37-1
37th Parliament,
1st Session
(January 29, 2001 - September 16, 2002)
Select a different session
Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
National Finance
Issue 18 - Evidence
| OTTAWA, Wednesday, September 19, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on National Finance met this
day at 5:47 p.m. to examine the role of government in the
financing of deferred maintenance costs in Canada's post-secondary institutions.
|
| Senator Lowell Murray (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Colleagues, this is our second meeting on the
reference we have been sent by the Senate to study, the role of
government in the financing of deferred maintenance costs in
Canada's post secondary institutions.
|
| Let me welcome Senator Wiebe, who is with us tonight,
replacing Senator Banks.
|
| Our first witness is Mr. Cliff Inskip, who is with the Canadian
Imperial Bank of Commerce. Mr. Inskip was involved, on behalf
of CIBC, in the University of Toronto's bond issue earlier this
year. I believe we circulated a copy of a National Post article on
that subject.
|
| Mr. Inskip has an opening statement to make. He will be using
a document that he has prepared. The document is available to
you, but it is in English only. It is his right as a citizen to address
the committee in the official language of his choice. If you are
interested in having a copy of the document as an "aide-mémoire"
during his presentation, the pages will distribute it to you.
|
| Welcome, Mr. Inskip. Please proceed.
|
| Mr. Cliff Inskip, Managing Director, Debt Capital Market,
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce: Mr. Chairman, honourable senators, ladies and gentlemen, I appreciate the opportunity to be here and I look forward to discussing a challenging topic.
I prepared a brief presentation. I shall skim through it quickly, to
ensure that we have plenty of time to answer questions.
|
| The purpose of my initial remarks is to provide an overview of
some of the key issues associated with financing universities in
Canada and then to briefly summarize the University of
Toronto $160-million-bond offering, a transaction on which I
spent many months leading our team.
|
| Traditionally, borrowings by universities have been focused on
bank borrowings, for two particular reasons: one is short-term
timing differences between receipt of cash and required expenditures; the second is for various capital projects. Those capital
projects tended to have been projects that generate revenue - for
example, residences, parking lots, food service facilities, things
like that.
|
| The Canadian debt capital markets, which is a group of
institutional investors, insurance companies, mutual funds, pension funds, et cetera, is a market outside the bank, and certainly
university financings can be seen as attractive and provide a
viable alternative. As I mentioned, the University of Toronto is
the largest broadly distributed university financing in Canada to
date.
|
| I will make a few comments on the financial operations of a
university and some of the constraints. There are various sources
of income - most of them are well known to all of you. There
are grants, user fees, donations, debt; on the bottom of this page,
in the blue, there are operating costs, capital expenditures and
debt servicing costs. Most universities have reasonably diversified
revenue sources, and that is useful because when one source is not
available others potentially are.
|
| There are a number of limitations on funding flexibility for
universities. Operating grants typically operate by formulas,
depending on the province. They may be capped; with enrolment
growth, the operating grants may not increase. Tuition fees are
typically regulated, so there is an inability to increase those
beyond the regulated limit.
|
| In addition, there are a number of restrictions on how funds that
are actually received are used. In certain provinces, provincial
grants cannot be used to pay principal and interest on debt used
for capital purposes. In Ontario, a certain portion of tuition fees
must be used for student aid. Research grants and endowments
have various restrictions on their use. As a result, universities
typically operate different funds. There is an operating fund, a
capital fund, ancillary operations, and restricted funds.
|
| The operating fund is for operating purposes. In general terms,
the operating fund is typically managed on an approximate
break-even basis. When governments cut funding in the 1990s,
universities were forced to cut operating expenses or to increase
tuition fees.
|
| The second fund is the capital fund, which is to build
non-academic buildings. It is usually project-specific and funded
from government capital grants and donations.
|
| The ancillary services fund covers all of those things that are
non-academic in nature: residences, parking lots, food services,
bookstores. That fund is typically operated on a full cost-recovery
basis. The costs, therefore, are recovered from the users with no
surplus and no deficit over the long period.
|
| Finally, the restricted funds are various kinds of donations,
grants or endowments, and those funds can be used only for the
purposes specified.
|
| In summary, universities have a diverse source of revenue, but
there are numerous constraints on how those funds can be used.
Universities have limited abilities to increase their funding -
which is based on formulas or received through fundraising.
Much focus in recent years has been placed on fundraising to
augment other sources of funds.
|
| Universities have demonstrated a capacity to borrow both in
the bank and the capital markets. Borrowings have been limited
by their ability to repay. In other words, universities have only
borrowed where there has been a repayment source to repay the
debt. They have not accessed the markets generally to fund
accumulated deferred maintenance because there is no specific
repayment source on which to service that debt.
|
| The next thing I would like to address is the University of
Toronto transaction. The amount there was $160 million. These
were 30-year debentures, so interest only for 30 years and repaid
in full in 2031. The interest rate is 6.78 per cent, payable
semi-annually.
|
| When we met with the University of Toronto - and this whole
process took six months - we analyzed a number of options. We
looked at bank debt as an alternative, we looked at a traditional
private placement placed with a limited number of life insurance
companies, and then we looked at a public-style debt issue.
|
| I will summarize the transaction. The issuer was the University
of Toronto - $160 million unsecured debentures. No security
was provided. The term was coupon 6.78 per cent, which was 65 basis points, or .65 per cent above the Government of
Canada 30-year benchmark bond. Repayment is by interest on a
semi-annual basis, with principal in full at the end. Use of
proceeds was to finance capital projects, primarily residences, but
a small amount for a parking facility and potentially a small
amount for academic buildings.
|
| Repayment will be from the ancillary revenues generated from
those facilities. Repayment is internally allocated to the divisions
within the university making use of the proceeds. If money was
provided to a specific residence, the users of that residence would
pay a residence fee and those monies would be paid to central
treasury. Central treasury use those monies to pay interest and to
invest the portion of principal set aside, which we manage, so that
at the end of 30 years the university will have the full $160 mil
lion to repay the loan.
|
| Typically, loans have covenants or restrictions. The only
covenant of any magnitude was a negative pledge, which is a
covenant that says that they will not give security to other lenders.
