Fitch Rates Tampa Bay Water, FL's Utility System Revs 'AA+'; Outlook Stable

NEW YORK--()--Fitch Ratings has assigned an 'AA+' rating to the following Tampa Bay Water, A Regional Water Supply Authority, FL (TBW, or the authority) revenue bonds:

--$103.6 million utility system refunding revenue bonds, series 2015C.

The bonds are expected to sell via negotiation the week of March 30.

Proceeds will be used to advance refund all or a portion of the outstanding series 2008 bonds for annual debt service savings, and pay issuance costs.

In addition, Fitch affirms the following ratings:

--Approximately $960 million utility system revenue bonds (prior to the refunding), at 'AA+'.

The Rating Outlook is Stable.

SECURITY

The bonds are secured by a pledge of TBW's net revenues, which include the moneys received from rates, fees, rentals, and other income collected for use of the water system by the member utilities. Members irrevocably agree to make monthly payments for the provision of wholesale service, including debt service on the bonds, and such payments are made without set-off, counterclaim, or abatement. A debt service reserve, fully funded with cash, provides additional security.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

ESSENTIAL SERVICE; STRONG UNDERLYING CREDITS: TBW is the region's exclusive wholesale water provider serving 2.3 million residents through six member utilities. Fitch maintains ratings on five of the six entities, ranging from 'AAA' to 'AA'. TBW's operating profile is strong and its role in regional service delivery and resource development, sound financial management, and autonomy over rates are important rating factors.

INHERENT FLEXIBILITY: Financial margins and debt service coverage (DSC) are low but typical for a wholesale system. Strong liquidity and autonomous rate setting provide management with significant financial flexibility.

MANAGEABLE DEBT AND CAPITAL NEEDS: The debt profile is expected to remain manageable with the recent completion of a large long-term capital program and intermediate-term needs focused on routine replacement and renewal.

DIVERSE, RECOVERING ECONOMY: The Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater economy serves as the economic anchor for Florida's Gulf Coast. Employment growth has been solid as the area continues its recovery from the recession (especially in housing).

RATING SENSITIVITIES

RATING STABILITY EXPECTED: The rating is sensitive to shifts in various credit fundamentals including financial performance and debt. The Stable Outlook reflects Fitch's expectation that such shifts are unlikely in the near term.

CREDIT PROFILE

TBW's six member agencies include Pinellas, Pasco, and Hillsborough counties, and the cities of Tampa, St. Petersburg, and New Port Richey.

LARGE REGIONAL WHOLESALE PROVIDER; STRONG UNDERLYING CREDITS

TBW is a large wholesale water provider serving the three-county area of the Tampa-St Petersburg metropolitan statistical area (MSA). TBW enjoys exclusive rights to provide treated water to its six member utilities. Hillsborough's water and sewer system revenue bonds are rated 'AAA' with a Stable Outlook by Fitch. Tampa's utility revenue bonds are rated 'AAA' while St. Petersburg and Pasco County's revenue bonds are rated 'AA', all with Stable Outlooks. Pinellas County has no water utility debt outstanding although Fitch rates the county's sewer revenue bonds 'AA' with a Stable Outlook. New Port Richey is not rated by Fitch.

TBW plays a key role in developing and delivering high-quality water from various sources and has successfully expanded and diversified its water supply and production capabilities, providing solid intermediate-term water supply while meeting the regional challenges and mandates to reduce groundwater use.

The nine-member board of directors is appointed by the six member governments, somewhat insulating policy decisions from potential political intrusion. A tenured and capable management team, led by a fairly new general manager with a long tenure in utility management, is responsible for daily operations. Long-range capital and resource planning is updated frequently, and rates are considered annually during the budget process. The board has autonomy over rate setting and has increased rates as needed to maintain stable financial performance.

The members unconditionally agree to pay for the costs of service at the rates specified by the authority pursuant to the master water supply contract. TBW applies a uniform rate in determining member payments, which for the past several years has equaled $2.56 per 1,000 gallons. Rates are determined by TBW based on annual estimates of the prorated costs associated with delivery of service to the member governments.

Member payments, which are designed to cover both the fixed and variable costs of the authority, include provision for operating, administrative and maintenance costs, annual debt service, amounts for capital improvement and operating reserves, are joint, not several in nature. However, the payments are an absolute and unconditional obligation of each member and are paid as an operations and maintenance (O&M) expense of each member's utility system, ahead of their respective debt service. In addition, solid cash reserves and autonomy over rates helps mitigate the lack of an explicit step-up.

DIVERSE WATER RESOURCES PROVIDE OPERATING FLEXIBILITY

TBW maintains strong operating fundamentals, including long-term capital and resource planning and significant and ongoing infrastructure investment. Water resources are diverse and comprise groundwater, treated surface water from the Hillsborough and Alafia rivers and the Tampa Bypass Canal, and desalinated seawater. TBW has been successful in cultivating other sources of water, while meeting requirements to lower its reliance on groundwater.

The system has a total permitted water supply capacity of 240 million gallons per day (mgd) from the various sources, which is well in excess of demand (157 mgd). Re-construction of the erosion plates associated with TBW's 15.5 billion gallon regional reservoir (the reservoir) has been successful with the project taking approximately two years to complete, and became fully operational in November 2014.

