JPMorgan Chase & Co., which has mostly been absent from the business of underwriting Texas municipal bonds for the past year, plans to revive its work with the state and its local governments soon.
The firm, the No. 2 underwriter in the $4 trillion market for US municipal debt, joined a small group of major banks in stepping back from Texas after two new GOP-backed laws there took effect there on Sept. 1, 2021. The measures target Wall Street for what local officials said were restrictive policies related to the firearms and energy industries.
Wednesday, however, brought a key development that opens the door for JPMorgan to ramp up its muni business in Texas, one of the three most lucrative US public-finance markets. In a nutshell: Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar, wrapping up a months-long inquiry mandated by the new law, didn’t include the bank among the 10 finance firms he deems boycott the oil and gas industry.
It stands to be a big win for the New York-based bank, which was the largest muni underwriter on the list of more than 150 firms that were caught up in Hegar’s probe.
With that cloud lifted, JPMorgan intends to begin bidding on public contracts again, including municipal underwriting, according to a person familiar with the matter. To begin underwriting muni deals in Texas, the bank first has to file a letter verifying its compliance with the firearms and energy laws with the Texas attorney general’s office, the person said. The exact timing of that filing is to be determined.
The bank would likely resume underwriting for Texas and its localities by bidding on what’s known as competitive bond deals, where banks buy the debt via an auction, according to the person.
JPMorgan didn’t cut any public-finance jobs in Texas after the laws went into effect, and bankers kept sending financing pitches to municipalities there to maintain relationships with clients, the person said.
The bank’s return is also potentially a boon for Texas municipalities, which haven’t been able to work with some of the biggest banks -- with the broadest network of investor contacts -- on their bond deals.
The absence of large banks from the Texas underwriting market because of the two new laws has resulted in “large adverse effects for borrowers,” according to a study by a University of Pennsylvania professor and an economist at the Federal Reserve.
Bank of America Corp., the No. 1 US muni underwriter, and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., ranked sixth, haven’t handled any deals by Texas or its cities since September 2021.