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Illinois Prepares to Borrow After Moving Off Precipice of Junk

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Illinois is poised to reap lower borrowing costs as it returns to the municipal-bond market for the first time since pulling back from the brink of becoming the first junk-rated U.S. state, Bloomberg News reported. Illinois is offering $920 million of general-obligation refunding bonds for yields ranging from 3.05 percent to 4.41 percent, according to three people familiar with the terms who declined to be named as the pricing isn’t final. The preliminary yields are about 30 basis points lower than the state’s deal in April, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Proceeds from the negotiated offering will also pay termination payments to banks to cancel interest-rate swap agreements and eliminate Illinois’s derivative exposure, bond documents show. Bondholders and rating companies have praised Illinois’s progress. Spreads on the worst-rated state’s 30-year bonds over benchmark debt tightened to the lowest since March 2015 after Moody’s Investors Service lifted its outlook to stable from negative last month. It’s the first time Illinois has been at that level since December 2012, according to Moody’s.