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Fitch finally upgrades Illinois credit rating (and it’s a double notch)

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* Background is here if you need it. This means all three rating agencies have now upgraded the state’s grade. Moody’s has upgraded the state twice in less than a year. Fitch

Fitch Ratings has assigned a ‘BBB+’ rating to the following State of Illinois’ GO bonds:

Additionally, Fitch has also upgraded the following state of Illinois ratings:

The Rating Outlook is Stable. […]

ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The upgrade to ‘BBB+’ reflects fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience including full unwinding of pandemic-era and certain pre-pandemic non-recurring fiscal measures, meaningful contributions to reserves and sustained evidence of more normal fiscal decision-making. The ‘BBB+’ IDR also reflects the state’s elevated long-term liability position and resulting spending pressure, as well as a long record of structural imbalance primarily related to pension underfunding. Illinois’ deep and diverse economy is only slowly growing, but still provides a strong fundamental context for its credit profile.

DEDICATED TAX ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The Build Illinois bonds’ ‘A’ ratings reflect Fitch’s view that pledged state sales tax deposits will grow with inflation. The security structures can withstand a substantial level of decline and still maintain sum-sufficient debt service coverage. However, Fitch caps the ratings on the Build Illinois bonds at two notches above the state’s ‘BBB+’ IDR based on our assessment of security-specific considerations. This is below our assessment of the underlying credit quality of the dedicated tax bonds.

Economic Resource Base

Illinois’ economy is centered on the Chicago metropolitan area, which is the nation’s third largest and a nationally important business and transportation center. The state’s GDP ranks fifth largest amongst all U.S. states. Economic growth lags that of the U.S. as a whole with population stagnation and relative labor market weakness.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Revenue Framework: ‘aa’

Over the long term, Fitch expects Illinois’ broad revenue base, primarily income and sales taxes, to capture the breadth of its economy and to track its slow growth trajectory. Illinois has unlimited legal ability to raise revenues.

Expenditure Framework: ‘a’

Illinois has adequate expenditure flexibility, with some of the broad expense-cutting ability common to most U.S. states. The natural pace of spending growth will likely outpace revenue growth, requiring ongoing and active budget management. Carrying costs are higher than all other states and contribution demands for retiree benefits will continue to be a particular pressure point as these benefits are constitutionally protected.

Long-Term Liability Burden: ‘a’

Long-term liabilities are an elevated but still moderate burden on Illinois’ significant resource base. Constitutional limitations suggest Illinois has very limited flexibility to modify existing pension and other post-employment benefit (OPEB) obligations.

Operating Performance: ‘bbb’

Illinois’ operating performance has improved but remains weaker than other U.S. states. Steady reduction in accounts payable, retirement of outstanding budgetary liabilities and smoother fiscal decision-making have become sustainable. Sizable gaps in pension funding and limited resilience to future downturns, despite recent additions to reserves, persist.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to positive rating action/upgrade:

Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to negative rating action/downgrade:

CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS

Economic Recovery Picks Up; Continues to Trail National Pace

Illinois’ employment recovery has modestly accelerated in recent months, but overall recovery still lags the national rate. Through March 2022, Fitch’s analysis of BLS data indicates the state had recovered 82% of the jobs lost at the start of the pandemic versus the national recovery rate of 93% through the same period. Over the past six months, Illinois has gained jobs at a faster clip with its recovery rate up more than 18 percentage points (pps) versus 16 pps nationally.

The state’s official March monthly unemployment rate of 4.7% was higher than the national 3.8% rate that month. Illinois’ Fitch-adjusted unemployment rate (which adds back the declines in labor force since February 2020) was higher at 6%, indicating the state has seen material weakening of its labor markets over the course of the pandemic, which could be a factor in Illinois’ slower employment recovery.

