To the extent that Stifel provides any alternatives, options, calculations or examples in the attached information, such information is not intended to express any view that the municipal entity or obligated person could achieve particular results in any municipal securities transaction, and those alternatives, options, calculations or examples do not constitute a recommendation that any municipal issuer or obligated person should effect any municipal securities transaction. Stifel is acting in its own interests, is not acting as your municipal advisor and does not owe a fiduciary duty pursuant to Section 15B of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, to the municipal entity or obligated party with respect to the information and materials contained in this communication. Stifel is providing information and is declaring to the proposed municipal issuer and any obligated person that it has done so within the regulatory framework of MSRB Rule G-23 as an underwriter (by definition also including the role of placement agent) and not as a financial advisor, as defined therein, with respect to the referenced proposed issuance of municipal securities. The primary role of Stifel, as an underwriter, is to purchase securities for resale to investors in an arm s- length commercial transaction. Serving in the role of underwriter, Stifel has financial and other interests that differ from those of the issuer. The issuer should consult with its own financial and/or municipal, legal, accounting, tax and other advisors, as applicable, to the extent it deems appropriate. These materials have been prepared by Stifel for the client or potential client to whom such materials are directly addressed and delivered for discussion purposes only. All terms and conditions are subject to further discussion and negotiation. Stifel does not express any view as to whether financing options presented in these materials are achievable or will be available at the time of any contemplated transaction. These materials do not constitute an offer or solicitation to sell or purchase any securities and are not a commitment by Stifel to provide or arrange any financing for any transaction or to purchase any security in connection therewith and may not relied upon as an indication that such an offer will be provided in the future. Where indicated, this presentation may contain information derived from sources other than Stifel. While we believe such information to be accurate and complete, Stifel does not guarantee the accuracy of this information. This material is based on information currently available to Stifel or its sources and is subject to change without notice. Stifel does not provide accounting, tax or legal advice; however, you should be aware that any proposed indicative transaction could have accounting, tax, legal or other implications that should be discussed with your advisors and /or counsel as you deem appropriate. 3

Municipal Market Benchmark Rates Municipal rates still near multi-year lows despite recent market moves 30-year AAA MMD index reached lowest level since 2012 on January 30th Benchmark Municipal Market Rates AAA MMD 1 Index - Last 3 Years U.S. Treasury Rates Last 3 Years 5.0% 4.5% 4.0% 30-Year MMD 4.0% 3.5% 30-year UST 3.0% 3.0% 2.0% 10-Year MMD 2.5% 2.0% 10-year UST 1.0% 2-Year MMD 1.5% 0.0% Apr-12 Oct-12 Apr-13 Oct-13 Apr-14 Oct-14 Apr-15 1.0% Apr-12 Oct-12 Apr-13 Oct-13 Apr-14 Oct-14 Apr-15 1 MMD (Municipal Market Data) is an index of AAA rated general obligation bonds. 4

Municipal Tax-Exempt Interest Rates 10-Year AAA Municipal Market Data (MMD) 1 Index 5.5% 5.0% 4.5% 3.5% 3.0% 2.5% 2.0% 1.5% Average = 2.18% 1.0% 0.5% Apr-14 Jun-14 Aug-14 Oct-14 Dec-14 Feb-15 Apr-15 4.0% 3.5% 3.0% 2.5% Average = 2.97% 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% Max = 4.86% Min = 1.47% Current = 1.97% 0.5% 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Source: Thomson Financial. As of 4/9/15. 1 MMD (Municipal Market Data) is an index of AAA rated general obligation bonds. 5

Municipal Mutual Fund Flows vs. 30 Yr. MMD Inverse correlation between MMD Yields and Fund Flows 10,000 All-time low yields 6.00% 5,000 5.00% - 4.00% (5,000) 3.00% (10,000) Fed Tapering Talk 2.00% (15,000) Whitney on 60-minutes 1.00% (20,000) 0.00% Apr-10 Aug-10 Dec-10 Apr-11 Aug-11 Dec-11 Apr-12 Aug-12 Dec-12 Apr-13 Aug-13 Dec-13 Apr-14 Aug-14 Dec-14 Apr-15 Fund Flows 30 Year MMD Yield Source: Investment Company Institute. As of 4/9/15. 6

