The Chicago Tribune reports:
A major rating agency downgraded the city of Chicago's creditworthiness two notches to junk status, a move likely to increase the city's borrowing costs and make investors skittish as the financial world reacts to last week's Illinois Supreme Court ruling that bodes ill for city efforts to resolve its massive pension fund shortfall.
Moody's Investors Service downgraded the city's debt rating on bond issues backed by property, sales and fuel tax revenue to Ba1, one notch below investment grade, from Baa2, specifically citing last week's Supreme Court ruling on an attempt to cut state pension costs. Moody's calls the Ba1 rating "speculative," which many investors simply call "junk," meaning investments in them carry far greater risk of a loss.
The downgrade came a few days after the state's high court struck down changes to four state pension funds, casting doubt on changes that Chicago made to its workers and laborers funds that also are being challenged in court. The ruling also put the city at a disadvantage during negotiations of pension changes with police and fire unions.
Here's the
Chicago Sun-Times and
Crain's Chicago Business on the story. In 2008, we warned you Chicago was the city that
doesn't work. Who will bail out the Blue
city ? Here's
Moody's:
The Ba1 rating on Chicago's GO debt incorporates expected growth in the city's highly elevated unfunded pension liabilities. Based on the Illinois Supreme Court's May 8 overturning of the statute that governs the State of Illinois' (A3 negative) pensions, we believe that the city's options for curbing growth in its own unfunded pension liabilities have narrowed considerably. Whether or not the current statutes that govern Chicago's pension plans stand, we expect the costs of servicing Chicago's unfunded liabilities will grow, placing significant strain on the city's financial operations absent commensurate growth in revenue and/or reductions in other expenditures. The magnitude of the budget adjustments that will be required of the city are significant. Furthermore, Chicago's tax base is highly leveraged by the debt and unfunded pension obligations of the city, as well as those of overlapping governments.
Historic moments of Blue America.