If these lenders are lending on an unsecured basis, they want other
lenders to lend on an unsecured basis as well so they are on an
even basis.
|
| The credit ratings obtained were one notch higher than the
province of Ontario, which was an AA-2 by Moody's and an
AA-plus by Standard & Poor's, which are extremely high credit
ratings.
|
| I have provided you with some of the criteria and factors that a
rating agency looks at, which include financial, demand, general
and management factors. I would be happy to answer questions
on those, but the rating agencies went through an analysis process
looking at all those factors to determine their rating.
|
| The University of Toronto is an outstanding university. We
have outlined some of the key things that are worthy of note and
ones that the rating agencies and investors looked at, but, clearly,
in terms of going to the bond market, an institution like the
University of Toronto was very simple because of the quality of
its credit.
|
| With regard to market reception, the issue was, as I mentioned,
the first widely distributed university debt financing in the
Canadian market. Quebec universities have issued small amounts
in the retail market. The debt service in those cases is paid by the
Quebec government. The U of T issue was extremely well
received by investors. It was well over-subscribed, meaning that
there were more buyers than there were bonds to place. The
pricing was tight. The pricing was 65 basis points over a Canada
bond. No other non-government issuer has achieved a spread
lower for a similar maturity bond, so it was tightly priced. The
buyers were evenly balanced between three groups - insurance
companies, investment managers and pension funds.
|
| In summary, we believe that there are significant opportunities
for Canadian universities to raise funds in the debt capital
markets. The University of Toronto certainly demonstrated that.
In the Financial Post, Barry Critchley wrote in July that the U of
T issue and, more important, what may follow, has got the market
excited.
|
| Investors are looking to diversify their portfolios. Universities
are generally seen as strong credits, and it is a credit they are
interested in buying.
|
| The key issues for universities in terms of issuing in the market
are to identify what funds are required and what is the source of
refinancing. To finance a significant amount of infrastructure
renewal generally will require an incremental source of revenue
that can be used to repay the debt.
|
| In the case of school boards, the market has raised over $1
billion for school boards in the last two years. They have a
funding formula for additional schools and also for facilities
renewal where you have a specific dedicated stream that must be
set aside into a segregated account and used only for specific
capital purposes. Something like that would certainly facilitate the
accumulated deferred maintenance issue. The key issue from a
university's perspective in terms of capacity to borrow is to
identify the source of repayment. If there is an identified source,
universities will have access to the market.
|
| Mr. Chair, that is the end of my formal comments.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you very much and thank you for
giving us a copy of your presentation.
|
| Before I open the floor for questioning, I should say for the
record that what gave rise to this study that we are doing was
Senator Moore's concern about the extent of deferred maintenance at Canadian universities. I hope that I am not putting it
unfairly, but it would appear that over the past number of years
universities, under financial constraints, have allowed the physical
plant to deteriorate considerably, to the extent that the Canadian
Association of University Business Officers has done a study that
suggests that the bill for all of this will amount to approximate
ly $3.6 billion. I suppose the issue cannot be divorced at all from
the overall question of financing of universities, which is why we
were so anxious to have you here and are so happy to have had
such a thorough presentation from you.
|
| Senator Moore: Thank you, Mr. Inskip, for being here and for
your presentation. We were all tweaked to what your company
was doing by the newspaper article of May 16 to which our chair
referred.
|
| Were you involved from the outset in this financing?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Yes, I was.
|
| Senator Moore: U of T has a very healthy endowment. It is
the largest in the country. It exceeds $1 billion, I believe.
|
| When you analyze the borrower to see whether there would be
appeal to the market to invest in that borrower, what weight is
given to the endowment? I am interested to note that there was no
security given.
|
| Mr. Inskip: The endowment by itself is not a large factor, and
one reason for that is that the endowment is restricted. The uses to
which those funds can be put are fairly heavily restricted. The
endowment itself is intended to be permanent; is only the
investment income can be spent. We would look at the
endowment in terms of size. In the case of the University of
Toronto, it is approximately $1.2 billion, as you mentioned.
Those funds are not actually used. They are preserved and the
investment income is used. The question is what that investment
income can be used for.
|
| To the extent that there are uses that are unrestricted, that
provides value to an investor because there are unrestricted funds.
To the extent that the funds are restricted, they become less
useful. To the extent that you could take restricted-use funds from
the endowment and free up moneys from the operating fund, then
they provide real value.
|
| That is only one factor. There are certainly many other
universities across the country that have borrowed in the bank
market. Many universities have been around longer than this
country has, so endowment is only one factor.
|
| On page 13 of my presentation I tried to outline a number of
the factors. Financial factors include revenue flexibility, which is
everything from whether tuition fees can be increased or whether
they are capped by government regulation, to student demand. If
demand goes down generally because of economic conditions,
which universities will students come to? Financial factors also
include ability to raise funds through donations. On the other side
is expenditure flexibility, which includes what percentage of the
professorship is tenured, where expenses can be cut, et cetera.
There are a number of factors. Endowment is one, but it is not a
huge factor in the process.
|
| Senator Moore: You mentioned no security. What legally
secures the obligation to repay the funds that you have arranged
from the marketplace?
|
| Mr. Inskip: There is a trust indenture between the university
and the trustee, and the trustee acts on behalf of all the
bondholders. The trust indenture is nothing more than a loan
agreement, an IOU, a promise to pay. There are a number of other
things in there, but basically it says that the university is
borrowing a certain amount and promises to pay interest at a
certain rate on a semi-annual basis and to pay it all back at
maturity.
|
| There are a couple of things they promise not to do, and those
are what I refer to as covenants. They promise not to give security
to other lenders, because those lenders would be secured while
these lenders are unsecured. There are a number of circumstances
under which they could give security, but they are limited.
|
| Senator Moore: Does the undertaking not to give security
apply just to the properties that are subject to this borrowing, or is
it to any properties on campus?
|
| Mr. Inskip: If you lent money for a specific asset and you took
security on that asset, then you would not have a negative pledge.
They could do whatever they wished with their other assets
because the lender has security on this residence or this facility. In
this case, the lender said, "Here is the money for the residence
and parking lot," but it has no right to any of those revenues.