Strong Revenue Growth Helps Unwind Nonrecurring Budget Measures

Revenue growth well ahead of budgeted expectations in fiscal year 2021 and 2022 (ending June 30) and prudent expense management allows the state to accelerate repayment of various budgetary liabilities. Revenue performance largely reflected economic activity rebounding much faster than anticipated, with federal economic support playing a key role. Illinois currently estimates fiscal 2022 net individual income tax (IIT) revenues of $22.7 billion will be $1.9 billion higher than the enacted budget, a 9.3% improvement. The estimate for net sales tax revenues similarly forecasts fiscal 2022 growth more than 10% ahead of the enacted budget estimate, by nearly a billion dollars. Corporate income taxes, typically the most volatile and least predictable of the primary tax revenues, is estimated to end $1.6 billion ahead of budget. In total, Illinois currently projects fiscal 2022 state general funds tax revenues will end the year at $41 billion, $4.5 billion above the June 2021 estimate of $36.5 billion.

Recently released April 2022 revenue collections reported by the state legislature’s committee on government forecasting and accountability (CGFA) suggest final fiscal 2022 collections will be even stronger. Through April, a key month for income tax collections, CGFA reports fiscal 2022 state general funds receipts, net of refunds and statutory distributions for income and sales taxes, up more than 16% yoy. CGFA notes several reasons for the sharp increase in April monthly receipts (69.1% yoy) including a change in tax filing deadlines in 2021, which suggests final year results will be somewhat lower than the 16% YTD gains. Through March, CGFA reported a yoy increase of 9.4%.

With operating expenditures generally in line with the enacted budget, the state was able to direct the revenue surplus for the current year towards paying down liabilities including the remainder of its federal Municipal Liquidity Facility (MLF) loans ($1 billion), outstanding interfund borrowings ($929 million - most of which was incurred pre-pandemic) and longstanding unpaid health insurance bills for employee and retiree healthcare ($898 million, also incurred pre-pandemic). Additional measures taken include paydown of a liability for the College Illinois program, a contribution to the state’s budget stabilization fund and primarily one-time tax relief measures as described further below.

The state’s trend in accounts payable has improved for several years, with the pace of repayment accelerating since the start of calendar 2021. As of March 31, 2022, the Comptroller’s Debt Transparency Act (DTA) report indicated an approximately $3.6 billion general funds bill backlog and a 12-month moving average (to adjust for seasonality) of $4 billion. This is down 44% from the pre-pandemic (February 2020) 12-month moving average of $7.1 billion. The March DTA report also notes $48 million in reported pending late payment interest penalties, down 85% from February 2020 ($319 million).

According to the March report, the Office of the Comptroller’s bill payment cycle, or the age of the state’s oldest unpaid general funds voucher for external vendors was 18 business days as of March 31. The Comptroller reports this metric has steadily decreased (aside from seasonal variation) from a peak of 210 days in November 2017.

Enacted Fiscal 2023 Budget Reflects Improved Operating Profile

Illinois’ enacted fiscal 2023 budget, along with supplemental fiscal 2022 budget changes, solidifies the state’s recent financial operating performance improvements but also maintains some fundamental weaknesses. The state expects to end the current year having fully repaid a series of outstanding budgetary liabilities while also making steady progress in reducing its account payables to essentially normal levels with an external vendors bill cycle well below 30 days. The 2022 revised and 2023 enacted budgets also deposit just over $1 billion into the state’s budget stabilization fund (BSF), which had been essentially zeroed out since fiscal 2017. While significantly improved, the planned contributions would leave the BSF at a still modest 2.2% of projected total general funds expenditures in fiscal 2023.

The 2023 enacted budget also includes increases over the current year originally enacted budget in all major spending areas including education ($767 million, with $350 million in evidence-based funding for K-12), human service ($1.3 billion) and healthcare ($552 million). Total general funds expenditures rise $3.7 billion from the enacted fiscal 2022 budget. General funds revenue sources rise $4.1 billion in the 2023 budget, yielding a roughly $440 million surplus, with $312 million allocated towards the BSF. $1.8 billion of tax relief measures in the revised fiscal 2022 and enacted 2023 budgets is concentrated in one-time measures in fiscal 2022, drawing on the large revenue surplus. Only $100 million for an increase to the earned income tax credit is an ongoing tax policy change.

