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Rutgers Bond Rating Up - B1G affiliation cited

RC1991

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Saw this linked on the Rutgers alumni twitter feed - interesting to note one of the reasons for the upgrade was Rutgers joining the B1G.


Rutgers University rating outlook revised to stable from negative
BY SOURCEMEDIA | CORPORATE | 06/23/17 07:17 PM EDTBy Andrew Coen
Rutgers University received a boost when Moody’s Investors Service revised its outlook on the school’s bonds to stable from negative, citing stabilized operations.

Moody’s affirmed Rutgers’ general obligation bond rating at Aa3 for its roughly $2 billion of outstanding debt in a report released late Wednesday. The stable outlook assigned to New Jersey’s flagship public university means its rating should hold steady for the next one to two years, according to Moody’s.

“Revision of the outlook to stable is based on our expectations of stabilizing operations at slightly better than break-even levels, resulting in modest operating cash flow growth,” said Moody’s analyst Susan Shaffer in the report. “It also incorporates our belief that the university will be able to absorb some reductions in state and federal funding, that it will limit any additional debt to current levels, and that liquidity will not deteriorate further.”

Shaffer noted that the Aa3 rating reflects the university’s large presence in New Jersey and positive exposure from entering the Big Ten Conference for athletics in 2014. She said university leadership has spearheaded increased fund-raising efforts, which provides a “growing cushion” that can withstand the potential of moderate revenue volatility.

Rutgers could receive an upgrade if it boosts reserves and cash flow levels along with attracting more students from outside New Jersey. The rating could drop however if New Jersey’s credit rating faces further pressure or the state significantly reduces financial support. Moody’s rates New Jersey GO debt at A3, the second lowest credit rating ahead of only Illinois.

Rutgers is planning a $100 million GO commercial paper transaction on June 30 aimed at providing the university increased flexibility to achieve capital and strategic goals through short-term financing. Moody’s assigned a P-1 short-term rating to the sale, which is aided by a revolving credit agreement with Bank of America (BAC).

Full-time student enrollment numbers over 60,000 at Rutgers’ campuses in New Brunswick, Newark and Camden. The university is in the midst of a master plan to upgrade infrastructure through 2030 that is slated to include new borrowing.
 
Killingsworth can suck it.
Did you mean...

Family-GUy-Buzz-Kill-600x400.jpg
 
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Oh he's the kind who would not let reality and evidence stand in the way of his shrill theoretical argument in support of his own agenda.
Sounds just like some of the posters on here and some of the other Boards on ScarletNation.
 
He's not much of an economic's expert is he. I'd demand my money back if I took any of his courses.
I have to take a course with him in the fall. Last one to complete my economics degree, and I'm loathing it knowing he'll probably have examples about athletics being a drain.
 
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I have to take a course with him in the fall. Last one to complete my economics degree, and I'm loathing it knowing he'll probably have examples about athletics being a drain.
I am an RU Econ alum, and would frequently get drunk before his class to make it more tolerable. Good luck.
 
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It is a shame that some naysayers including some who post on this board who wish that Rutgers never joined the Big Ten are so shortsighted, among other things.:rolleyes:

This is just the start, Joining the Big Ten was the best thing to happen to Rutgers since they became a Land Grant University and so far that is playing out.

Facts are Facts.:sunglasses:
 
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Even the academics who hate athletics should be able to appreciate the BTAA aspect of being part of the B1G.

https://www.btaa.org/home

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Academic_Alliance
BTAA universities award 29% of all agriculture Ph.D.s, 18% of engineering Ph.D.s, and 18% of humanities Ph.D.s in the United States annually.[13]

BTAA members, when viewed collectively, conducted a combined total of $10 billion in funded research[12] and BTAA libraries own over 100 million volumes.[13]
 
Rutgers is a really strange place when it comes to change, specifically beneficial change. I've never seen so much pushback in my life. From the college system merger to joining the B1G. Weird stuff.
 
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Rutgers is a really strange place when it comes to change, specifically beneficial change. I've never seen so much pushback in my life. From the college system merger to joining the B1G. Weird stuff.
Some of us know people on the inside and of the ones I know they'll will agree with the above.

When it does happen here there will be more than a few INSIDERS who will be just as disappointed as our opponents on the field/courts with the turnaround.

And that to me is just sad.
 
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It's a shame reductions in state funding are figured into the plan. For all the good the school does for the state, in return, it gets treated like shit.
 
Rutgers is a really strange place when it comes to change, specifically beneficial change. I've never seen so much pushback in my life. From the college system merger to joining the B1G. Weird stuff.
Try moving to a Florida retirement community where the old, old timers who piss blood when they wake up in the morning refuse to spend a nickle to improve facilities that would attract new residents.
 
Essentially - significant positive change in the economic picture - as assessed by objective outside independent - agenda-free organization

Rutgers University received a boost when Moody’s Investors Service revised its outlook on the school’s bonds to stable from negative, citing stabilized operations.
Moody’s analyst Susan Shaffer noted that the Aa3 rating reflects the university’s large presence in New Jersey and positive exposure from entering the Big Ten Conference for athletics in 2014. She said university leadership has spearheaded increased fund-raising efforts, which provides a “growing cushion” that can withstand the potential of moderate revenue volatility.


Most probably bewildered at this significant transformation is Mark R. Killingsworth.

However, it would not be a surprise - if it came as a surprise to the professor - in light of the fact that his research focuses on labor economics - His recent work has been concerned with family members' labor force participation decisions, labor-market influences on fertility, and the effect of childhood religious instruction on adult earnings
... all of which might suggest that when it come to critical thinking about large scale sports economics and the collective institutional impact ... well, the professor sort of finds himself double dribbling out in left field, perplexed at his inability to kick a touchdown.
 
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I am an RU Econ alum, and would frequently get drunk before his class to make it more tolerable. Good luck.
Honestly it'll be more of a struggle to not correct him on the actual economics/financials of the athletics department if he does bring it up.
 
Gee, the State of New Jersey is only rated 49th out of the fifty states.
I guess the crooks in Illinois are worse than the crooks in Trenton.
But we keep reelecting the same bozos so we get what we deserve.
 
Can't be true. I did a search over on NJ.com and there's nothing on it.
 
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