Therefore, the lender is saying that it wants to lend on the same
basis as any other lender, which is not having security on any
asset. That is easier for most borrowers because it means that they
do not have to bear the cost or spend the time to actually put a
mortgage on a building. The lenders do not have to worry about
access to the building, if they were to repossess it; also, if the
building were in the middle of campus, they do not have to
concern themselves with subdivision issues. Those issues are
avoided by doing it on an unsecured basis.
|
| Senator Bolduc: You mentioned as a source of repayment
ancillary generated residence and parking facilities. Do you have
any other possible areas for repayment, for example, an arena?
|
| Mr. Inskip: This is an unsecured loan; therefore, U of T can
choose to repay from whichever sources it wishes. The university
is not obligated to take revenues from a residence or a parking lot.
The university's intention is to build a residence and charge
residence fees. Those residences fees will go to the central
treasury for management. U of T is free to do whatever it wants.
There is no legal obligation to use any revenue sources to repay
these bonds. If they are not paid, the bondholders, in theory, could
sue the university and demand payment from whatever resources
the university has; however, the bondholders have no right to any
particular asset or any particular cash flow. Anybody else could
lend on an unsecured basis, and they would have equal rights to
the revenues created by the assets built from this funding.
|
| The other option is to lend on a secured basis - the lender lends
the money, U of T builds a residence, the lender has security on
that residence and the cash flow stream from it. If things got
tough, in theory, you could take those assets and cash flows and
use them to repay the loan. The constraint there is putting on
mortgages. It is costly and there are a number of other issues. If
you do not need to give security, from an issuer's point of view,
sometimes it is easier to say all of its lending is unsecured.
|
| The documentation is simpler.
|
| Senator Bolduc: How do you compare the interest rate that
you charge on that project with some of the types of capital
developments?
|
| Mr. Inskip: This interest rate was 6.78.
|
| Senator Bolduc: Fixed rate for 30 years?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Yes, for the next 30 years. One of the attractions of
going to the bond rate is being able to get a fixed rate for the full
term. The university knows when pricing its residence fees
exactly what the capital costs are. The university built the
resident, knows what it cost, and knows what the borrowing is. U
of T can predict over the next 30 years some margin for operating
cost variation. As far as capital costs, the university knows exactly
what they are.
|
| Senator Bolduc: It is about 65 basis points over the Government of Canada benchmark bond.
|
| Mr. Inskip: That was the tightest spread in the market for that
term for a non-government issuer. The other comparable, for
example, would be NAV Canada, very similar pricing, and it has a
monopoly, runs the air space. If you look at GTAA, it was closer
to the high 90s basis points. This rate was very attractive. There
was no non-government issuer that achieved a tighter spread over
a 30-year term than this issue.
|
| Senator Bolduc: Is there any Ontario Hydro financing on a
30-year basis?
|
| Mr. Inskip: There is. The old Ontario Hydro debt, which was
guaranteed by the province, had provincial rates - because the
province guaranteed it. With respect to Hydro One, for example, I
believe it was certainly higher. It was less than 100 basis points
but definitely higher than the 65 basis points.
|
| Senator Bolduc: This is not guaranteed by the government?
|
| Mr. Inskip: That is correct.
|
| Senator Bolduc: In the Province of Quebec, if memory serves
me, the government is involved, I believe.
|
| Mr. Inskip: My understanding is that in Quebec the debt
service is paid by the government. In the example before us, there
is no government guarantee. Obviously, however, the government
has seats on the board.
|
| Senator Bolduc: The University of Toronto issue that is before
us is a free market operation.
|
| Mr. Inskip: This is stand-alone financing for the University of
Toronto, no guarantees. There is government support in terms of
board representation, government grants, but this is a separate
obligation of the University of Toronto only, and there is no
guarantee from the province.
|
| The Chairman: The situation in Quebec is that the government actually pays the debt servicing costs.
|
| Senator Bolduc: I do not think they have the right to -
|
| The Chairman: Go it alone. Why would they?
|
| Mr. Inskip: This is the first widely distributed government
bond for a university on its own credit. There are numerous
universities that have gone to the bank markets for capital
projects, because the projects were smaller and perhaps the
money was for a shorter term.
|
| Senator Bolduc: You say that there is a possibility for
diversifying the portfolio. Do you see it as a possibility for
various universities in Canada to do that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Absolutely.
|
| Senator Bolduc: There is a market for that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: There is a market. Investors are looking to
diversify their portfolios. We have talked to a number of
universities across Canada who are exploring it, and who, we are
confident, could access the market.
|
| Senator Bolduc: In the case of residences and the parking
facilities, I cannot understand that. Are there other possibilities -
except maybe in the sports area?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Obviously, we are in the business of placing debt.
We will explore every opportunity to place debt, and where there
is a willing buyer and seller we will put them together. It is
relatively easy to go to a university that needs to borrow money to
produce an asset that will generate a cash flow, and take that cash
flow to service the debt, good business principles. Residences,
parking lots, food services, bookstores, any of those kinds of
things are fine. With respect to academic buildings, presumably, it
can be paid off by grant revenue.
|
| In Ontario, for example, the operating grants cannot be used to
pay debt related to capital. Those are not available. The
endowment funds are not available. If you cannot find a
repayment source, it becomes difficult. Even if the university has
lots of assets, you do not want to rely on them selling off
buildings to pay off the loan. That revenue source could be user
fees, or it could be government grants.
|
| In the case of school boards, the $1 billion I referred to, the
governments have said, "Here is one grant for new pupil places,
for new facilities to generate additional places in school," or
"Here is a grant for facilities renewal." Both of those grants have
to go into a segregated account. These school boards have raised
over $1 billion, and for the next 25 years they are getting grants
that have to go into the segregated accounts, and they can be used
to repay the debt. In the school board case, there are no user fees,
but an identified source that is segregated can be used to service
the debt.
|
| Senator Bolduc: I give money to Laval University every year,
and I always stipulate that it is for the library. Many people are
doing the same, so we have specialized endowment funds. Would
you go so far as to say that you would be ready to look at it from
the point of view of financing a library?
