U.S. muni market slowly
starts paying heed to cyber risks
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[June 14, 2017]
By Hilary Russ
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - A rise in cyber attacks on U.S. public sector targets
so far has had little impact in the $3.8 trillion municipal debt market,
with no issuer as yet hit by a downgrade or higher borrowing costs
because of a cyber security threat.
That is beginning to change.
S&P Global has begun to quiz states, cities and towns about their cyber
defenses, and some credit analysts are starting to factor cyber security
when they look at bonds. Moody's Investors Service is also trying to
figure out how to best evaluate cyber risk.
The shift follows a particularly steep rise in ransomware attacks, when
criminals hold an entity's computer system hostage until a small ransom
is paid.
The number of global ransomware detections rose 36 percent in 2016 from
the year before, to 463,841, with the United States most heavily
affected, according to cyber security firm Symantec Corp.
Such attacks, which have also hit companies and federal entities, have
spared no kind of municipal issuer large or small, from police
departments to school districts and transit agencies. Ransomware attacks
on state and local governments and their agencies have risen in
proportion with the overall increase, according to cyber insurance
provider Beazley Group.
"State and local governments are a huge target, quite frankly an easy
target for bad guys," said Bob Anderson, managing director for
information security at Navigant management consulting firm in
Washington and a former global cyber investigator at the Federal Bureau
of Investigation.
Last month's "WannaCry" ransomware attack, which hobbled global
businesses and Britain's National Health Service, may also be prompting
renewed focus on cyber security, though it had minimal impact in the
United States.
Considering a potential cyber attack as a similar risk to a natural
disaster, S&P has already been reviewing cyber security defenses of
utilities, hospitals and colleges because they were early public sector
targets for hackers.
Now it is also beginning to ask cities and states about the costs and
level of security measures and the financial impact of successful
attacks, said Geoffrey Buswick, who manages S&P's public sector ratings.
HEAD IN THE SAND
The answers feed into broader categories that affect an issuer's
ratings, particularly governance, liquidity and operations.
Many breaches are handled quickly and financial damage is limited, but
not every attack will necessarily end that way, Buswick said. "We're
trying to get sense of who has their head in the sand and who doesn't."
Fitch Ratings said it does not consider cyber security in its ratings,
and many investors still are not concerned enough to ask for details.
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A man types on a computer keyboard in this illustration picture
taken February 28, 2013. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo
In
part, that is because it can be difficult to assess the operational and
financial fallout of such attacks. Some high profile breaches so far have also
done limited damage to issuers' finances.
Case in point is the state of South Carolina, which in August 2012 suffered
possibly the worst cyber attack yet of any city or state.
When hackers stole the personal data of more than 3.5 million taxpayers, the
state had to investigate, provide credit monitoring and consumer fraud
protection, and implement a slew of post-breach upgrades, according to State
Senator Thomas Alexander.
The total cost is around $76 million and counting, he said. That is enough to
pay for several school programs combined. But against South Carolina's annual
general fund budget of roughly $8 billion, the costs made no dent in its
standing as a borrower.
Many issuers do not disclose any information to potential investors in bond
documents about cyber risks or defenses. But a few, particularly hospitals and
utilities, have started doing so.
In a
February prospectus, the Maryland Health and Higher Educational Facilities
Authority, the state's largest public debt issuer, included nearly a full page
devoted to the growing risk of cyber attacks.
"Because we're such a large issuer, and because healthcare is often treated much
more like a corporate credit, the legal counsels to the transaction weigh in on
the bondholder risk section," said Annette Anselmi, the authority's Executive
Director, noting that such disclosures also evolve depending on what kinds of
questions the market is asking.
Hospitals are also ahead on cyber security disclosure because they rely on huge
amounts of data, said Court Street Group analyst Joseph Krist.
Eventually, he expects others to follow suit.
"We went through this with getting munis to ... disclose more pension
information. Those were frankly long and painful processes. It just has to get
to a critical mass."
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Additional reporting by Jim Finkle in Toronto;
Editing by Daniel Bases and Tomasz Janowski)
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