TBW is one of the few systems in the country that can process seawater. The desalination plant was completed in 2008 and can provide up to 28.75 mgd of supply to the system (with expansion capabilities to 35 mgd). Treated seawater is combined with treated surface and groundwater before it is distributed. Two interconnections with the city of Tampa provide some redundancy. A total of nine treatment facilities including the surface water treatment plant, which has a 120 mgd capacity, and the desalination plant, provide ample capacity to meet the system's long-term needs.

STRONG FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND LIQUIDITY OFFSETS LOW COVERAGE

Like many wholesale systems, TBW displays only modest annual DSC - roughly 1.1x annually from net revenues historically, and about 1.3x including available reserves. However, the strength of the member payments, historically stable financial results, well-managed operations and the ability to raise rates provides strong support for the high rating. The rates are established during the annual budget process and members are billed monthly for service.

Fitch expects liquidity to remain strong. The authority ended fiscal 2014 with $9.5 million in current unrestricted cash, renewal and replacement, and operating and maintenance reserve fund balances, which is equivalent to a solid 150 days cash on hand. Cash declined from previously higher levels in fiscals 2011-2013 due to a combination of pay-go capital funding and a $20 million final judgment related to TBW's lawsuit against the design firm for the original construction of the reservoir. When including available non-current unrestricted investments totaling $64 million in fiscal 2014, liquidity is a robust 520 days cash.

The authority's approved fiscal 2015 budget shows a slight decline in total revenues compared to fiscal 2014 and a sizable increase in operating expenses leading to DSC of approximately 1x, which Fitch believes is conservative given historical results.

Financial projections in the authority's approved budget show DSC similar to budgeted results for fiscal 2015. The forecast assumptions appear reasonable and include the refinancing of the sole remaining bullet maturity associated with the 2011B bonds, which mature in 2020, but does not include any additional bonds or the debt service savings from the 2015A and 2015B bonds issued earlier this year.

DEEP AND DIVERSE ECONOMIC BASE

Located midway down the western coast of Florida, the Tampa Bay region serves as the economic center for Florida's Gulf Coast, with major sectors in business services, government, healthcare, education, and tourism. The economy continues to recover with solid employment gains over the past several years. BLS employment data for December 2014 indicate a 5.9% increase in Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater MSA jobs over the same month in 2011, leading to a much lower unemployment rate of 5.6%.

MANAGEABLE CAPITAL NEEDS AND DEBT BURDEN

TBW's debt burden remains manageable despite having about $1.1 billion of total debt outstanding as of fiscal 2014. For fiscal 2014, debt was about 86% of net capital assets, which is somewhat high but not unusual for a wholesale provider, and just $477 on a per capita basis. Fitch notes TBW debt is on top of the outstanding debt of most of the members, which would raise the debt per capita figure.

However, long-term capital needs are limited as water supply and treatment capacity are both ample for the intermediate term, which should allow debt ratios to decline over time. Management believes current water supplies will comfortably meet demand for at least another 15 years. The current five-year capital plan through fiscal 2019 totals just $54 million and is expected to be partially funded with additional bonds, estimated by management at $20 million, to be issued in 2018.

After issuance, annual debt service will be roughly level through fiscal 2019 ahead of the last remaining scheduled bullet payment associated with the 2011B bonds. Fitch expects this final remaining bullet payment (about $29 million) will be handled with a future refinancing prior to maturity, resulting in level-to-declining debt service amortization.

Additional information is available at 'www.fitchratings.com'.

In addition to the sources of information identified in Fitch's Revenue-Supported Rating Criteria, this action was additionally informed by information from Creditscope.

Applicable Criteria and Related Research:

--'Revenue-Supported Rating Criteria' (June 2014);

--'U.S. Water and Sewer Revenue Bond Rating Criteria' (July 2013);

--'2015 Water and Sewer Medians' (December 2014);

--'2015 Outlook: Water and Sewer Sector' (December 2014).

Applicable Criteria and Related Research:

2015 Water and Sewer Medians

http://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=818409

U.S. Water and Sewer Revenue Bond Rating Criteria

http://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=715275

Revenue-Supported Rating Criteria

http://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=750012

Additional Disclosure

Solicitation Status

http://www.fitchratings.com/gws/en/disclosure/solicitation?pr_id=982129

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Contacts

Fitch Ratings
Primary Analyst
Andrew DeStefano
Director
+1-212-908-0284
Fitch Ratings, Inc.
33 Whitehall Street
New York, NY 10004
or
Secondary Analyst
Eva D. Rippeteau
Associate Director
+1-212-908-9105
or
Committee Chairperson
Jessalynn Moro
Managing Director
+1-212-908-0608
or
Media Relations:
Elizabeth Fogerty, +1-212-908-0526
elizabeth.fogerty@fitchratings.com

Contacts

Fitch Ratings
Primary Analyst
Andrew DeStefano
Director
+1-212-908-0284
Fitch Ratings, Inc.
33 Whitehall Street
New York, NY 10004
or
Secondary Analyst
Eva D. Rippeteau
Associate Director
+1-212-908-9105
or
Committee Chairperson
Jessalynn Moro
Managing Director
+1-212-908-0608
or
Media Relations:
Elizabeth Fogerty, +1-212-908-0526
elizabeth.fogerty@fitchratings.com