While the fiscal outlook continues to improve, structural gaps remain, primarily underfunding of pension contributions. The 2023 budget fully meets Illinois’ statutory obligations which are based on funding up to target of 90% funding of the state’s pension liabilities by 2045. For fiscal 2023, the CGFA estimates a gap of $4.1 billion (roughly 10% of state sourced general funds revenues) between the statutory state pension contributions of $10.8 billion and the actuarially determined contributions (ADC). The 2022 budget revisions and the 2023 enacted budget includes a total of $500 million in supplemental pension contributions, over the statutorily-defined level, but still well below the actuarial level necessary to fully fund pensions over time.

Measured Initial Use of Federal Aid

Illinois’ plans for spending American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) state fiscal recovery fund aid is focused on one-time investments rather than recurring operating needs. In the fiscal 2022 budget, the state allocated $2.8 billion of Illinois’ $8.1 billion ARPA state fiscal recovery fund (SFRF) distribution on infrastructure and other one-time, or temporary pandemic-specific needs. Additionally, the state created the Essential Government Services Support Fund (EGSSF) and anticipates flowing $1.5 billion of the ARPA aid through the fund for operating needs. The $1.5 billion is more than offset from a budgetary perspective with repayment of the MLF loan (approximately $1 billion) and interfund borrowing ($928 million), though ARPA aid will not be used for the actual repayments.

In the spring 2022 legislative session, the state also allocated $2.7 billion to repay Illinois’ loan from the federal government’s unemployment trust fund account. Additional one-time uses for healthcare facilities, small businesses and affordable housing essentially round out the state’s use of SFRF aid. Illinois also has access to $254 million from the ARPA’s Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund for infrastructure projects.

Bottom line is Fitch wants the state to stay the course, avoid going back to the endless Blagojevich/Quinn/Rauner (especially) budget wars and double the rainy day fund to $2 billion.

…Adding… Speaker Welch…

Less than a year ago we celebrated Illinois’ first credit rating increase in more than 20 years. Today, we’ve received multiple upgrades from all three credit rating agencies. Thanks to steadfast and responsible budgeting, Democrats continue to improve our state’s fiscal health. More work remains, but we’ve promised to restore financial stability and that’s exactly what we’re delivering.

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker…

Governor JB Pritzker hailed a two-notch bond rating upgrade from Fitch Ratings, Illinois’ fifth notch upwards in less than a year, saying it validated the strong and responsible fiscal management he’s implemented since taking office.

The Fitch upgrade is the first for Illinois’ GO bonds since June 2000 and follows an upgrade by Moody’s Investor Service last month, the second such upgrade by Moody’s in 10 months.

“Balanced budgets four years in a row, paying the state’s bills on time, early repayment of pandemic-related borrowing, clearing out debts left by previous administrations, making higher-than-required pension payments, setting aside $1 billion in savings for a rainy day — this is what responsible fiscal management looks like,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Working with the General Assembly and my fellow constitutional officers, with dedication and determination we have turned Illinois from a deadbeat state into a fiscally responsible state that is attracting business from around the globe.”

“The upgrade to ‘BBB+’ reflects fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience including full unwinding of pandemic-era and certain pre-pandemic non-recurring fiscal measures, meaningful contributions to reserves and sustained evidence of more normal fiscal decision-making,” the Fitch Ratings release stated, noting a steady reduction in accounts payable and retirement of many of the state’s lingering debts.

In its rating action, Moody’s credited the state’s “solid tax revenue growth over the past year” which expanded the state’s ability to rebuild financial reserves and increase payments toward unfunded liabilities. Moody’s noted Illinois’ progress in repaying its debts and its increased pension contributions as an indication of the state’s increased commitment to paying its pension debt.