Municipal Market Issuance % of Total 100% 80% Municipal Market Issuance by Tax Status (%) 60% 40% 20% 0% Tax- Exempt 49% of issuance 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015YTD Tax Exempt Taxable (Non-BAB) AMT BAB/Other Stimulus Tax- Exempt 91% of issuance ($ in Billions) 500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 Municipal Market Issuance ($) By Use of Proceeds Annual Average Issuance (Past 6 years): $356.4 bn 2015 Issuance (1/1-4/9): $115.5 bn (69% rise from 2014 same period) 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2014 New Money Refunding (1/1-4/9) 2015 (1/1-4/9) Source: SDC/Thomson Reuters (top graph based on data available through Feb. 27, 2015). 7

Buyers of Municipal Bonds Holders of U.S. Municipal Bonds $ in Billions 4,000 3,500 $3,425 $3,517 $3,672 $3,772 $3,719 $3,714 $3,671 $3,652 3,000 2,500 $2,821 6% $3,019 7% $3,189 8% 7% 7% 7% 8% 9% 11% 12% 13% 2,000 1,500 1,000 54% 53% 51% 49% 49% 50% 50% 49% 45% 44% 42% 500 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Individuals Mutual Funds Banking Institutions Insurance Companies Other Sources: Federal Reserve System; compiled by SIFMA 8

Relative Value: AAA Rated Municipals vs. Treasuries 300% 5-Yr AAA Municipal as a % of 5-Yr UST 250% 200% Max = 221% Min = 58% Current = 87% 150% 100% Average = 87% 50% 0% 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Financial and Federal Reserve. As of 4/9/15. 9

Relative Value: A Rated Municipals vs. Treasuries 300% 5-Yr A Municipal as a % of 5-Yr UST 250% 200% 150% Max = 271% Min = 75% Current = 111% Average = 124% 100% 50% 0% 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Financial and Federal Reserve. As of 4/9/15. 10

California Municipal Bonds < Typically Higher Grade Types of Bonds Typically Lower Grade> General Obligation Enterprise Revenue Lease Revenue /COPs Pension Obligation Tax Increment Special Tax/ Assessment Revenue Pledge Secured by unlimited ad valorem property taxes Net revenue of a specified enterprise, such as water, sewer, solid waste, or parking Lease payments for use of government asset; paid from general fund Annual general fund payments to satisfy an obligation imposed by law Incremental property tax revenues above a base level within a defined project area Lien on property; bonds paid from annual special or assessment Vote Required? 2/3rds vote threshold; Schools may be 55% No public vote required No public vote required Judicial validation for debt-limited entities Traditional RDA didn t require a vote; IFDs require a vote 2/3rds vote for CFD; 50%+ for Assessment Districts 11

California Municipal Bonds California Long-Term Municipal Debt Issuance by Type January 1, 2014 to Date Other Revenue 17% Special Tax/ Assessment 4% Tax Increment 4% Pension Obligation 1% General Obligation 37% Lease Revenue/ COPs 7% Enterprise Revenue 30% General Obligation Enterprise Revenue Lease Revenue/ COPs Pension Obligation Tax Increment Special Tax/ Assessment Other Revenue 12

The Bond Financing Process Timing depends on complexity & certainty of financing plan Simple, straightforward financings can be completed in 3 months Most financings are completed within 4 to 6 months Infrequent issuers may need more time for analysis & board approvals Some financings can take years Financing Plan (Month 1) Engage financing team Clarify project list Analyze financing options Preparing Bond Sale (Month 2) Draft legal documents Draft investor disclosure (Official Statement) Review prior continuing disclosure compliance Seek credit rating Secure Council/Board financing approvals Pricing and Closing (Month 3) Market bonds to investors Set interest rates Finalize all documentation Deliver funds at closing Post-closing obligations Debt payment, continuing disclosure, tax compliance, additional covenants 13