|
| Mr. Inskip: We would look at any assets where there is an
identified repayment source. If a university came to us and said
that they had a particular grant we could use for this, or an
endowment fund, and the intention is that so much can be
segregated, you must consider the legalities. Can you pledge these
funds or can they be used? The source would need to be identified
and we would be happy to explore the possibility.
|
| Senator Bolduc: How is it that in 2001 this bright idea of
market financing has come about?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Basically, for a couple of reasons. One is that there
has not been the need on the part of universities. For the most
part, in terms of capital facility, governments have funded those
academic buildings, or it is has been a combination of
governments and donations. The only ones where the universities
have needed to borrow in past are ones that governments did not
fund, which were typically things like residences. If you do one
residence at a time, the borrowings are relatively small. If you
want to borrow $25 million you can go to the bank and arrange
the financing. If you want a fixed rate you might go to the swap
markets and lock in your interest rate. For the size of the
transactions, that has been an appropriate way to proceed.
|
| When we are looking at significant growth in enrolment - in
Ontario we are looking at the elimination of grade 13, which
means we have more students - all of a sudden you are looking
at significant amounts of capital requirements.
|
| Senator Bolduc: CMHC used to be the source of residence
financing on the universities campuses.
|
| Mr. Inskip: CMHC was involved in many of them. In the U.S.,
they have used capital markets for many years where they had
large needs. The second reason is that in the Canadian market, 10
years ago, there was not a developed corporate market. The
governments issued a large amount of debt, as we know, and
interest rates were high so it crowded out the non-government
issuers. It has only been the last five or six years where we have
had school boards, airports, universities, therefore, a broader
corporate involvement in the market.
|
| Senator Bolduc: The bond market is going down, too.
|
| Mr. Inskip: The yields have come down significantly. Five
years ago, you were looking at close to 10 per cent, whereas today
you are looking at between 5 and 6 per cent for 10-to 30-year
money.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: Mr. Inskip, after Italian, French is the
language I speak best, better than I do English.
|
| I would like to know how many years the University of
Toronto has used your services to secure loans, namely, for how
long has the University of Toronto been needing the services of
the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce?
|
| Has this been going on for a long time or did the university
only begin using your loans services last year, in addition to
organizing fund raising in order to resolve many of their
problems?
|
| [English]
|
| Mr. Inskip: I cannot answer how long. We deal with the
University of Toronto on a banking relationship. In terms of the
particular bond issue, the process started with a request for
proposals to a number of different financial institutions, and that
process was done in the fourth quarter of 2000. We started the
advisory work in January 2001, at which point we talked about
what was required to issue a bond, what the credit ratings were,
the legal document, the kind of covenants, and then we started
that process. From the time we actually were awarded the
mandate to help them go to the markets, it was early January of
this year. It actually went to market in July, so it was about six
and a half months.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: I would like to know what problem
the University of Toronto was facing when it informed the bank
that it needed to borrow money in order to resolve some very
important issues.
|
| Can you tell me what the problem was? Was it the residences,
infrastructure maintenance or maintenance required for other
sectors in the university? What was the main problem facing the
university that required that it borrow money?
|
| [English]
|
| Mr. Inskip: I do not think it was much a problem, as I would
think of deferred maintenance as a problem. It was that the
university currently has residence facilities for roughly 14 per cent
of its students. It wanted to expand residence capacity over a
period of time to something closer to 25 per cent of their students.
More than half of this money will be used for building new
residences. They wanted to expand a number of residences,
particularly with the elimination of grade 13 and two years
graduating at once - but even for their current enrolment they
wanted to expand residences. They wanted to build a parking
facility, and they may have a small need for augmenting their
academic buildings. Primarily, it was motivated by a need for
additional residences.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Ferretti Barth: Did you begin providing this service
to the university in 2000? Did you inform other universities in
Canada that you were able to assist them?
|
| You know, Quebec universities are in good shape. The way that
they operate provides some stability, even for resolving infrastructure problems. But for the other universities that require money
for research or building maintenance, did you advertise the fact
that you were there to help the universities?
|
| The Toronto example must be very positive, and there may be a
lot of universities that will call upon your services. You could
subsequently reduce the interest rates!
|
| [English]
|
| Mr. Inskip: I appreciate the opportunity for you to look after
our interests. We certainly have met with some universities, some
on the West Coast and the East Coast, in Quebec, Ontario. We
have not met with the majority.
|
| We met with selected ones. Obviously it takes time, but our
intention is to meet with many universities across Canada. We
obviously want to look at ones that have a need that is of a size
that is appropriate for the bond market. We have told a number of
them that we have done this transaction and would be happy to
talk to them about how it went. I have met with several
universities across the country and have presentations planned
with others. We have met with one in Quebec and have plans for
others there as well.
|
| It is an ongoing process. This was done in July. Summer
intervened and we are now just starting up again. The markets are
a little unsettled at the moment, but we will be out talking to more
universities.
|
| Senator Stratton: With regard to payback on the bonds, I
realize we are talking about payback from general revenue, even
though there was revenue achieved from the student residence and
the parking fees. Did the university base the payback of the
interest on the income derived from the residence and the
parking? Is that how you arrived at the amount, or did they top it
off with other revenue sources?
|
| Mr. Inskip: They will allocate the funds to the particular users.
I think that, in the case of the University of Toronto, they said that
they would provide a small subsidy for a time-limited basis. In
that sense, I do not know the exact amount. The intention is to
subsidize residence rates by a small amount for a certain period of
time, reflecting the difficult market conditions in terms of high
housing costs.
|
| Absent that, generally the costs of the financing would be
passed on on a full cost-recovery basis. Therefore, in the long
term, full cost recovery but a temporary period of subsidy.
|
| Senator Stratton: I would hope that they would have a gradual
escalation of residence fees rather than a sudden increase.
|
| You talk about funding of a size appropriate for a bond market.
