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Benefits
of Bond Financing |
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Why a bond issue may be the perfect financial option for
your Church?
As you consider selecting a financing partner for your Church,
it may be important to examine the differences between two financing
alternatives:
Consider a bank loan. When a Church borrows money from a bank,
the bank is using its depositor’s money, and in return the
bank pays those depositors a specified rate of interest for using
their money. The bank then makes loans to borrowers who then pay
the money back to the bank with interest. The difference between
the rate of interest that the bank borrows from its depositors and
lends to its borrowers is called the “spread.”
The same concept applies to a bond issue. The Church is the borrower
and the bond purchaser is the lender. A bond underwriter is the
organization that sells the bonds to investors. A bond trustee is
the registrar and paying agent that collects the money from the
Church and pays the bondholders, or investors. The Church is making
a promise to pay the borrowed money back with interest to the bondholders.
Even though both alternatives have certain similarities, there
are also some very distinct differences. With both financing options,
there are origination costs. With a bank loan, the origination cost
is usually lower than the origination cost for a bond issue. The
reason for this is to compensate the bond underwriter and its sales
force for selling the bonds. On the other hand, in return for the
underwriting fee, in most cases the Church can secure more attractive
loan terms than might be available with a bank loan. Many Churches
have found that bond financing has been the best alternative over
the long term.
The origination fee can vary depending on the bond underwriter,
the size of the bond issue, and the strength of the Church’s
credit. Bond investors consider credit quality, and compare one
bond issue with another in an effort to decide which bond issue
may be a more attractive investment.
Many US corporations issue bonds, since bonds offer a number of
benefits that they do not get from bank financing.
One advantage that a bond issue provides a Church is total certainty
of fixing the payment for the life of the bond issue. With a bond
issue, the Church can fix the interest rate, the terms, and the
repayment of the loan for the full term of the bond issue. Banks
generally protect themselves at the expense of the Church, by loaning
money with a longer amortization schedule, but a shorter-term fixed
interest rate guarantee, with a number of conditions to the loan.
Why would this be important to the Church? The primary reason is
that as Church leaders go through their budgeting and planning process,
they will know that their debt service payments are established
up-front, and will stay constant for the life of the bond issue.
By selecting a bond issue, the Church can take away that risk by
setting up a permanent repayment plan. There will not be a constantly
changing dynamic that the Church may get with a bank loan with fluctuating
interest rates, changing loan officers, or bank consolidations.
A second major advantage that a Church may realize with bond financing
is that there are usually less loan covenants with bond financing
than with a bank loan. What does this mean to the Church? This can
provide the Church with more flexibility as well as control.
For example, the bank may write into the loan certain on-going
operational covenants. What if the Church elected to spend any additional
money over its debt service payments for capital improvements? In
this case, the Church may have to go to the bank for permission
to spend that money. This certainly does not mean that the Church
would not get permission from the bank. On the other hand, the bank
would be allowed to control an independent decision about what a
Church could do and how it can spend its money.
With a bond issue, the Church does not have to come to the underwriter
for permission. This can be very important to a Church and its congregation,
since instead of the Church leadership and congregation being able
to manage the Church, there is an outside entity reviewing the Church’s
financial affairs and ultimately deciding what the Church can do.
Another common loan covenant that Churches should be aware of
are financial performance ratios. These say that each calendar quarter
or each year, the Church has to measure its financial performance
and determine how it is measures up to certain benchmarks.
For example, a bank may have written into the Church’s loan
that it has to maintain a certain debt service coverage ratio. This
means that based on certain financial ratios, the Church may have
generated a surplus of cash that must go to pay on the mortgage
over and above the actual mortgage cost. If the Church does not
meet these requirements, then the bank would then have the right
to renegotiate the loan. And, what if interest rates went up between
the time that the original loan was written and the time the loan
was renegotiated? Banks make money on the interest they receive
on the loan. Again, the Church is back to reporting to the bank.
Typically, these problems are not a problem with bond financing.
As long as the Church is current with its mortgage payments, the
loan terms under a bond issue will not change.
Over the past several years, many Church leaders have not been
concerned with giving levels since the economy has been strong.
However, with the last real recession of the early 1990s, there
were many Churches that saw their income drop. This is a concern
of many Churches when considering a conventional bank loan, and
being required to maintain certain financial performance ratios.
