Updated: Wednesday, 13 Jan 2010, 2:35 PM PST
Published : Wednesday, 13 Jan 2010, 2:34 PM PST
Posted by: Dennis Lovelace
Sacramento - A major credit-rating agency lowered California's debt rating
Wednesday, putting pressure on Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and
lawmakers to start tackling the state's $20 billion deficit.
Standard & Poor's lowered its rating on California's $64
billion general obligation debt one step, from "A" to "A-." The
agency also dropped $9.4 billion in lease-revenue bonds three
notches, from "A-" to "BBB-."
California already had the lowest general obligation rating
of any state when S&P dropped it from "A+" to "A" in February
2009. Fitch and Moody's, two other rating firms, followed with
their own downgrades.
Illinois' "A+" rating is the second lowest in the nation,
said Gabriel Petek, an analyst for the agency.
The reduced S&P ratings are still investment grade, but
they could reduce investor demand for California's debt and raise
the cost to taxpayers of borrowing money. Last year, the state
treasurer's office estimated that if agencies downgraded $53.3
billion in general obligation bonds to "BBB+," it would increase
the state's long-term borrowing costs by $7.5 billion.
"BBB+" is one notch below California's current "A-" rating,
and S&P warned Wednesday that the state's rating has a negative
outlook, meaning future downgrades are possible.
The ratings agency said California is once again facing cash
shortages in March and July, and it questioned some of the
governor's budget proposes, including one to cover the low cash
period in March with $1 billion in as-yet-undetermined solutions.
The agency worries that Schwarzenegger's proposal to close
the deficit relies too much on federal help and underestimates the
difficulty of getting voters and lawmakers to agree to his plan.
"We believe that ... uncertain assumptions for major portions
of the budget balancing proposal make the state's credit more
susceptible to adverse economic or other developments," S&P
wrote.
The governor's finance spokesman, H.D. Palmer, said the
agency's action underscores the need for the Legislature to act
quickly.
"If the Legislature acts on the governor's special session
proposals, nearly half of that gap can be closed," Palmer said in a
statement. "The governor looks forward to working with the
Legislature to start taking the tough but necessary steps to bring
our budget back into balance."
General obligation bonds are loans approved by voters and
paid back through general taxes. Lease-revenue bonds are used for
capital outlay. They don't require voter approval and are paid back
by the state departments using the facility.