City of London launches US private placements
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City of London launches US private placements

City of London

The City of London Corporation, via its endowment fund The City’s Cash, has launched first US private placements (PP), roadshowing the prospective notes this week and next. The funds will be partly used to finance the consolidation of the Billingsgate, Smithfield and Spitalfields wholesale food markets at a new site in Dagenham, Essex.

Lloyds Bank and Santander were mandated to raise the private debt, according to several market sources. The tenors will be fixed during marketing, though the maturities are likely to be 10-30 years. The amount is also not yet fixed, though one market source said he thought it would be £200m-£300m.

Lloyds and Santander both declined to comment, as did the City of London Corporation.

In May in its draft capital strategy the Corporation, the local government body responsible for London’s Square Mile area, said it is facing “a funding requirement of unprecedented scale”.

It wants to raise £3.36bn ($4.24bn) in the next few years to finance several infrastructure projects, including relocating the Museum of London, refurbishing the Guildhall, and moving the three wholesale food markets to a new site.

However, only a small part of that will come from borrowing.

Though the money set to be raised in the US PP market is not earmarked for a specific project, it is thought that much of it will finance relocating the markets.

The Corporation includes the City Fund, the arm responsible for local authority financing, and the City’s Cash, which is the endowment arm. The City Fund will borrow from the Public Works Loans Board (PWLB), part of the UK Debt Management Office that lends to local authorities. 

However, the City's Cash will turn to banks and institutional lenders for investment.

According to the Corporation’s annual investment strategy, the City Fund’s capital expenditure is rising, from £49.5m in 2017-18 and £117m in 2018-19, to £211m this year, £183m in 2020-21 and £286m in 2021-22. 

Its capital financing requirement — a measure of its outstanding debt — will also grow from £44.6m in 2017-18, £46.9m in 2018-19, £127m this year, £225m in 2020-21, and £400m in 2021-22.

The City’s Cash, meanwhile, will have capex of £59.3m in 2017-18, £201m in 2018-19, £174m this year, £156m in 2020-21, and £139m in 2021-22. 

Its cumulative borrowing requirement will grow from zero in 2017-18 to £125m, £231m, £316m and then £428m in 2021-22.

For both the City Fund and the City’s Cash, the forecast borrowing requirements are similar to the operational limits followed by the City, which are in both cases £100m lower than the authorised maximum limits. This is to ensure the City is not constrained by a debt ceiling if a debt restructuring opportunity arises.

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