The Office
of the City Controller today turns a new page in
its bid for a paperless office. The City conducted
its first sale of $160 million in Tax Revenue Anticipation
Notes over the Internet using MuniAuction, a municipal
bond auction site created by a coalition of former
financial advisors and investment bankers. The sale
was managed by city's Finance Working Group, which
includes members of the Controller's staff and the
administration.
According
to Jim Moncur, Director of Investment and Debt Management
for the City Controller, this method of selling
the City's bonds introduces elements competition,
transparency, and speed that were not present in
the sealed bid format previously used by the City.
The auction
system allows buyers to bid against each other on
an electronic platform, which includes competition.
The bidding process is observable by the issuer,
which ensures the integrety of the auction, and
can reveal information as to the market's reception
of the issue. The use of the internet greatly speeds
up the selling process. A bidder can wait until
just before the deadline, submit their bid, and
know almost immediately if they have won the auction.
This reduces the need for a bidder to add a cushion
to their price to protect against adverse market
moves while the issuer determines who won. The result
of all of these factors should be better prices
for the City's bonds and lower costs to the taxpayers.
Use of
the internet to sell bonds has other appealing advantages.
Printing and mailing of the offering documents,
which typically run more than 100 pages, has traditionally
been a costly and time consuming process. With these
documents "online" there are no printing costs.
Several firms which expressed interest in the City's
bonds just one and two days before the sale were
able to download offering documents within minutes
of their inquiry. "I believe the City had more participation
than it otherwise would have if the offering documents
were not available on the internet", Moncur said.
"The result is wider distribution of the City's
bonds, which again encourages better prices and
lower costs."
Controller
Garcia expressed satisfaction with the innovation.
"As one of the largest issuers of municipal bonds
in the country, the Office of the City Controller
is committed to participating in new technology
that serves the best intrests of our constituants.
This is another terrific example of performance
government in action.