Illinois will issue $1.8 billion of general obligation bonds — $250 million taxable Series 2024A and $1.55 billion tax-exempt Series 2024B — to fund accelerated pension benefit payments and capital expenditures through the Rebuild Illinois program.
The fixed-rate bonds are expected to price this week.
Jefferies, Siebert Williams Shank and Barclays are joint senior managers on the deal. Public Resources Advisory Group is municipal advisor. Chapman and Cutler LLP and McGaugh Law Group LLC are co-bond counsel.
The bonds are direct general obligations, backed by the state’s full faith and credit. There is a continuing appropriation in place which guarantees bond repayment without the General Assembly needing to act.
Ahead of the deal, Moody’s Ratings
Fitch upgraded Illinois’ issuer default rating to A-minus with a stable outlook in November. It affirmed the rating and outlook before this week’s deal.
Ahead of the deal, S&P Global Ratings affirmed its A-minus rating; the outlook is stable.
“The state’s progress in improving its structural budget alignment, paying down liabilities, and building its budgetary reserves all place it on a positive credit trajectory, but the stable rating outlook continues to reflect our view that there remain meaningful upside constraints that keep it separate from more highly rated states,” S&P analyst Scott Nees said in a statement.
S&P noted Illinois’ retirement liabilities and significant annual funding shortfall, as well as a Budget Stabilization fund that has improved substantially but “still only offers a comparatively thin bulwark against revenue decline.”
In offering documents, the state said it has deposited $1.2 billion to the Budget Stabilization Fund in fiscal 2023 so that the fund is now at $1.9 billion. The state expects to deposit $205 million in fiscal 2024 and $170 million in fiscal 2025, bringing the balance to 5% of projected fiscal 2025 revenues, and close to the statutory target of 7.5%.
Fitch said that Illinois’ operating performance, while “solid,” still lags most other states, due in large part to structural imbalances tied to underfunding pension liabilities. Like S&P, the rating agency pointed to a slow economic growth trajectory, but Fitch said it predicts the state’s broad revenue base, mostly from income and sales taxes, will “capture the breadth of its economy” over the long term.
Still, Fitch noted in a
Because of those constitutional protections, Fitch said, Illinois has little room to change its pension obligations. The state has made progress in lowering other post-employment benefit liabilities recently.
“Gaps in pension contributions relative to actuarially determined levels persist, with recent supplemental contributions helpful but insufficient to address this structural budget gap,” Fitch added.
The state noted that it has all but wiped out its
The cash balance in its general fund has recovered from a drop in fiscal 2023 — to $787 million from $1.143 billion — and stands at $1.71 billion as of March 31.
Fiscal 2024’s budget surplus is expected to reach $1.8 billion, while the fiscal 2025 surplus is projected to be $298 million.
Illinois in its investor presentation for the deal pointed to declining unemployment rates and a rising per capita income that roughly tracks trends nationally and in the Great Lakes region, with the state’s 2023 figure, $70,953, coming in higher than both the national and regional data points.
The state currently has $26.4 billion of outstanding GO bonds. The new debt will bring that total to roughly $28.2 billion.