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Copyright © 2017 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved. New Year, New Charter School Facilities Knowledge Webinar 2/16/2017

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Page 1: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2017 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

New Year, New Charter

School Facilities

Knowledge

Webinar2/16/2017

Page 2: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome

Page 3: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

3Copyright © 2017 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

WELCOME

Stuart Ellis, President and CEOCharter School Capital

Larry Rieder, PresidentCharter School Property Solutions

Page 4: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

4Copyright © 2017 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

WHAT WE’LL COVER

• Market overview and impact

• Balancing facilities dreams and budget realities

• Understanding and choosing a funding structure

• Funding approval - keys areas of focus

• Project execution and timing

• Other considerations

Agenda

Presentation will be available to download athttp://charterschoolcapital.org/webinars

Page 5: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Market Overview

Page 6: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

6Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CURRENT MARKET IMPACT

• Lack of facilities access is an obstacle to growth

– With more than 3 million charter students nationwide, there are still 1 million on

waitlists

– 7,000 charters in U.S. yet many have suboptimal facilities hindering growth

– With more financing options available today, charters can expand enrollment

• Charter financing options have expanded, but markets have been recently “disrupted”

– Long term and short term rates have been rising

– Refinancing and locking in long term financing could be beneficial

– Turbulent markets make for uncertainty that should be taken into consideration

• Alternatives for your specific situation vary depending upon

– CMO vs. EMO vs. individual school

– Refinance vs. expansion

– Long-term lease vs. bank financing vs. bond

Page 7: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Facilities Funding Structures

Page 8: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

8Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CONSIDERATIONS

What can we afford? What is required?

Existing reserves Academic mission

Ongoing % of revenue Growth plan for attendance

Fundraising – public/private Specialty requirements

Funding alternatives Local considerations

Want – need – budget

Page 9: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

9Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

FACILITIES BUDGETING

How much can we afford?

$0mm $2mm $4mm $6mm $8mm $10mm$0mm

$2mm

$4mm

$6mm

$8mm

$10mm

$12mm

$14mm

$16mm

$18mm

$20mm

Facilities Budget vs. School Revenues10% Facilities Cost/Rev 15% Facilities Cost/Rev 20% Facilities Cost/Rev

Annual School Revenue

Potential Project Budget

Page 10: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

10Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

AVAILABLE OPTIONS VARY

# of Years of Operation

$ Size of Financing

Large

Small0 10+

DeveloperLong-term Lease

BankLong-term Lease

BondLong-term Lease

Bank

Short-term LeaseLong-term Lease

Developer

Alternative capital sources expand with school/network size and maturity1st Renewed Charter

~$7 -10mm

Page 11: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

11Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CONSIDERATIONS

• Control versus Ownership

– Control is critical to maintain stability, growth and financial predictability

– Ownership is an investment

• Evaluate total dollars spent not percentage rates

• Cost is not just money, but time and opportunity

– Risk of funding effort failure

– Total elapsed time to complete funding

• Structural constraints and impact on future options

What to consider in a financing structure

How do different options compare for my particular school?

Page 12: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

12Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

FINANCING OPTIONS

Criteria Cash Bank Bond Long Term Lease

Cash needed to close

$7M $2.1 – 2.8M ~$200 – 500K $0 – 100K

Annual cost (example)

$0 $350 – 700K $600 – 800K $630 – 700K

Underwriting None Min 5 yrsSurplusAssets + Revenue

Min 3 yrsDebt coverageSurplusRating?

No minimumAcademic successFlexible

Security interest None Real estate + all assets

Real estate + all assets

None

Growth options Cash = Build Refinance risk Rate risk

10 yr minimum Refinance riskCovenants

Scalable, expandable

Considerations/challenges

Reserves? 20+/- 40% equity 5-20yr term and amortization

100% financing Transaction costs “Road show”

100% financing No amortizationBuy back

Note: $7 million project example; bank assumptions 6-8% interest on debt, 30-40% equity, 10-20yr amortization; bond assumptions 6-9% interest rate, 18% transaction cost/additional financing, 30yr amortization; lease options assumptions 100% financing, 9-10% cap rate.

Page 13: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

13Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

THE BOND MARKET SOLUTION

• Bond market financing of charters has increased as the charter school market

has grown

• Bonds fit well for larger, more mature charters

• Other alternatives exist today to serve the remaining 88% of the charter

school market

Since 1990s, ~12% of charters nationwide received bond market funding

Source: 2015 LISC report, School Bond Issuance: A Complete History Vol 3

Page 14: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

14Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

EXAMPLE - PROJECT $5MM

Security Interest

Growth Options

Underwriting

Annual cost

Cash needed

Comparison for illustrative purposes only. Rankings are based on how hypothetical “School A” might view its options based on unique attributes and objectives.

Criteria Cash BondTraditional Bank

Long Term Lease

Page 15: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

15Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

EXAMPLE - PROJECT $20MM

Security Interest

Growth Options

Underwriting

Annual cost

Cash needed

Comparison for illustrative purposes only. Rankings are based on how hypothetical “School A” might view its options based on unique attributes and objectives.

Criteria Cash BondTraditional Bank

Long Term Lease

Page 16: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Funding Approval and Execution

Page 17: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

17Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

PASSING THE TEST

• Enrollment – Stable or increasing enrollment– Strong demand – waiting list, expanding grades, market growth

• School / Leadership History– Experienced leadership team with proven track record– Market leading academic performance(local peers, district, state)

• Numbers have to “pencil”– Sound financial performance and pro forma– Debt service / lease payment target < 20% of total revenue– Valuation of target property

• Governance issues– Authorizer relationship– Operational excellence and adherence to internal controls

Funding structure requirements

Page 18: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

18Copyright © 2017 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

FACILITY CONSIDERATIONS

• Plan ahead– Collaborate with the programmatic side of the organization– Lock in a stable leadership and management team– Understand academic performance– Plan financial performance measures

• Watch the market– Keep an eye on rates and available products– Understand the real estate opportunities and challenges– Have realistic expectations

• Line up internal resources– Legal, financial and academic

• Prepare for the deal– Work with a partner – Charter school experience – Line up your financing ahead of time

Four key components

Page 19: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

19Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

PROJECT EXECUTION

Execution requires significant time

Plan Construct Design Acquire

Space Programming

Features Budget Timeline Charter

approvals

Select team Design/build

options GC bidding Bldg. permit Timing; big

bang or phased

Locate Site Acquisition Use Permit Land prep

Move dirt Raise the

roof Control:

Project manager or owners rep

Fund

Cash Bank Bond Lease

Page 20: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

20Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

KEY CONSIDERATIONS

• Full-service resource–Funding partner / structure–Commercial developer–Architect–General Contractor

• Flexible / Adaptive to your unique project• Guarantor / Sponsor / Investor• Access to working / growth capital• Total cost of ownership (now and later)

Choose a strong partner

Page 21: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

21Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

OTHER OPTIONS

• Long-term lease

• State bond

• CDFI

• Private bond

• Cash reserves

• New market tax credits

• EB-5

• USDA (rural development funds)

Options expand as organization matures

Page 22: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Questions?

Page 23: New Year,  New Charter School Facilities Knowledge

23Copyright © 2015 Charter School Capital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Thank YouPresentation available at: Charterschoolcapital.org/Webinars

Stuart Ellis [email protected]

Larry [email protected]