The Governor thanked House Speaker Chris Welch, Senate President Don Harmon, Leader Greg Harris, Senator Elgie Sims, Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Treasurer Michael Frerichs for their ongoing commitment to Illinois’ fiscal well-being.

The upgrades follow the enactment of the state’s fourth balanced budget in a row, while providing $1.8 billion in tax relief to the working families of Illinois and marked Illinois’ first contribution to a Rainy-Day Fund in 18 years, as well as a $500 million extra payment toward the state’s pensions. The historic budget places Illinois it its strongest financial position in a generation while funding key investments for education, human services, law enforcement and violence prevention.

Fitch upgraded Illinois’ rating on its General Obligation bonds to BBB+ (stable outlook) from BBB- (positive outlook), and also upgraded Build Illinois sales tax bonds to A (stable outlook) from BBB+ (positive outlook).

Moody’s upgraded Illinois’ rating on its General Obligation bonds to Baa1 stable outlook from Baa2 stable outlook, and also upgraded Build Illinois sales tax bonds to Baa1 from Baa2 while maintaining their stable outlook.

The rating of a state’s bonds is a measure of their credit quality. A higher bond rating generally means the state can borrow at a lower interest rate, saving taxpayers millions of dollars.

Between 2015 and 2017, the State of Illinois suffered eight credit rating downgrades and sat at the top of many analysts’ lists of the worst managed states in the nation. At its worst, Illinois’ bill backlog hit nearly $17 billion.

Key Actions – Responsible Fiscal Management

Fiscally responsible choices over the last three years have resulted in historic progress toward financial stability in Illinois.

Illinois’ FY2023 budget:

…Adding… Comptroller Mendoza…

Today, Fitch Ratings gave the state a two-notch, bond-rating upgrade, noting the state’s “fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience.” This is the first Fitch upgrade for Illinois in more than 20 years. It comes on the heels of an upgrade from Moody’s Investors Services last month.

Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza repaid Illinois’ federal loans years ahead of schedule, saving Illinois taxpayers $82 million.

“Prudent expense management allows the state to accelerate repayment of various budgetary liabilities,” Fitch said in its double-upgrade Thursday.

Last year, Moody’s upgraded the state’s rating on June 29, 2021, which was the first upgrade the state had earned in more than two decades. The next week, on July 8, S&P Global upgraded the state’s credit rating as well.

With Fitch’s announcement today, the state’s credit has now been boosted five times in less than a year.

“Our state has now earned five credit upgrades during my tenure as Comptroller, it’s an amazing accomplishment and I’m very proud that my team and state leaders are showing you can lead with empathy – prioritizing human and social services as well as promises made to state retirees about their pensions – while also prioritizing fiscal responsibility,” Comptroller Mendoza said.

Comptroller Mendoza has focused on paying down the state’s backlog of bills and shrinking the time state vendors wait to be paid.

“According to the March report, the Office of the Comptroller’s bill payment cycle, or the age of the state’s oldest unpaid general funds voucher for external vendors was 18 business days as of March 31. The Comptroller reports this metric has steadily decreased (aside from seasonal variation) from a peak of 210 days in November 2017,” Fitch wrote.

Under the prior governor, the state had suffered a 736-day budget impasse and eight credit downgrades, during much better economic times.

Moody’s and Fitch both cited the state’s contributions into reserves as a reason for the recent upgrades.

Comptroller Mendoza has been a strong proponent and driver of reviving the state’s Budget Stabilization Fund – commonly referred to as the Rainy Day Fund.

The FY ‘23 budget signed by Gov. JB Pritzker includes $1 billion for the Rainy Day Fund and an additional $500 million to the Pension Stabilization Fund, saving Illinois taxpayers $1.8 billion in the long run.

