Corpus Christi to sell bonds as water woes weigh on ratings
BY SourceMedia | MUNICIPAL | 05/12/26 03:47 PM EDTThe Corpus Christi City Council on Tuesday gave final approval to the issuance of up to $728 million of bonds in the wake of rating downgrades and negative outlooks spurred by depleted water supplies.
The drought-stricken Texas city's upcoming debt consists of no more than $500 million of utility system senior lien revenue bonds for water and wastewater projects, $113.17 million of refunding bonds, as well as $115 million of general obligation bonds tapping voter-approved authorization from 2022 and 2024.
"The city is collaborating with its financial advisor to determine the optimal timing for entering the market to price the bonds," a statement on Tuesday from Corpus Christi's Finance Department said. "Additionally, we are assessing various underwriters for the upcoming transactions."
A timeline presented to the city council last week showed the bonds pricing in August.
A Level 1 emergency ? indicating the city's water system is 180 days from supply not meeting demand ? has been projected for September.
Previous projections had the onset of a water supply emergency as soon as May, in November, or never. Corpus Christi Water, a city agency, is the primary water supplier for a seven-county region, which is experiencing stage three drought conditions that triggered water-use restrictions.
While the city has been scrambling to boost water supplies, the looming crisis is weighing on its credit ratings.
Last week, S&P Global Ratings downgraded the city's utility system revenue debt rating two notches to A and placed it on CreditWatch indicating the potential for another downgrade over the next six months "if Corpus Christi's acute drought conditions worsen and result in a prolonged Level 1 emergency that pressures its operations, financial performance, rate-raising practices, and economic activity."
Moody's Ratings, which downgraded Corpus Christi's GO rating to A1 from Aa2 and utility system rating to A1 from Aa3 in December, launched a review last month for another round of potential downgrades.
Fitch Rating has assigned negative outlooks to the city's AA issuer and AA-minus utility system ratings.
City officials have said $1 billion of projects aimed at producing 76 million gallons of water daily are underway. Long-term projects being explored involve seawater desalination.
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