Participation Certificates – Bonds – and the “Shadow Banking” System – Hocus-Pocus Financing – Demystified.

The shadow banking system is a term for the collection of non-bank financial intermediaries that provide services similar to traditional commercial banks. Former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke provided a definition in April 2012: “Shadow banking, as usually defined, comprises a diverse set of institutions and markets that, collectively, carry out traditional banking functions–but do so outside, or in ways only loosely linked to, the traditional system of regulated depository institutions. Examples of important components of the shadow banking system include securitization vehicles, asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) conduits, money market mutual funds, markets for repurchase agreements (repos), investment banks, and mortgage companies.” Shadow banking has grown in importance to rival traditional depository banking and was a primary factor in the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007-2008 and global recession that followed.[1]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_banking_system

A Participation Certificate (PC) (also known as a Certificate of Participation) is a financial instrument, a form of financing, used by municipal or government entities which allows an individual to buy a share of the lease revenue of an agreement made by these entities. It is different from a bond issued by these agencies since participation certificates are secured by lease revenues. Municipal and government entities use this instrument to circumvent restrictions that might exist on the amount of debt in other forms they are able to take on.

Participation certificates are a new form of credit instrument whereby banks can raise funds from other banks and other central bank approved financial institutions to ease liquidity. In this case banks have the option to share their credit asset(s) with other banks by issuing participation certificates. With this participation approach, banks and financial institutions come together either on risk sharing or non-risk sharing basis. While providing short term funds, participation certificates can also be used to reduce risk. The rate at which these certificates can be issued will be negotiable depending on the interest rate scenario.

On June 14, 2013, the city of Detroit announced, as a policy move to preserve cash during its financial crisis, that it would not be making payments [1] on a certificates of participation it had issued.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Participation_certificate

At its meeting on October 19, the Tustin City Council approved selling bonds in an amount not to exceed $45 million dollars to complete financing Tustin Ranch Road from Walnut Avenue south to Warner Avenue.

The bonds will have no financial impact on the City’s budget, as all
payments of principal and interest will be paid solely from revenues generated by development at Tustin Legacy. The bonds will also be used to fund other major infrastructure projects at Tustin Legacy.

Funds to complete the road will come from a variety of funding sources,
including these bond proceeds and funds from the City of Irvine allocated to mitigate traffic impacts from its adjacent development, the Irvine Business Complex. No monies from the general fund will be used.

https://www.tustinca.org/departments/citymanager/releases/releases/182.pdf

To provide for business start-up opportunities and expansion of existing businesses, the Tustin Community Redevelopment Agency provides access to a variety of financing programs authorized by either the federal or state government, as well as programs provided by other private, public and non-profit agencies. The Agency also provides technical assistance, educational support and other similar needs of a non-financial nature to the business community. A brief summary of the possible assistance and incentive programs that can be made available are as follows:
Zoning incentives to encourage economic development through:

Floor area ratio bonuses
Allowance for mixed use projects
Combining of public and private uses
Planned Unit Developments
Density bonuses
Assistance in land assembly:
Land banking
Eminent domain
Land swaps
Land write downs
Assistance with construction of infrastructure improvements.
Provision of technical assistance.
Provision of developer unique financing opportunities, consisting of:
Tax Increment Financing
20% Housing Set-Aside Funds
Special Purpose Financing Districts
1911, 1913, 1915 Acts
Mello Roos Community Facilities Act of 1982
Landscape and Lighting District of 1972
Revenue bonds
Lease Revenue bonds
Tax Allocation bonds
Lease Purchase financing
Industrial Development bonds
Certificates of Participation
Mortgage Revenue Bonds
Loans and Advances
Leases
Land Disposition Proceeds
Rental Payments
Participation in future cash flows

https://www.tustinca.org/departments/redev/busassist.html

Certificates of Participation (COPs). A form of lease revenue bond that permits the investor to participate in a stream of lease payments, installment payments or loan payments relating to the acquisition or construction of specific equipment, land or facilities. In theory the certificate holder could foreclose on the equipment or facility financed in the event of default, but so far no investor has ended up owning a piece of a school house or a storm drainage system. A very popular financing device in California since Proposition 13 because COP issuance does not require voter approval. COPs are not viewed legally as “debt” because payment is tied to an annual appropriation by the government body. As a result, COPs are seen by investors as providing weaker security and often carry ratings that are a notch or two below an agency’s general obligation rating.