Under Comptroller Mendoza, there is no longer a bill backlog, rather an accounts payable, that stands at about $2.1 billion today. That’s down from nearly $17 billion in 2017.

“We’re putting our best fiscal foot forward, and we’re earning recognition for these great strides we’re making,” said Comptroller Mendoza. “Even better days are yet ahead if we keep leading with fiscal responsibility.”

posted by Rich Miller
Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:41 am

Comments

  1. Another bad day for the Illinois Policy Institute…

    If you root against Illinois, this is horrible news, the grifters are weeping.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:48 am

  2. Time for the state to re-finance higher interest debt to lower interest bonds. Especially pension debt.

    Comment by DuPage Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:49 am

  3. ===ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

    The upgrade to ‘BBB+’ reflects fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience including full unwinding of pandemic-era and certain pre-pandemic non-recurring fiscal measures, meaningful contributions to reserves and sustained evidence of more normal fiscal decision-making. The ‘BBB+’ IDR also reflects the state’s elevated long-term liability position and resulting spending pressure, as well as a long record of structural imbalance primarily related to pension underfunding. Illinois’ deep and diverse economy is only slowly growing, but still provides a strong fundamental context for its credit profile.===

    Reading that malarkey, I’m reminded it’s a racket, based on nothing with law or constitutional considerations, it’s a big ole game of “feeling”, and by reading all the words that follows… it’s about justifying the racket and a self importance that ignores most critical components to debt and governing.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:52 am

  4. ===Time for the state to re-finance===

    I think most of that has already been done.

    Comment by Rich Miller Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:54 am

  5. This should about be the point in time when the likes of IPI and Wiredulls shift to trying to throw shade on all the ratings agencies ‘because they were wrong on the MBS ratings in the run up to the 2008 crash’.

    When Illinois was hovering above junk status, the ratings were infallible. Now that the ratings are improving, the ratings are questionable.

    It’s not hard to figure out their playbook.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:55 am

  6. Huge win for Illinois and the Governor. But I can hear the collective sigh from the GOP.

    Comment by exhausted Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 10:56 am

  7. This is great news for Illinois and Gov. Pritzker. It’s hard to argue that he is not moving Illinois in the right direction but the GOP will do their best to spin it.

    Comment by Because I said so.... Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:03 am

  8. This seems to run contrary to those folks who spend their time orbiting Illinois politics just spelunking for misery… our state has a lot to be proud of.

    But, the grift will continue, the phony needs to be spread, the money needs to be harvested from the ill-informed.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:08 am

  9. == Time for the state to re-finance higher interest debt to lower interest bonds. Especially pension debt. ==

    You do understand that, except for the bonds issued to do some buyouts, that the State pension debt is NOT bonded out. It is just a bookkeeping IOU the State owes itself.

    As such, the State has no hard fixed payment; the Ramp is just a suggested guideline they can choose to ignore during budget crunches. Were the State to bond it out, they would lose that budgeting flexibility.

    Yes, there are arguments in favor of bonding it out, primarily the current assumed interest rate versus whatever rate could be obtained in the market. But it will never happen.

    Comment by RNUG Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:11 am

  10. My take was similar to Rich’s, but a bit different.

    I read it as:

    The State deserves a higher rating than we are giving it. Be good another year, and we’ll rate you where we really should.

    Comment by RNUG Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:14 am

  11. I can hear the Republicans now, a la Saturday Night Live, “nevermind.”

    Comment by Sir Reel Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:18 am

  12. “Time for the state to re-finance higher interest debt to lower interest bonds.”

    uhhh… have you looked at rates lately? Like within the past few hours?

    There’s an interesting quirk that often was buried in the details when discussing these ratings. Interest rates on the bonds were rarely if ever mentioned.

    We’ve come out of a historically low interest rate environment, where even ‘junk’ ratings on a bond might only be paying 4% interest. While it was a higher than market interest rate, it was still a very reasonable rate.