What is an appropriate size for the bond market?
|
| Mr. Inskip: As I outlined in my presentation, there are two
ways of approaching the bond markets. One is the traditional
private placement. That is where you would go to a number of
insurance companies and negotiate a fixed- rate, long-term
transaction with those providers of money. The minimum is in the
range of $25 million to $100 million. For a public-style issue, the
amount is probably $100 million.
|
| Therefore, in terms of the capital markets, it will be at least
$25 million; otherwise, you are in the bank market. If it is under
$100 million, you will do a traditional private placement where
you negotiate with individual investors. If it is over $100 million,
it will be more of a public style, where it is fully negotiated and
underwritten by an underwriting group.
|
| Senator Stratton: A small university building, a residence and
a parkade would, in many cases, have to go the private route?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Yes. We are talking to a couple of universities that
have requirements of less than $100 million. In those circum
stances, it is just a different approach to go to market. In many
cases, we are talking about the same investors; some will be
different. You will not be going to mutual funds and others that
require more liquidity. The process is different, but the trust
indenture and the other things could be very similar.
|
| Senator Stratton: Is the rate higher because of that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: The rate is higher because of the lack of liquidity.
Liquidity is the ability to resell. When investors get nervous and
want to see their mutual funds, they have to be able to sell what is
in their portfolio. These are less liquid, and typically they have a
premium on the spread.
|
| Senator Stratton: How many basis points?
|
| Mr. Inskip: It depends on the circumstances. An insurance
company would say 25 basis points. Sometimes we can squeeze
that down, depending on who the issuer is. If it is heavily
structured, it will be more than that.
|
| Senator Bolduc: When it is in a private placement, you can do
it as a major undertaker and then sell it to other of your friends, I
suppose?
|
| Mr. Inskip: You might have a lead investor, where you do
more negotiating, but typically if we were doing a $50-million
private placement we would work with the university. We may or
may not get it rated. We would draft up term sheets, go through
the details, prepare a presentation, and go with the university to
half a dozen investors and make the presentation. They would
each say how much they want. We want fill up the book, and we
would negotiate the documentation. It might be three or four
insurance companies, as opposed to a bank transaction where you
might have a bank underwrite the whole thing and then sell off
pieces after. In the private-placement market, you would typically
try to place the whole thing first.
|
| Senator Tunney: Can you imagine a situation where a
university would go into receivership if they defaulted on interest
payments, for instance? How could a university go bankrupt? I
expect I know what you would do if they were in serious financial
trouble.
|
| I am sure this will not happen, but supposing it were 1929 and
the economy went into a serious depression. Of course, there
would be thousands of these cases in serious trouble, but what
coverage have you got for risk, if there is risk? I have not yet
heard you say whether there really is a risk.
|
| Mr. Inskip: My view is that there is risk in anything. Some
risks are very small and some are very big. In the case of the
University of Toronto, the credit ratings are a notch higher than
those of the Province of Ontario. The Province of Ontario has
unlimited taxing power. The university has assets with an insured
value of $4.8 billion, it has a large amount of land in downtown
Toronto and it has an endowment fund of $1.2 billion. It has a lot
of assets and high demand for its services. The risk theoretically
exists but is infinitesimally small. Investors have the same view.
They said the spread they will charge is extremely low. It sold
very quickly and is heavily over-subscribed. That is the
University of Toronto.
|
| Looking at universities across the country, there are others that
are located in less favourable locations. In the case of the
University of Toronto, if they got into difficulty, they have some
very valuable assets in terms of lands and the things you could do
with those assets. In the cases of some other universities located
in small town, if it were not a university it is not clear for what
other purpose those assets could be used, so there you have a
higher risk.
|
| Investors will look to see which universities in a province are
the flagship universities. They will take the view that no
provincial government would let its major university get into
difficulty, so those ones become fairly easy.
|
| It is when you have four, five or six universities in a province,
some of them small, and there is a 1929 situation, that there might
be real risk where one would ask whether the province needs five
universities. The expectation of investors and underwriters in
those circumstances would be that there would probably be
consolidation. In the hospital sector, numerous hospitals were
merged. There was a reduction in the number of facilities, but the
merged entities took over responsibility. Does the risk exist? Yes.
Can I imagine a university going bankrupt? It is hard to imagine.
A more likely scenario is some kind of restructuring to reduce the
number of universities or merge them, so you would have
multiple campuses.
|
| Senator Tunney: I may not have explained my concern well
enough. For instance, in a 1929 situation, the university would not
stop operating but tuition fees might have to be substantially
reduced, maybe enrolment would be reduced, and many things
that keep the university flowing now might not be there. There
might be problems with the capital amount, if not with the interest
charges. Maybe that could be extended over a time.
|
| I admire the promptness with which you were able to put all
this together. You mentioned late 2000, and it is still not late 2001
and this whole deal is in place.
|
| Mr. Inskip: It took six months. We started January 6 and were
done in July. We could have done it a couple of months quicker,
but we wanted to go through all the different options. If the
university knew which option it wanted, it could have been done
more quickly.
|
| A private placement or a bond offering for a first time issuer
could be done in three months. For a university or any issuer that
is looking at doing it this way instead of a bank offering, a tax
deal or a securitization, an analysis needs to be done. Therefore,
six months is a reasonable time.
|
| Senator Tunney: I like the interest rate. I am a farmer, and I
know I could not get that, nor probably could I get a loan put
through in the short time you were able to do this, but I do not
deal with the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
|
| The Chairman: Notwithstanding that the senator does not deal
with the bank, I hope you will appreciate this exercise as a
rehearsal for the next shareholder's meeting.
|
| Senator Wiebe: Like Senator Stratton, I am not a banker or a
bond issuer, so could you explain to me what kind of assurances
there are. You mentioned that the revenue to pay the interest
would be generated from the residences or the parking lot or any
other source of income, and a certain portion of that would be set
aside each year to pay for the capital, to pay the $160 million
back in 30 years.
|
| What kind of assurances are there that the university is
handling the capital payback portion properly? You mentioned
that the university could invest that. Does that mean investment in
another building and another way to generate some money? What
kind of assurances do I, as a bondholder, have that that $160 mil
lion will be there 30 years from now?
|
| Mr. Inskip: I will answer generally and then specifically, in the
case of University of Toronto.
