Bonds

Oklahoma gets Moody’s upgrade to Aa1

Moody’s Ratings lifted Oklahoma’s issuer rating a notch to Aa1 with a stable outlook on Wednesday, citing the state’s strong fund balances, low leverage, and conservative budget management. 

The upgrade is the first for Oklahoma since Moody’s, Fitch Ratings, and S&P Global Ratings  revised their outlooks for the state to positive from stable beginning last year.

“The rating upgrade is a reflection of the hard work the state, Gov. (Kevin) Stitt and the legislature have done to build and maintain a stable financial foundation while navigating challenges and continuing to foster economic growth,” Oklahoma Treasurer Todd Russ said.

Oklahoma Treasurer’s Office

Moody’s upgrade affects certain lease revenue bonds issued through the state’s development finance and capital improvement authorities, according to the rating agency, which said Oklahoma has about $1.9 billion of governmental debt outstanding.

“The issuer rating upgrade to Aa1 is based on Oklahoma’s very strong fund balances and dedicated reserves alongside extremely low leverage and fixed costs from debt, pensions, and retiree healthcare,” Moody’s said in a report. “These balance sheet strengths alongside conservative budgeting practices, such as an appropriation limitation of 95% of expected revenues, allow for vast financial flexibility.”

Fiscally balanced operations are expected despite Oklahoma’s recent elimination of the state sales tax on groceries, while economic concentration in the volatile energy sector is the state’s primary credit challenge, the report added.

Oil and natural gas production tax revenue fell 44.3% to $483 million in fiscal 2024 from fiscal 2023’s $1.09 billion.

“The rating upgrade is a reflection of the hard work the state, Gov. (Kevin) Stitt and the legislature have done to build and maintain a stable financial foundation while navigating challenges and continuing to foster economic growth,” Oklahoma Treasurer Todd Russ said in a statement. 

He added that as the state “continues its commitment to economic growth and financial stability, we look forward to sharing notable achievements like real GDP growth and improved resident income levels with the rating agencies.” 

As of the end of 2023, Oklahoma had no general obligation bonds outstanding, according to the annual state debt report.

Articles You May Like

Frank Auerbach and the unexamined life
Fed’s Waller leaning toward rate cut but open to a ‘skip’
Biden embarks on first and final Africa trip as US president with Angola visit
Mexico makes largest fentanyl bust as Trump’s tariff threat looms
California broker to pay 529 rollover customers in FINRA settlement