By DWU Consulting | Published October 2024
Introduction: Bond Insurance as Credit Enhancement
Bond insurance—also known as financial guaranty insurance—is a mechanism by which a third-party insurer commits to pay principal and interest on a municipal bond if the issuer defaults. From the 1980s through 2008, bond insurance penetration expanded, peaking at approximately 57% of new issuance in 2006 (SIFMA), but after the 2008 financial crisis, the market contracted. 2024 YTD penetration reached 5.8%, up from 4.2% in 2023 (Bond Buyer); continuation depends on muni issuance volume and insurer capacity. This article covers bond insurance mechanics, major insurers, economic value conditions, and 2023–2024 market data.
How Bond Insurance Works: Mechanics and Structure
When an issuer decides to insure its bonds, the underwriting syndicate arranges for a bond insurer (a specialty insurance company) to issue a financial guarantee policy. The policy commits the insurer to pay all principal and interest due on the bonds if the issuer fails to do so.
Credit Enhancement: From Issuer Credit to Insurer Credit
The bond's credit strength is enhanced to the insurer's credit rating if that rating is higher than the issuer's underlying rating. For example, if a municipality with a Baa2 rating insures its bonds with an insurer rated Aa3, the insured bonds would be rated Aa3 based on the insurer's stronger rating. If the issuer's rating is already higher than the insurer's rating, the bonds retain the issuer's rating.
Example: A Baa2-rated issuer issues $100 million in water system revenue bonds. Without insurance, the bonds would be rated Baa2, carrying a spread of 150–200 bps over AAA munis as of Q3 2024 (Municipal Market Data) (example: 1.75% AAA yield = Baa2 3.25–3.75% yield). The city elects to insure the bonds with Assured Guaranty (Aa3 rating). The insured bonds are now rated Aa3, with a spread of 50–80 bps as of Q3 2024 (Municipal Market Data) (example: Aa3 2.25–2.55% yield). This reduces the all-in borrowing cost despite the insurance premium (1.0–1.2% of total debt service).
Insurance Premium Calculation
The bond insurer charges a premium, calculated as a percentage of total principal and interest payments. According to Assured Guaranty and BAM published rate sheets, as of 2023–2024 insurance premiums range from 0.5% to 3.0% of total debt service, depending on:
- Issuer Credit Rating: Lower-rated issuers pay higher premiums.
- Bond Maturity: Longer-maturity bonds carry higher premiums (more exposure time).
- Revenue Stream Stability: Volatile revenue sources (speculative projects) command higher premiums; services (water) command lower premiums.
- Insurer Risk Appetite: During strong underwriting markets, premiums are lower; during stressed markets, they rise sharply.
Wrap Structures: Full vs. Partial Insurance
From 1990 through 2007, municipal bond insurance was applied as a "full wrap" on most issues. As of 2023–2024, partial wraps covered 15% of insured issues exceeding $300M in 2024 (Bond Buyer), where insurance covers only a portion of the debt service. Partial insurance on larger issues has been used to attract institutional investor participation and expand market access (Bond Buyer, 2024). For instance, a water utility with large revenue bond issuances might insure the final 10 years of a 30-year bond issuance, leaving the near-term bonds uninsured but providing investors with certainty on back-end principal repayment.
Major Bond Insurers: Market Structure
Assured Guaranty (AGM)
Assured Guaranty holds approximately 56% of new municipal bond insurance market share as of 2023 (2023 10-K). As of 2023, "$165 billion in gross par outstanding insured (Assured Guaranty 2023 10-K, coverage: U.S. public finance)." Assured Guaranty is rated Aa3 by Moody's, providing credit enhancement for municipal issuers rated below Aa3.
Build America Mutual (BAM)
Build America Mutual is a municipal bond insurance company with 24% average market share in 2023 (BAM Annual Report, coverage: U.S. muni new issuance). As of 2023, "$32.5 billion in gross par outstanding insured (BAM 2023 Annual Report, coverage: mutual trust municipal bonds)." BAM is rated AA/Stable by S&P Global Ratings, providing credit enhancement for issuers rated below AA.
Other Insurers
Other bond insurers operate in niche segments or have smaller market shares. The concentration in Assured Guaranty and BAM reflects investor preference for highly-rated insurers and concerns about counterparty risk.
When Does Bond Insurance Add Economic Value?
Spread Analysis: Cost-Benefit Calculation
Issuers may find insurance economically justified when the spread reduction from insurance exceeds the cost of the insurance premium. The calculation is:
Benefit: Spread reduction for uninsured bonds – Spread for insured bonds (in bps) × Total principal and interest
Cost: Insurance premium (in bps) × Total principal and interest
Net Benefit = Benefit – Cost
Example (Numerical):
- Uninsured Baa2 bonds: 3.5% yield (175 bps over AAA munis at 1.75%)
- Insured Aa3 bonds: 2.30% yield (55 bps over AAA munis)
- Spread savings: 120 bps on a 20-year, $100M term bond (bullet maturity, no principal amortization) reduces annual interest cost by approximately $1.2M per year, totaling roughly $24M over the life of the bond (nominal). For a standard serial bond with level annual debt service (P+I), average outstanding principal is lower, reducing total nominal savings to approximately $12–15M
- Insurance premium: 1.2% of total debt service (P+I) on a $100M, 20-year, 3.5% coupon term bond (total debt service ≈ $170M assuming bullet maturity; ≈ $137–142M for a standard serial bond with level debt service) ≈ $1.6–2.0M
- Net benefit: The spread reduction exceeds the insurance cost, making insurance economically justified in this example
In this scenario, insurance is economically justified.