|
| In some cases, there is a formal sinking fund. For example, the
school boards have issued debt. They are, under the Education
Act in Ontario, required to either pay off the capital portion on an
annual basis, like a mortgage, or they have to set it aside in a
formal sinking fund. By law, it has to be audited. Many of them
have independent fund managers that manage that account. There
is a formal sinking fund, which is a legal requirement of the trust
indenture, and if it is not done, there is a breach. The bondholders
can say that they want all their money back today and take legal
action.
|
| In the case of the University of Toronto, there is no legal
requirement for a sinking fund. Many companies that issue debt
do not have any legal requirement for a sinking fund; therefore,
you are relying on the company's management, on its financial
prudence to put that money aside. In the case of University of
Toronto, it has outlined it intentions in its document, but no legal
requirement forces it to have a certain amount of money on a
certain date. As a bondholder, you are reliant on good
management, the strength of the credit, and the promise to pay.
|
| Senator Wiebe: Will there be any indication on a yearly basis
with an annual return by the university that there is some good
prudence being done? To find out in 28 years that in two years
from they will not be able to come up with the money - will
there be something on an annual basis that allows some comfort?
|
| Mr. Inskip: The university publishes an annual report, which is
audited, the same way it has an endowment fund. They
have $1.2 billion. It has an independent company that manages
these funds. I do not know what will be in its annual report next
year about money that has been set aside, whether it is
specifically identified. It is probably relatively small; perhaps not.
|
| If you think in the context of its operation, $160 million is
small. No prudent financial manager is going to say it has assets
that are ensured at 4.8 billion. Those are just the physical assets,
and there is an endowment. In terms of their operation, $160 mil
lion is a small portion. No prudent financial manager, let alone a
governing council consisting of one-third government appointees,
alumnae and others, is going to risk the credibility of an
institution like that when it is a small proportion of their whole
business. In the end, if it does not pay, investors can sue. No one
ever wants to be in a situation of defaulting. It will do everything
it can, like any other borrower, to make sure they meet any
covenant obligation, any reporting obligations, and, obviously, in
due course, the final payment obligation.
|
| At the end of the day, the bondholder has to assess the risk. If
there is not a formal fund, the bondholder has to determine the
risk he is prepared to take, whether he is he willing to buy the
bond and at what price? It is a risk he weighs. For a borrower that
has a lower credit quality, bondholders might want a formal
sinking fund or to get their money back on an annual basis.
|
| Senator Wiebe: It went on the market on July 1. Have they all
been sold?
|
| Mr. Inskip: They were sold within the same day. Everything
was sold the same day.
|
| Senator Mahovlich: University of Toronto has been around
since 1827. How many students would they have today?
|
| Mr. Inskip: The university has 55,000 students.
|
| Senator Mahovlich: Their alumnae must be in the hundreds of
thousands.
|
| Mr. Inskip: I do not know the number, but it has a very large
group of alumnae.
|
| Senator Mahovlich: Would not they be purchasing these
things, and if they are as old as Senator Wiebe, in 30 years they
will not be around?
|
| Senator Wiebe: I am going to surprise you, Senator
Mahovlich.
|
| Mr. Inskip: We encourage the university to send something
out, and suggest that rather than accepting an interest payment
they donate the interest payment to the university. That way they
would not need to actually pay anything.
|
| These were technically a private placement. There are various
securities laws. A public issue can be sold retail, but that requires
all kinds of reporting obligations on the university. We recommended they did not go that route, so it was done technically as a
private placement, which meant the minimum purchase amount
was $150,000. Therefore, virtually all of it was sold to retail as
opposed to alumni. If an alumnus wanted to buy $150,000 or
more, they could have.
|
| Senator Mahovlich: This is large to me but it is small to you.
Do you mind me asking what your commission was on this
transaction?
|
| Mr. Inskip: It is a small percentage of the annual average
hockey player's salary.
|
| The Chairman: I presume it is public knowledge, Mr. Inskip.
In addition to this indebtedness, what does the overall debt load of
the University of Toronto look like?
|
| Mr. Inskip: I will actually answer that question, and Senator
Mahovlich's question too, which is a matter of public record. The
underwriters received a fee of seven-tenths of 1 per cent, which
was distributed among the underwriters.
|
| The second question concerned the University of Toronto's
debt load. Their current debt load is something in the order
of $60 million plus the $160 million they have just borrowed.
|
| The Chairman: We are accustomed in this sector to reckon the
debt, as you well know, as a proportion of sometimes GDP,
sometimes of government revenues, and so forth. Given the assets
of the University of Toronto that you have referred to, a debt load
of approximately $220 million, the vast majority of it quite long
term, is not much of a burden, is it?
|
| Mr. Inskip: It is not, and that is one of the reasons for their
high credit rating. When credit rating agencies look at it, they will
look at the debt service as a percentage of their operating revenue.
Their plan is potentially to borrow $300 million - the $160
million now and, if they need it, an amount that would get to
$300 million. At that point, their debt service obligations as a
percentage of their annual operating revenues is about 3 per cent.
That is still very small.
|
| The Chairman: Did Standard & Poor's and Moody's rate the
University of Toronto in connection with this issue, or do they
routinely rate the universities?
|
| Mr. Inskip: They can do either. They can do what they call an
issuer rating. If a university phoned up and asked for a general
rating, they can get that. In the case of University of Toronto, they
technically have two ratings: one is a general issuer rating and the
other is the rating on the specific bond. They happen to be
identical. They are identical because the bond is a general
obligation bond, it is unsecured, and it is not limited to only
residence revenues or only tuition. It is a general obligation of the
whole university, and there is no one in front. If there were
another lender that had security on all the assets, then this bond
might be rated lower. They do not have that, so the ratings of the
university and the bond are identical.
|
| The Chairman: Do you know how many other universities
have been rated by the agencies?
|
| Mr. Inskip: In Canada, the University of Toronto has two
ratings; the University of British Columbia has one rating from
Moody's; and Brock University has one rating from Standard &
Poor's. There are no other public ratings.
|
| The Chairman: You have told us that you have been in touch
with a number of universities with a view to discussing the
possibility of bond issues of this kind. You have told us that you
have not seen the majority of the universities in Canada; however,
I presume you have seen a fair cross-section of the universities
from the point of view of size, financial capacity, location and so
forth.
|
| Mr. Inskip: To be honest, we focused more on the larger
universities, or the ones we thought had the largest need, and less
so on the smaller ones; however, we have spoken to a couple of
smaller ones.
|
| The Chairman: How many of those do you think might
qualify for the kind of rating that the University of Toronto
received?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Brock University is rated A low. There are ratings
of A low, A mid, A high, double A low, double A mid, double A
high. The University of Toronto is double A high by one rating
agency and double A mid by another. UBC is double A low, so
you have six notches in between. Brock is a smaller university.
