U.S. charter school default rate up, but
sector sound: report
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[July 22, 2015]
By Megan Davies
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. charter schools
are defaulting on bonds at a rate of 3.3 percent, a level higher than
that recorded three years ago but still not one which should concern
investors, according to the co-publisher of a report made available on
Tuesday.
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Charter schools, held in a number of municipal bond funds, are
public schools that operate independently and are an alternative to
schools run by local school districts. They are publicly funded but
use private-sector lenders to fund buildings.
Of the $10.4 billion issued by charter schools, $346.9 million, or
3.3 percent, has defaulted, according to the report by community
financing organization the Local Initiatives Support Corporation
(LISC) and Charter School Advisors. That compares to 2.7 percent
recorded in a 2012 LISC report by the same author, CSA managing
director Wendy Berry.
"I don't think it should be concerning to investors if they're
looking at schools in the right way," said Reena Abraham, LISC's
vice president of education programs.
"There is tons of growth in this sector. I think they should be
asking the same questions that we have been asking around academic
performance. A good school will not fail you."
The data also showed an uptick in the default rate on the basis of
the number of schools issuing bonds - with 5 percent of the 818
schools defaulting according to the 2015 report versus 3.8 percent
of 583 recorded in 2012.
The schools defaulted mainly because the authorizer of the school
did not renew their charter due to sub-par academic performance, the
report said.
Michigan's default rate of 12 percent was the highest amongst all
states. Michigan was particularly active in issuing charter school
bonds in the early years of charter school bond issuance - which
began in 1998 - according to the report, when underwriting criteria
had not evolved, it said.
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The high default rate is also due to the state having mostly small,
stand-alone schools that were less able to weather Michigan's
economic downturn and the associated effects of reduced education
funding, the report said.
The study also said that some state programs were improving charter
schools' access to the bond market with state officials in Colorado,
Utah and Texas developing programs to allow charter operators to get
enhanced credit ratings.
(Reporting by Megan Davies; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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