Double Barreled

Categories: Stocks, Accounting

The kind of gun Daddy shows off to your date on prom might. It's is also a municipal bond term.

A double-barreled muni bond is backed both by specific revenues (like bridge tolls) as well as by the credit and good faith (and taxes) of the municipality. Think: a county beach that charges admission.

See: Double Barreled Bond.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are General Obligation, Re...92 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what are general obligation, revenue and double-barreled

00:07

bonds? well they're all flavors of muni bonds and they refer to how the promise

00:13

to pay is backed up by the city issuing the bonds, you know to raise money. ever [ ice cream flavors in a case]

00:18

been to a town hall meeting? well they usually have lots of retired people

00:20

attending and lousy coffee a lot of blue hair rinses and dentures or something

00:25

like that, and yet municipalities are the backbone infrastructure of our country

00:29

they build parks and buildings and sewers and garbage collection systems

00:33

and so on. in other words the things that make us go or you know deal with us [garbage truck and bathroom pictured]

00:38

after we go. boiling it down there are really only two flavors of muni bonds-

00:42

general obligation bonds these things a municipal bond where interest payments

00:46

and principle repayment are back with will pay the creditor the issuing

00:49

municipality, and revenue bonds to whom belong on the pleasures of

00:51

revenue from the amount borrowed that. all right well the state or local issuer

00:55

assures repayment through Full Faith and Credit, but there's a huge difference [bond pictured]

01:00

between these two types of bonds .let's think about how this works on a national

01:04

level with Treasuries. Full Faith and Credit means that the US government

01:09

unconditionally promises to pay all interest in principle even if it has to

01:12

run the process 24 by 7 to print enough money to do so. so that's at the federal

01:17

level for Treasuries. like t bonds t-bills T notes that kind of stuff.

01:21

municipalities work different though because they're just local. they can't [t-bonds, bills and notes on a table]

01:26

print money like you have any Los Angeles dollars handy with you? yeah

01:30

they'll make a nice fire someday. ok so think about Munis as a little bit

01:35

different here. all right. so let's think about general obligation bonds. these are

01:39

general obligations of the city to pay interest in principal from taxes that

01:43

the issuer can levy on its citizens, that's its local taxes on its local

01:49

citizens, and they get a piece of income tax property tax sales tax sin tax you [check out scanner adds taxes]

01:54

know cigarettes and booze. if there's a way to extract a tithe a municipality

01:58

well they actually might try. breathing tacks what do you think? well

02:02

The Full Faith and Credit is the issuer's unconditional promise to pay

02:06

the interest and the principal unless you know they can't generate enough tax

02:10

revenue to do so or even go bankrupt. and in fact that bizarro land phenomenon is

02:16

starting to happen more and more as cities go bankrupt all over the country [map of US- bankrupt cities marked]

02:19

or at least they're starting to. anyway since general obligation bonds are

02:23

backed by The Full Faith and Credit of the city , those responsible for the full

02:28

faith in such credit must approve their issuance, and who might those be?

02:32

well the citizens of the locality that's issuing them, that would be you. you

02:37

people you live there you have to approve the issuance of a general

02:41

obligation bond because it affects you. okay so that means your whole city sits

02:45

behind a general obligation. in a revenue bond things are different. revenue bonds [city shown with networking lines showing connections]

02:51

are more risky because they're backed up only by the revenues of a given project.

02:56

right they don't offer Full Faith and Credit comfort .payment on these bonds

03:00

comes only from the revenue generated from what the bonds were used to create.

03:05

bonds to build a toll bridge are a good example here. the issuer can estimate

03:09

fairly accurately the revenue that will be generated from the tolls you know

03:13

based on how much traffic and five bucks every time you drive across the bridge,

03:16

and then it's up to the investor to decide if that revenue will be

03:20

sufficient to service the debt on the bond .okay got that ? so that's a revenue [woman frowns, man smiles]

03:24

bond riskier then a general obligation bonds. it's backed up by only one thing. the

03:29

bridge fails well you're out of luck. okay moving. on a hybrid mutt formed from both

03:33

of these concepts is a double-barreled bond ,which is backed by both taxes and

03:39

revenues .think of a County Beach that charges admission. got it? so it's gonna

03:45

have a general obligation of the coastline and everything around it but

03:48

generally speaking paying back the interest is supposed to come from [coastline pictured]

03:52

charging you that 20 bucks it takes to park there all day, and you come back to

03:56

a hot car that burns your well nevermind. all right so quite a trio here: general

04:00

obligation bonds pretty safe backed by the whole city revenue bonds backed by a

04:05

one thing like that toll bridge double-barreled bonds that are

04:08

kind of backed by both. yeah. so they're quite a trio. but if they're the Destiny's [bonds listed from safest to riskiest]

04:12

Child of muni bonds. well which one is queen bee?

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)