Who s Who on the Financing Team Bond Counsel Prepares legal documents Assures financing conforms to statutes Provides tax opinion Underwriter Assists in organizing financing process Structures financing Markets and sells bonds Makes secondary market Financial Consultants i.e. Financial advisor, fiscal analysis, rate consultant Roles and inclusion varies by issue Disclosure Counsel May draft the Official Statement for investors Municipality Trustee or Fiscal Agent Holds funds Tracks payments Involved with defaults Underwriter s Counsel Represents the underwriter May draft the Official Statement if there is no Disclosure Counsel Rating Agency Assesses bond risks at issuance and through ongoing surveillance Investors use ratings as a guide to value bonds Bond Insurer Assumes bond payment risk in exchange for insurance premium Lowers financing cost May offer surety reserve 14

The Municipal Advisor (MA) Rule The MA Rule is a 777 page rule that went into effect in July of 2014 Part of the fallout of the financial crisis of 2008 was the enactment of the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform & Consumer Protection Act (the Act ) Caused a review of practices in the municipal marketplace and required the SEC to define municipal advice Among other things, the MA Rule requires that non-broker dealer FAs (included under the new term municipal advisors ) be registered for the first time, and be subject to new regulations, qualifications and testing With those regulations comes the requirement that the MA has a fiduciary duty to the issuer, which means it must put the issuer s interests before its own For underwriters, the Act reaffirmed fair dealing requirements, and required underwriters to make various disclosures It also imposed limitations on the type of information that can be communicated by underwriters to municipalities prior to engagement Underwriters cannot provide advice on a financing to municipal issuers unless: Responding to a Request for Proposals Issuer has an independent financial advisor on that financing Underwriter has been hired for that particular issue Objective information and refunding analyses not construed as advice by SEC 15

Questions to Ask Before Issuing Bonds Can you afford the debt? Adequate revenues? Adequate reserves? Adequate coverage cushion? What could go wrong? Who s helping you? Get good advice from respected professionals Is disclosure adequate? Official Statement ( OS ) is the issuer s document Have you told investors everything they need to know in the OS? Have you kept up with continuing disclosure obligations? Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Rule 10b-5: It shall be unlawful for any person... (a) to employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud, (b) to make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading... 16

State of the Muni Markets John Gallagher, Senior Vice President April 15, 2015

Important Features for Pricing TYPES of BONDS GOs bonds issued by states, cities/towns and school district payable general funds of issuer or appropriations made by state legislature. REVENUE payable from a specific source of revenue from a project. Government agencies can issue bonds for essential services or act as a conduit issuer for a private entity or 501c. Transportation systems Hospitals Power systems Sewer systems Water systems Other local authorities that generate revenue from providing services to the public 18

Important Features for Pricing TAX STATUS Tax-exempt can be federal or state Taxable municipal securities also can be issued if the purpose of the issuer s financing does not meet certain public purpose or public use tests under the federal tax rules. Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Bonds Some municipal securities pay interest that is exempt from gross income under the ordinary federal income tax calculation but are nonetheless subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, or AMT. 19

Important Features for Pricing Tax Status Bank Qualified (BQ) <$30mm in annual issuance and allows banks to deduct 80% of interest expense. 20% tax penalty is the TEFRA disallowance. Favorable tax treatment increases the taxable equivalent yield relative to other municipal bonds. Bonds issued by states and their political subdivisions (towns, counties, school districts, sanitation, utility districts) are eligible. 20

Important Features for Pricing Serial vs. Term bonds Callable bonds - new issues generally with 10yr calls Sinking fund - allows the issuer to retire principal amounts of debt in specific amounts prior to maturity. Premium vs. Discount Zero Coupon Bond a type of original issue discount bond on which no periodic interest payments are made. Issued at a deep discount from par, accreting (at the rate represented by the offering yield at issuance) to its full value at maturity. 21

Important Features for Pricing Variable Rate Securities VRDOs ARS Pre-refunded bonds Advance refunding Escrow account /funded with Treasuries Municipal notes TANs RANs BANs Housing bonds Mortgages and mortgage loan repayments 22