    Today, an interest rate for investment grade bonds, is at or even above what some junk bond interest rates were just a few months ago.

    Which bond issuance would you choose;

    An ‘AAA’ rating when investment-grade bond interest rates are 6%

    A Junk rating with a very high 4% premium when interest rates are 1%.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:19 am

  13. === The State deserves a higher rating than we are giving it. Be good another year, and we’ll rate you where we really should.===

    You both aren’t wrong, but are spot on, your own assessment is likely correct to interpretation.

    What a racket it is when “observations” of what may or may not occur versus the legal obligations that haven’t changed nor the constitution towards debt.

    Illinois suffers another year on “what they feel”

    I’d like to see mortgage lenders to have this thinking, lol

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:19 am

  14. Somewhere right now, Mazzochi, McCombie, Bourne and Spain are screaming at the sky, shaking their fist and praying for a recession.

    Comment by Give Me A Break Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:20 am

  15. == …the grifters are weeping. ==

    Probably just re-calibrating.

    Meanwhile, new Pritzker ads in 5…4…3…2…

    Comment by Northsider Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:24 am

  16. “We are hereby gathered today to solemnly flush Illinois doomsayers’ policy ideas and talking points down the toilet of history. Everyone please pretend to be somber.”

    Comment by Grandson of Man Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:26 am

  17. Can’t wait for the Republican response talking about how horrible things — really — are and continuing to build up their false narrative that doesn’t acknowledge the rule they have consistently played in trying to make things worse.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:40 am

  18. “it’s a racket, based on nothing with law or constitutional considerations, it’s a big ole game of ‘feeling’”

    The bond market is all about the vibes, maaaaaaannn…

    – MrJM

    Comment by MisterJayEm Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:43 am

  19. Here’s why the upgraded Credit Rating proves that Democrats in Springfield are driving us off a fiscal cliff
    -The Illinois Policy Institute, probably

    Comment by Nick Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:47 am

  20. ==The State deserves a higher rating than we are giving it. Be good another year, and we’ll rate you where we really should. ==

    Which, given our history, seems fair.

    Comment by Arsenal Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:56 am

  21. ===Which, given our history, seems fair.===

    With great respect, sincerely…

    If “our history” matters, where does the law and the constitution fit in all that, let alone payment… history?

    Again, bud, with respect.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:58 am

  22. Gotta agree with OW here, it’s a racket. Credit ratings are supposed to reflect the possibility of default so that markets can price in that risk. But the whole ball game is here:

    === Illinois has unlimited legal ability to raise revenues. ===

    Credit ratings are irrelevant for sovereign governments. We’re not going to default, no matter what Fitch claims to have divined from their monthly seance. It’s just Wall Street skimming off the top.

    Comment by vern Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:59 am

  23. Waiting on the cheers from our fiscal conservative posters and pols…

    crickets…

    This is definitely good news and more evidence that you cannot get out of debt by destroying the state. Sorry Bruce, not sorry.

    Comment by JS Mill Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:04 pm

  24. Operating Performance: ‘bbb’

    Illinois’ operating performance has improved but remains weaker than other U.S. states. Steady reduction in accounts payable, retirement of outstanding budgetary liabilities and smoother fiscal decision-making have become sustainable. Sizable gaps in pension funding and limited resilience to future downturns, despite recent additions to reserves, persist.

    Comment by It's all Good Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:06 pm

  25. == Can’t wait for the Republican response talking about how horrible things — really — are and continuing to build up their false narrative that doesn’t acknowledge the rule they have consistently played in trying to make things worse. ==

    Oh, they’ve already started to shift to “Credit ratings don’t stop people from moving away, look at this estimate showing massive population losses in the last year!”, as if the wildly inaccurate estimates saying we were losing hundreds of thousands of people between 2010-20 were proven demonstrably false when the actual numbers came in.

    IPI, Wirepoints, and those who think those groups are somehow serious are still trying to make hay out of this, and will continue until the next census shows they are wrong again.