Another factor that Church leaders should consider are pre-payment
penalties. In many cases, the longer that a bank will agree to fix
the interest rate, the larger the pre-payment penalty a Church would
face should it elect to pay off the loan early. Many times these
pre-payment penalties are variable, and are commonly known as “market-to-market”
pre-payment penalties.
In this case, the bank might offer to provide a fixed interest
rate for the next seven years, which on the surface might sound
like good terms. However, the bank may also say that if the Church
were to decide to prepay or refinance the loan, for example in year
three, then the Church would have to pay what the bank’s profit
would have been for the remaining four years of the loan. Therefore,
the Church would have to pay the interest differential back on what
the bank would have earned on the Church’s loan, and the current
rate the bank could loan on the same amount of money for a new borrower.
Does this sound confusing? Let’s take a look at an example:
A Church borrows $3 million three years ago, with a twenty-year
amortization, but has a fixed rate of 8 percent for the first seven
years. For any of a number of reasons, the Church wants to refinance
the loan. Today, the current lending rate for the bank is 7 percent
for new clients. The bank is planning on receiving money from the
Church for the next four years at 8 percent. Therefore, the bank
looses the 1 percent difference for the remaining four years, and
some formula of this amount would have to be paid to the bank in
order for the Church to be able to prepay the loan.
In many cases, Church leaders may not realize that these types
of variables exist. They look at the up-front costs of a bond issue
and see the larger origination fee, and believe that they will save
money by going with a bank loan. After a couple of years into the
bank loan, circumstances occur that they decide to refinance, take
out another loan, or pay off the loan. All of a sudden, the Church
will have to pay a lot more money back to the bank – even
more than if they had selected a bond issue in the beginning and
paid the difference in the origination fees. These are expenses
that many times the Church leaders never realize exist until they
encounter them later.
Another benefit of bond financing through Great Nation is the open-ended
mortgage feature. With this feature, the Church may have the option
to do additional financing by issuing additional bonds later without
being required to refinance the first or original loan.
Consider this example: A Church issues $3 million in bonds today
when interest rates are 8 percent. Then, four years later, the same
Church wants to take out another loan for $2 million, but interest
rates have risen to 10 percent. With a bond issue, the Church can
borrow the additional $2 million in needs at 10 percent, without
being required to refinance the original $3 million at the then
current rate of 10 percent. The Church can keep the original $3
million loan at 8 percent. On the other hand, had the Church elected
to take out a bank loan, in most cases the bank would require the
Church to refinance the first loan at the then current interest
rate in order to secure the second loan.
Also, some Churches would prefer to pay interest to its members
and other Christian investors than to a bank.
It is important to note that both type of financing, bond financing
as well as bank financing works well in the right situation. If
a Church were only to need the money for a year or two as a bridge
loan for a capital stewardship campaign, a bank loan could be a
better alternative. However, given the many benefits of longer-term
bond financing, it certainly makes sense to consider the option
of a bond issue as well.
Bond financing has been available for hundreds of years. It has
proven to be a conservative, time-tested method of borrowing money,
not only for Churches, but corporations, state and local governments,
as well as the United States Treasury. Permanence of the Church
loan is important, since conventional bank lending has typically
run hot and cold depending upon the economy at the time. If you
are a Church leader considering bank financing, it is important
to realize that if we are in a bad economy, if the financial position
of your Church were to change, or the bank that you are doing business
with is consumed by a larger bank, then a bank may not want to continue
your loan when your loan is up for renewal. With bond financing,
a Church has permanence that it does not have with a conventional
bank loan. Bond financing may not fit in every circumstance, but
it is a time-tested method of borrowing money, and offers a number
of benefits to Churches.
Get
Started Now!
If you have questions at any time, please don't
hesitate to contact us at:
GREAT NATION INVESTMENT
CORPORATION
Attn: Martin Northern Vice President and
Branch Manager
P. O. Box 1302
Benton, AR 72018-1302
Phone: (501) 316-3100 * (800) 468-3007
Fax: (501) 316-3110
Email: martin@martinnorthern.com
Great Nation is right for you! Our
professionals are standing by ready to serve. Meanwhile, we look
forward to becoming your financial partner in growing God's Kingdom…one
Church at a time…
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