Muni Investor Checklist Determine tax status: tax-exempt or taxable Maturity range Coupon High coupon provides price protection in a environment of increasing yields. Price range (par, premium, discount) will depend on your interest rate or tax position. Yield target GO (state or local), revenue (if revenue limited to essential service i.e. sewer/water), sectors Credit quality (A>) Call feature, understanding YTC Price fair? One measure of what constitutes a fair price is that it must bear a reasonable relationship to the prevailing market price of the security. Brokers conduct this analysis by, among other things, reviewing recent transaction prices for the municipal security and/or the transaction prices for other securities with similar credit quality and features. 23

Pre-Trade Discovery Evaluate credit Rating reports (could be old) Official statements (pull up from EMMA website or ask Dealer). I will tell you how revenues are pledged to pay bondholders and how issuer will use proceeds. Continuing disclosure may provide information such as financial statements Assess default risk Evaluate bond insurance EMMA Price discovery tool- search trade history. Pull up trade prices on same issuer or similar bonds. Search security information Setup price/security alerts through MyEMMA Use benchmarks (MMD AAA tax-exempt Curve and Spread to Treasuries for Taxables) Evaluate trade costs (operational, reporting) 24

Refining your Search 25

Market Awareness and Discovery 26

Tax-Exempt AAA MMD Yield Curve Source: TM3. As of 4/8/2015. 27

Tax-Exempt Credit Spreads Source: TM3. As of 4/8/2015. 28

5year Taxable Credit Spreads Source: TM3. As of 4/1/2015. 29

Taxable Credit Spreads Source: TM3. As of 4/8/2015. 30

Post-Trade Discovery EMMA alerts for ratings, financial information or trades Disclosure events Monitor trade prices EMMA. 15 minutes to report. 90 percent of trade history on a CUSIP is within the first 90 days of issuance. The relatively illiquid municipal market lacks centrallyposted and continuous quotes. Evaluation services (S&P, IDC) Bloomberg search functions 31

EMMA Trade Details 32

Sourcing Bonds/Liquidity Ways to Source Bonds Primary market CDRN (negotiated Calendar/CDRC (Competitive) functions on Bloomberg IPREO provides New issuance software Secondary Market Have your dealers send inventory PICK Liquidate Bonds Work an order Bid wanted - ideally provide at least an hour lead time so you can get the best bids Liquid bonds vs. Illiquid bonds Tools to Use Bloomberg Functions to search Municipal offerings PICK IMGR DES, YA, TDH Trade platforms (i.e. econnectdirect, Municenter, Bonddesk) 33

Are Munis a Safe Investment? Default rates (after 10 years) Recovery rate of 67 cents vs 16 cents for corporates Do your credit work, research is key and have strong risk oversight Set appropriate investment policies Issuer transparency will increase 34

Long-Term Trends Regulation SEC and MSRB working to increase pre-trade and post-trade transparency. Rule G-30: MSRB Rule G-30 requires that broker-dealers charge fair and reasonable aggregate prices to customers. Credit risks matter Risk mitigation through surveillance and setting appropriate Investment policies. Less due diligence for higher-rated GOs vs. low-rated revenue bonds. Oil/gas revenues put pressure on some states (Alaska, ND, WY have the largest % of revenues of total taxes). 35

Long-Term Trends Bankruptcies/state issues (Detroit, Puerto Rico, NJ, Illinois) pension issues. Continued upgrades vs downgrades due to economy, structural changes to local government criteria. Health care and higher education have negative outlook. Continued increase in bond insurance on new issuance 5.6% in 2014. Transparency Bond flows determine market technicals. Tax reform proposals to curtail the tax benefits of municipal bond investments may once again make some headlines, but we do not expect to see this come to fruition in 2015. Increase in interest rates and returns on portfolios and credit spreads. Supply $330BLN in 2014 36

Disclosure Multi-Bank Securities, Inc. (MBS) cannot be held responsible for errors regarding time and/or price on buy/sell requests. Information provided in this presentation has been prepared from sources known to be reliable, but is not guaranteed and is not a complete summary or statement of all data necessary for making an investment decision. This is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a recommendation; please confirm all information before investing. Securities discussed are subject to availability and change in price and yield. Changes to assumptions may have a material impact on returns. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. For institutional investors only. 37