https://www.emuni.com/glossary.php

A day after Angels owner Arte Moreno said negotiations with Anaheim over the Angel Stadium lease are going “backward,” a consultant to the club confirmed that the Angels met with Tustin officials about a new ballpark

A day after Angels owner Arte Moreno said negotiations with Anaheim over the Angel Stadium lease are going “backward,” a consultant to the club confirmed that the Angels met with Tustin officials about a new ballpark.
“We had an initial meeting with Tustin,” consultant Marie Garvey said Saturday. “It’s the very beginning. It’s the very early stages.”
Garvey, hired by the Angels to assist with lease negotiations, said the talks took place earlier this week. She did not specify what location in…

https://www.ocregister.com/articles/angels-601995-city-negotiations.html

“Baseball….Does anyone really care anymore?

I say this after I saw a SC clip of a Nats game that Strasburg (last years savior) was pitching…..The entire chunk of seating in view from the behind the pitcher camera was empty…

Couple this was tons of other games where there are huge chunks of outfield seats left empty…

Do the masses really care about baseball at all anymore?

Do you care about MLB anymore?

I can honestly say I have not watched a whole baseball game in about 6 years, and I don’t see myself doing so anytime soon.”

https://www.operationsports.com/forums/pro-baseball/552213-baseball-does-anyone-really-care-anymore.html

Anaheim California – It’s More Than Just Disneyland – It’s Home to the World’s Smartest Police Dogs.

The Anaheim Police Department has hired 13 officers and focused on building ties with the community since a downtown riot last year revealed the broken relationship between Latinos and city government, according to a report presented to the City Council Tuesday night.

The report is intended to provide an update on the Police Department’s improvements since the summer of 2012, when more than 1,000 demonstrators, most Latino, confronted officers after fatal police shootings of two young men.

Newly hired officers are focused on “community policing, gang enforcement and youth services,” the report states.

Critics of the police department say officers disrespect most youth in Latino working-class neighborhoods by assuming they all are gang members, thus undermining a fragile trust with a community that has historically suffered at the hands of police.

Many residents have demanded a civilian police oversight panel as the means to restore trust with the neighborhoods. Mayor Tom Tait has pushed for such a board, but his colleagues have so far resisted efforts to establish one.

The report presented Tuesday lists a number of operational enhancements to address the plight of these neighborhoods.

They include:

Mandatory audio recording of uniformed police officers. Video recording is in the testing phases.

Modifying vehicles to better prevent dogs from accidentally escaping“. LOL

Before last summer’s riot, a police dog was released into a crowd of protesters and overturned a baby stroller. The image was caught on video and shown in news broadcasts.

Increased foot patrols in neighborhoods, as requested by residents.

Continued review of transferring police officers from some areas to others.

Some residents have been angered by the presence of officers in neighborhoods where they have been involved in fatal shootings.

Development of a neighborhood advisory board.

The panel will include residents, who will meet monthly with the police chief to discuss community concerns and building trust.

The establishment of an anonymous complaint portal on the Police Department website.

Compilation of a brochure in coordination with the American Civil Liberties Union that gives residents an understanding of “what members of the public should expect, and what is expected of them during a contact with an officer.”

Assistance in setting up neighborhood watch programs.

Making Cops 4 Kids, a police program for youth, mobile and accessible to children of Anna Drive and Guinida Lane, two neighborhoods hit particularly hard by fatal shootings and gang activity.

Implementing ”Coffee with a Cop” in English and Spanish so residents and police officers can interact in informal settings.

Referring children traumatized by fatal shootings to programs that could ease the psychological impacts.

Expanding the Gang Reduction and Intervention Partnership program, a community-based initiative that involves teachers, police, case managers and others to prevent at-risk youth from joining gangs.

More narrowly defining gang injunctions to address only gang members named in the civil restraining order.

https://www.voiceofoc.org/oc_north/article_c44ae094-1635-11e3-82c0-001a4bcf887a.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmGhdDgx3_w

 

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