-

KBRA Releases Research – Customer Rate Relief Bonds: An Important Part of the Recovery Process

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA releases a research report providing an overview of customer rate relief (CRR) transactions and their credit characteristics.

As powerful storms and other severe weather events impose outsized strains on utility infrastructure across the U.S., affected utility companies are increasingly tapping capital markets to recoup associated losses. Most commonly, public utilities are pooling together their customer bases and pledging CRR charges due on top of monthly bills to serve as collateral for CRR bonds, allowing them to receive upfront financing at a lower cost than at the corporate-issued level. While consumers ultimately bear the incremental expense, they also benefit, as the costs are generally spread out over years, avoiding one-time outsized charges in the event’s near-term aftermath.

Key Takeaways

  • Although CRR bonds have been around for 20 years, they have recently grown in popularity as a financing method for utility companies to recoup one-time costs associated with natural disasters.
  • CRR bonds are primarily collateralized by cash flows from CRR charges added to customers’ monthly utility bills. These payments are typically a higher priority than other utility bill items, which, when combined with their non-bypassability features and true-up mechanisms, generates a strong underlying cash flow stream to pay interest and principal.
  • CRR asset-backed securities (ABS) transactions typically feature true-up adjustments at least annually, and as frequently as monthly with interim adjustments, whereby the monthly amount charged to customers is adjusted based on the difference between the aggregate collections received and the aggregate collections expected to make timely debt payments. These transactions also feature a funded reserve account to help the bonds meet their scheduled amortization.
  • As more severe weather incidents occur in the U.S. and investor acceptance for CRR bonds increases, KBRA expects more utility companies to issue CRR bonds as a cost-effective financing option.

Click here to view the report.

Related Publications

About KBRA

KBRA is a full-service credit rating agency registered in the U.S., the EU, and the UK, and is designated to provide structured finance ratings in Canada. KBRA’s ratings can be used by investors for regulatory capital purposes in multiple jurisdictions.

Doc ID: 1004489

Contacts

Alan Greenblatt, Managing Director
+1 646-731-2496
alan.greenblatt@kbra.com

Matthew Gardener, Director
+1 646-731-1276
matthew.gardener@kbra.com

Thomas Berle Carman, Associate
+1 646-731-1241
thomas.carman@kbra.com

Eric Neglia, Head of Commercial and Consumer ABS
+1 646-731-2456
eric.neglia@kbra.com

Media

Adam Tempkin, Director of Communications
+1 646-731-1347
adam.tempkin@kbra.com

Business Development

Arielle Smelkinson, Senior Director
+1 646-731-2369
arielle.smelkinson@kbra.com

Kroll Bond Rating Agency, LLC

Details
Headquarters: New York City, New York
CEO: Jim Nadler
Employees: 400+
Organization: PRI

Release Versions

Contacts

Alan Greenblatt, Managing Director
+1 646-731-2496
alan.greenblatt@kbra.com

Matthew Gardener, Director
+1 646-731-1276
matthew.gardener@kbra.com

Thomas Berle Carman, Associate
+1 646-731-1241
thomas.carman@kbra.com

Eric Neglia, Head of Commercial and Consumer ABS
+1 646-731-2456
eric.neglia@kbra.com

Media

Adam Tempkin, Director of Communications
+1 646-731-1347
adam.tempkin@kbra.com

Business Development

Arielle Smelkinson, Senior Director
+1 646-731-2369
arielle.smelkinson@kbra.com

Social Media Profiles
More News From Kroll Bond Rating Agency, LLC

KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to PMT Loan Trust 2026-CNF3

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA assigns preliminary ratings to 44 classes of mortgage-backed notes from PMT Loan Trust 2026-CNF3 (PMTLT 2026-CNF3), a prime RMBS transaction sponsored by PennyMac Corp. (PennyMac), an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust (PMT). PMTLT 2026-CNF3 comprises 589 agency-eligible, conforming mortgage loans with an aggregate stated principal balance of approximately $322.7 million as of the March 1, 2026 cut-off date. The underlying col...

KBRA Releases Research – Anatomy of Loss in Single-Borrower CMBS: A Loan-Level Analysis

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA releases research examining loss severities in the single-asset single borrower (SASB) commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) sector. SASB transactions have grown to dominate post-global financial crisis (GFC) issuance, and while loan defaults in the sector have risen sharply since the onset of the pandemic, the sector's overall loss rate remains limited, as nearly three-quarters of SASB loans resolved after default experienced minimal to no loss. When loss...

KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to Sequoia Mortgage Trust 2026-INV2 (SEMT 2026-INV2)

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA assigns preliminary ratings to 71 classes of mortgage pass-through certificates from Sequoia Mortgage Trust 2026-INV2 (SEMT 2026-INV2). The transaction consists of 1,118 investment property mortgages with an aggregate principal balance of $438.4 million as of the March 1, 2026 cut-off date. The collateral is characterized by a weighted average (WA) original credit score of 770 and moderate borrower equity, with a WA original LTV and WA original CLTV of 73.2%. KBR...
Back to Newsroom