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California cuts bond sale over prison legal battle

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This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

California today pared back its last big tax-free bond sale of 2009, citing legal questions about funding for a prison project.

Treasurer Bill Lockyer sold $743 million in lease revenue bonds for the state Public Works Board instead of the $1.34 billion that had been planned.

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The deal was slashed in size because funding was dropped for a new death-row-inmate complex at San Quentin prison. The fate of that complex is in limbo because of an ongoing legal battle between the Legislature and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger over certain budget items that he has vetoed.

‘Legal questions arose Wednesday about whether the San Quentin facility could be funded with the bonds,’ said Tom Dresslar, Lockyer’s spokesman. ‘The state did not have enough time to address those issues and decided to drop the project from the sale.’

The smaller deal size allowed the state to slightly trim the interest rates on some of the bonds. For example, the Series I bonds maturing in 10 years will pay a tax-free annualized yield of 5.10%, a sliver less than the 5.12% the state had preliminarily set.

It helped the state that yield-hungry individual investors put in orders for $447 million of the bonds. That was 61% of the final total sold. A hefty number of individual-investor orders gives the state more leeway in negotiating the final interest rates on its bonds with institutional investors.

The state now has borrowed more than $21 billion since late September via short- and long-term debt for budget-related reasons and to finance voter-approved infrastructure projects. That supply glut has helped to push up tax-free muni bond yields across the board as investors have demanded higher returns to absorb all of the debt.

Fundamentally, tax-free munis remain appealing compared with taxable bonds, as I noted in this earlier post. The jump in yields over the last six weeks should reinforce that appeal.

The state’s borrowing binge is nearly over for the year, which could put downward pressure on California muni yields in the near term. Lockyer has just one more sale of tax-free bonds planned for 2009: a $200-million issue for the University of California on Dec. 3.

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-- Tom Petruno

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