UBC is the largest in B.C., and one of the larger, so it is probably
fair to say that most of the universities would get a rating in the A
category.
|
| The Chairman: Would that be most of the ones to whom you
have been talking?
|
| Mr. Inskip: There will be some in the double A category, such
as UBC, U of T, so there would be a limited number in that
category, and then there would be a large portion in generally the
A category. All of those are acceptable to the market. Those are
good investment grade ratings. They will have different prices
attached to each one, but they are all still good ratings.
|
| Senator Bolduc: Do you mean that there is a 25-basis-point
difference, or more than that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: No, the 25 basis points was the premium that you
would pay for going the traditional private placement versus a
public route.
|
| For the actual spread, you look at the university and you
question where its funding is coming from. In Ontario, investors
look at the Province of Ontario and they build a spread that way.
If we are talking about a university in another province, an
investor would look at the spread for that province, the
appropriate spread for that university given its credit rating, and
the other spreads available in the market at the time. Spreads
move up and down.
|
| Senator Bolduc: It is a bit like the school boards.
|
| Mr. Inskip: The school boards are different, in that if you look
at the school boards in Ontario they all have the same legislation.
They are all governed by the Education Act, as opposed to
universities all having their own legislation. They all have the
same funding formula. They are not a competitive business.
Universities compete. School boards will all have similar ratings.
|
| Senator Bolduc: They have municipal taxation.
|
| Mr. Inskip: In Ontario, they have taken that away. School
boards will have similar ratings; therefore, the credit spreads will
be fairly similar for a similar size bond issue. If you do a large
one, you will get a tighter spread than a small one, which is the
same for universities.
|
| The Chairman: To come back to the problem that preoccupies
Senator Moore, you say here that for universities to finance
significant levels of accumulated deferred maintenance an
incremental revenue source is required to repay the additional
borrowings. I believe you said something about that earlier but I
would like you to elaborate.
|
| Mr. Inskip: Earlier, when referring to a university's operations,
I mentioned four funds. The operating fund is the day-to-day
operating requirements. It has specific source of revenues. There
are operating grants, student fees, et cetera. Those typically
operate on a break-even basis, and they work hard to break-even.
Then you look at the capital account, and those are typically
project by project. You get government money and donations and
you build a building. The ancillary services are the residences and
parking lots. Those are typically full cost but break-even. Then
you have restricted funds, which are your endowments and your
donations, and they can only be used for specific purposes. When
you go through each of the accounts and you look at where the
money comes from, how it is used, there is no extra source of
money. You can look at how it can be increased. If we go to
sources, such as government operating capital grants, if that is
increased that is an incremental source that can be used but
governments may say no.
|
| Research grants and contracts are all for specific purposes, so
you cannot use that. In many cases, student tuition and fees are
regulated. Some universities, by nature of their reputation, could,
in theory, raise their tuition fees and students would still come.
Others could not. Most fees are regulated, not all; but if you raise
them above the regulated rate, the government reduces the grant
so you do not get any new revenues. Therefore, you cannot raise
money there.
|
| Investment income may be dedicated to a specific source, and
it is a function of what assets you have that actually earn return.
Sales and ancillary operations refer to parking lots, residences and
so on. The only way to raise money on those is to charge more
than they cost and use the excess to subsidize the building, but the
philosophy of most universities is not to cross-subsidize.
|
| Then there are donations. Usually people who donate designate
where their donations are to go, so that money is not available for
refurbishing buildings.
|
| In all those sources, there is no obvious source of money that
you could use for accumulated depreciation.
|
| The Chairman: You are not encouraging us to think that a
bond issue is the way to tackle Senator Moore's problem.
|
| Mr. Inskip: A bond issue is really nothing more than a
financial instrument to bridge timing differences. If I want to get a
mortgage on my house, the bank will give me money today in the
expectation that I will earn money over the next 25 years to pay it
back. It is really just a timing difference. The key issue in terms of
deferred maintenance is that if you could identify a source of
money to come in in the future you could borrow today. That
would not be a problem, or you could give cash today. If that
source could be donations or government grants, you could take
the cash and build it. If those sources were not there but you
wanted to promise it for the next 25 years, like school boards did,
under that scenario you could borrow.
|
| The Chairman: You, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and, I suppose, other institutions are getting ready to move
into this field. It is clear to you that there is a need and there is a
market?
|
| You have been analyzing the financing and the administration
of our universities. Feel free to make whatever comments you like
about that. In particular, I wonder whether you have come to any
conclusion about the regulatory framework in the sense of the
kind of conditionality you were talking about earlier where
governments insist that a certain percentage of tuition fees go to a
particular purpose or whatever. Have you come to any con
clusions about the wisdom of the constraints upon the budgeting
process of universities?
|
| Mr. Inskip: I do not think so. I suspect they vary across the
provinces. I do understand the need to have certain restrictions.
