Saturday, January 22, 2022

Private and public financing schemes emerge to finance fiber telecom infrastructure

In the absence of an aggressive federal initiative to timely replace obsolete, decades-old copper telephone lines that reach every doorstep with fiber, local U.S. governments are looking to connect homes, schools and small businesses lacking fiber connections or unable to afford them and to promote economic development.

A major stumbling block is they lack the financial resources to build their own networks. Despite low interest rates, they are reluctant to issue bonds to cover construction costs and more specifically, to secure the debt. With taxpayers reluctant to support new tax levies, politicians are leery of asking voters to approve them. In addition, local government officials -- still scarred by the penury of the 2008 financial crisis -- aren’t inclined to pledge their general funds as security.

Private and public financing schemes have emerged to try to help localities secure fiber construction bonds. One private scheme is being utilized by a telephone company, Consolidated Communications. The local government issues a bond and retains full or majority ownership of the network infrastructure. The telco secures the bond until it’s retired in 20 to 30 years and then assumes control of the network assets. By which time equipment replacement and updates will likely be needed. But the telco gets network revenues both during the bond term and afterwards and doesn’t have to commit as much capex up front, offset by the muni bond proceeds. That meets telcos’ need to avoid capex that suppresses earnings as well as incurring more debt load given already overburdened balance sheets among investor-owned telcos.

Another private financing method utilizes European pension fund investment capital. Under that scheme, the local government does not own the network, which remains under the control of a private sector operator. The model provides more patient capital than shareholder owned telephone and cable companies. But like the investment capital of those companies, it is risk averse and aimed at densely populated urban areas.

A public bond securitization method is under development in California. Legislation enacted in 2021 authorizes the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to annually loan funds from its advanced telecommunications infrastructure subsidy program to a loan loss reserve fund. The current state budget appropriated $750 million to seed the fund. It will cover costs of debt issuance, obtaining credit enhancement and funding of reserves for the payment of principal and interest on debt incurred by local government and nonprofit organization projects.

The CPUC is in the process of developing eligibility requirements, financing terms and conditions and allocation criteria for advanced telecommunications infrastructure projects as mandated by the legislation. According to the Golden State Connect Authority, a multi-county joint powers authority formed in 2021 to construct advanced telecommunications infrastructure and provide technical assistance, the legislation authorizes a joint powers authority to issue revenue bonds supported by the loan loss reserve fund.

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