    Comment by Leap Day William Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:09 pm

  26. Waiting for the IPI celebration…

    Comment by PublicServant Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:13 pm

  27. ===Illinois’ operating performance has improved but…===

    Yeah, I’m gonna stop ya there.

    The rest is the phony of IPI and Wirepoints that first cheer when Illinois gets downgraded, then try to frame any good news with “but”… which is always the big tell.

    The racket of ratings, until their “Conclusions” or “Findings” begin, end, only consider… payment history, laws to debt and the constitution, the rest, like your take… is wholly in line with those folks who spend their time orbiting Illinois politics just spelunking for misery…

    Thing is, our state has a lot to be proud of.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:14 pm

  28. The spelunkers are now focusing on crime, inflation and bogus indoctrination of children.

    Comment by Norseman Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:22 pm

  29. Just devastating news for the likes of IPI

    Comment by A Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:34 pm

  30. Wait wait no I’ve got it

    “The improved credit rating is just more proof that Demcorats in Springfield are getting better at spending your taxpayer dollars, that should scare you.”

    Comment by Nick Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 12:52 pm

  31. Whereas I am definitely in the this is good news group, I do think it needs to be viewed similar to an annual checkup.

    You lost weight-good.
    BP still high but better than last year
    Cholesterol getting better but still not good
    Still smoking, bad,
    Not exercising, bad.

    Comment by don the legend Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 1:06 pm

  32. = bogus indoctrination of children.=

    I mean, you don’t even know the half of the crazy we are dealing with on this!

    Comment by JS Mill Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 1:18 pm

  33. @- RNUG - Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 11:11 am:

    == Time for the state to re-finance higher interest debt to lower interest bonds. Especially pension debt. ==

    ===State pension debt is NOT bonded out. It is just a bookkeeping IOU the State owes itself.

    As such, the State has no hard fixed payment; the Ramp is just a suggested guideline they can choose to ignore during budget crunches. Were the State to bond it out, they would lose that budgeting flexibility.

    Yes, there are arguments in favor of bonding it out, primarily the current assumed interest rate versus whatever rate could be obtained in the market. But it will never happen.===

    The money not paid in to the pension funds carry an IOU note with assumed interest rate, correct?
    I kept hearing “assumed interest rates 7 or 8%” based on what that money would earn if the pension fund invested it. Is that correct or not? If not, what rate of interest is the state paying on those “loans” owed to the pension funds? A few years ago, I heard a lawmaker exclaim opposition to bonds because “we would actually have to pay them” whereas cutting pensions would let the state get out of paying back money to the pension systems.
    Please tell us what interest rate the state is paying to the pension systems and what was the bond rates available when the fed was at 0%.

    Comment by DuPage Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 1:23 pm

  34. Ted and Mark are in the fetal position down in the bunker in reaction to the news.

    Comment by Morty Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 1:24 pm

  35. In related IPI news, their Springfield location on 2nd Street is up for sale.

    https://www.remaxcommercial.com/ListingDetails/802-S-2ND-Street-Springfield-IL-62703/CA1013371

    Comment by Anyone Remember Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 1:27 pm

  36. “…it’s a racket, based on nothing with law or constitutional considerations, it’s a big ole game of “feeling”, and by reading all the words that follows… it’s about justifying the racket and a self importance that ignores most critical components to debt and governing.”

    I’ve never heard the job description of an “economist” described so aptly.

    Comment by Ducky LaMoore Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 2:48 pm

  37. -Dupage- you are right that the State’s assumed rate is in that neighborhood, depending on the year and the financial analysis.

    But, as I noted above, regardless of the difference in rates, the State will never bond it out because it eliminates the ability to not pay the (makeup) pension contributions when a budget crunch comes along.

    When you’ve worked for (or observed) governments long enough, you realize that what makes financial sense often does not make political sense … and politics wins every time.

    Comment by RNUG Thursday, May 5, 22 @ 8:44 pm

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