Governments want to ensure that money designated for a certain
purpose is used for that purpose. If the objective is to educate
students, you want to ensure that the money is used for the
appropriate reasons. School boards have money for classroom
purposes, money for building new facilities and money for repair
and maintenance. That works well because a lender knows that
there are restrictions. They cannot take all the money from the
capital envelope and grant a 15 per cent salary increase while
being unable to pay their debt.
|
| There is definitely value in restrictions from a bondholder's
point of view and probably from the public's point of view, but I
cannot comment on whether the existing restrictions are the most
appropriate ones or not.
|
| Senator Moore: Mr. Inskip, in response to Senator Stratton's
questions about the interest rates that might be payable and the
type of financing that would be available, you indicated that the
minimum appropriate sum would probably be $100 million to do
a public bond offering such as your company did. Less than that
you thought would be a private placement situation, at least 25
basis points above that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: The spread over Canada would be a reflection of
the credit risk, the liquidity and the size of the offering. In the
case of the University of Toronto, we are talking about 65 basis
points. For another university, the appropriate spread may be 100,
if it were a similar size issue. If that university is lower rated, their
spread is 100 and they only wanted to do $25 million, you might
add 25 on top of that to reflect the fact that it is an non-liquid
offering, which is difficult to sell and you are selling to selected
universities. In that case, the spread might be 125.
|
| It is a function of what the appropriate credit spread is for a
large liquid offering for that university, and then there would be a
premium for a smaller transaction.
|
| Senator Moore: In the area of 25 to 100 would happen
through a conventional bank loan?
|
| Mr. Inskip: On page 1, I outline the three. You could do a
bank loan as one option. I mentioned that between $25 million
and $100 million, you could do a private placement. Not all
investment dealers will apply the same size criteria. One
investment dealer might say that if it is under $50 million it is too
small.
|
| Senator Moore: What would be the range of interest rates on
something like that?
|
| Mr. Inskip: It depends on the issuer and on whether it is
secured or unsecured. The University of Toronto is at 65. That is
the tightest you will get for any Canadian university. It will go up
beyond that. A 10-year deal is different than a 30-year deal. There
are many variables.
|
| Senator Moore: It is certainly going to be a lot or more
expensive.
|
| Mr. Inskip: I do not know whether it is a lot more expensive.
If, broadly speaking, it is in the 7 to 8 per cent range, is that really
expensive? I do not know. There is no question that any university
offering in Canada will have a higher spread than the University
of Toronto.
|
| Senator Moore: With respect to financing the accumulated
deferred maintenance, you have indicated that it is not something
that would be attractive in the bond market. Where would you see
that? If you were running a university with a $50-million need,
where would you try to find that money, given what you have told
us about the parameters and the considerations?
|
| Mr. Inskip: The lack of attractiveness is not specific to the
bond market. Any lender, whether a bank or an individual
institution, will want to know how it is going to be repaid. If you
have an accumulated depreciation, borrowing is not a magic
solution. Borrowing the money and fixing it up may not create
additional revenue, because you have just maintained the assets in
the condition that they should have been. You now have exactly
the same revenues as you had before, but you also have a debt
service obligation. You are going to have to say, "How am I going
to pay that?"
|
| There are two possibilities. One possibility is that one has more
revenue coming in. I would look at all my revenue sources. I
would lobby the governments to see if I can get more government
money.
|
| Ideally, one would lobby the government for it to fund 100 per
cent; then one would say, "If I come up with a dollar, will the
government come up with a dollar on a joint kind of basis?" That
may be done through fundraising. The other portion may be
achieved through any operating cost savings. There is probably
not a lot of operating cost savings in the system because funding
has generally decreased in the 1990s. Everybody has already gone
through and said, "What can we cut?" They have already done
that process. It probably means some combination of government
grant and donations. However, that is tough. Everybody likes to
cut ribbons. They do not like to fund deferred maintenance.
|
| There are people who give on an unrestricted basis. Using
unrestricted donations, combined with some kind of a government
support, might be a combination that works.
|
| Senator Moore: You have mentioned the word "government"
several times in your response. No one is going to write
a $3.6 billion cheque, but there may be ways that donors can be
encouraged to donate with tax breaks. It is a huge problem. I am
from Nova Scotia. I know the universities in Nova Scotia and in
the other Atlantic provinces. I know the situation, from the report
mentioned by our chairman. Some of the universities in Quebec
and Ontario have needs in the hundreds of millions. The
immediate need identified is $1 billion, apparently for things that
must be done yesterday. I am struggling with how we do that.
|
| I sit on the board of St. Mary's University and all the things
you have covered here are things we look at. How can these
situations be handled? The universities have faced cutbacks in
funding. They have had increased demand from their students.
Research monies do not beget new facilities.
|
| The committee is hoping for some jewels of wisdom, so that
we can pass them on to the powers that be.
|
| Mr. Inskip: Unfortunately, the bond market does not provide
any jewels of wisdom. Instead of writing a $3.6 billion cheque,
you could say, "I am willing to write a bunch of smaller cheques
so the bond market can lend." You write a cheque this year and
next year and the year after; therefore, you are writing smaller
cheques. This is just a timing difference. Reducing the size of the
cheque that you have to write in any given year is one solution.
However, it does not reduce the accumulated size of the cheque.
In fact, the size of the cheque might be bigger because you have
interest that accumulates over time.
|
| Presumably, there may be opportunity for cooperative effort
with the university. With my son, I always say, "If you do this, I
will do this." Obviously, the simple answer is for universities to
turn to governments and say, "We need all this money." Frankly,
they probably do need a lot of the money and there is probably
limited opportunity for them to contribute, but maybe there is
some combination of fundraising.
|
| Senator Moore: It still comes back to identifying the source of
repayment.
|
| Mr. Inskip: Absolutely. All the bond market will do is to grant
you funds on a timing differential basis. If you need the money
now and want to pay next year, that is okay, but you need to
identify what that source is.
|
| The Chairman: In your travels, did you come across evidence
of serious accumulated deferred maintenance at institutions that
you visited or with whom you were in contact?
|
| Mr. Inskip: Not physically, although had I looked around I am
sure that might have been the case. Certainly, in speaking with the
universities, several of them had said, "We have X-hundred
million of accumulated depreciation and it is a concern to us. We
cannot borrow - how would we repay the funds?" It is an issue,
as you all know, for universities. That has really been the extent
of our involvement, to acknowledge that that is a concern they
have.
|
| The Chairman: Do you think it was a management problem at
the universities?
|
| Mr. Inskip: In terms of the accumulated -
|
| The Chairman: Yes.
|
| Mr. Inskip: I am not qualified to answer that.
|
| The Chairman: We all know the universities have been under
serious financial constraints for quite a few years.
|
| We will have an opportunity to discuss it with them.
|
| I thank Mr. Inskip for his attendance this evening.
|
| The committee adjourned.
|