Credit Profile and Sensitivity
Insurance has historically provided the largest spread reduction for revenue bonds with volatile cash flows—healthcare revenue bonds traded 120–150 bps wide of insured equivalents in 2023–2024 (Bond Buyer)—compared to 30–50 bps for stable-revenue sectors. Insurance adds greatest net benefit for issuers with Baa or lower ratings. A Baa-rated issuer can achieve Aa or Aaa credit enhancement, reducing spreads. For an Aa-rated issuer, insurance to Aaa may reduce spreads by only 30–50 bps as of Q3 2024 (Municipal Market Data), potentially not justifying the insurance cost.
Assured Guaranty has expanded to insure high-grade issues, driven by investor demand for insurance even on high-grade credits (Assured Guaranty Q2 2024 10-Q). Assured Guaranty insured 54 high-grade, AA-rated issues totaling approximately $3 billion in high-grade par insured in Q2 2024 (updated quarterly) (Assured Guaranty Q2 2024 10-Q), indicating investor interest in insurance even for well-rated bonds.
Revenue Volatility and Insurance Value
Revenue bonds with volatile cash flows—particularly healthcare—traded 120–150 bps wide of insured equivalents in 2023–2024 (Bond Buyer). For service revenue bonds (water, sewer, electric utilities), insurance may add lower net benefit, with spread savings of 30-50 bps (DWU analysis of Aa-rated service revenue bonds, FY2024) because the underlying revenue stream is stable and ratings are already Aa or Aaa.
Bond Insurance Market Penetration: Historical and 2026 Trends
In 2006, 57% of all municipal bonds were insured (SIFMA, 2007), and insurers were major players in municipal bond finance. The 2008 financial crisis and the collapse of the monoline insurance model reduced insurance penetration.
By 2024 YTD, insurance penetration stood at 5.8% of new issuance (Bond Buyer, coverage: long-term muni new issue volume), reflecting post-2008 credit tightening and selective issuance practices by surviving insurers. Penetration rose from 4.2% (2023) to 5.8% (2024 YTD, Bond Buyer), driven by 12% increase in insured par volume.
Market Trends: Partial Insurance and Tactical Wraps
Trend 1: Partial Insurance on Large Issues
Rather than full wraps, issuers and underwriters are employing partial insurance on large deals to attract specific investor classes. Partial wraps used in 15% of issues >$300M in 2024 (Bond Buyer dataset). A $500M water bond might see $100M insured (targeting conservative accounts) and $400M uninsured (targeting aggressive buyers). This diversifies the buyer base while controlling insurance costs.
Trend 2: Tactical Insurance on Weak Credits
Healthcare systems and lower-rated GO issuers are using insurance to access capital markets at lower all-in borrowing costs than uninsured equivalents, based on 2023–2024 spread data (Bond Buyer; DWU model: 120 bps savings vs. 1.2% premium for Baa issuers).
Trend 3: High-Grade Insurance for Capacity Expansion
Insurance companies, banks, and conservative funds have capital constraints that limit exposure to any single issuer. Insurance on AA or Aaa bonds from otherwise well-rated issuers may expand the investor base for issuers by allowing conservative accounts to increase their allocations according to regulatory capital guidelines (e.g., a bank's regulatory capital rules may allow more exposure to Aaa than AA bonds per Basel III capital requirements).
Insurance Counterparty Risk: Investor Considerations
Bond insurance introduces counterparty risk. Based on 2023–2024 market practice, institutional investors have required insurers to be rated Aa3 or higher to provide meaningful credit enhancement (Assured Guaranty 2023 10-K; BAM 2023 Annual Report). Assured Guaranty (rated Aa3 by Moody's) and BAM (rated AA by S&P) enhance credit, but neither is AAA-rated. If an insurer were downgraded, insured bonds would face repricing risk.
The 2008 crisis demonstrated the severity of this risk: MBIA and Ambac, once-dominant insurers, faced severe credit deterioration—MBIA Insurance Corp was downgraded below investment grade by Moody's in February 2009, and Ambac filed for bankruptcy in November 2010—and insured bonds reliant on those wraps repriced as the credit enhancement evaporated, with losses concentrated in credits with underlying distress or structured products. This history makes investors and issuers cautious about insurer credit quality.
Insurance vs. Uninsured: Relative Value Positioning
When considering bond insurance, investors may wish to evaluate whether the additional credit comfort justifies accepting lower yields, depending on their risk tolerance and investment objectives. For example:
- Uninsured Baa2 Healthcare Bond: 4.5% yield, 50 bps spread over AGM-insured equivalent
- Insured Aa3 Healthcare Bond (AGM wrap): 4.0% yield
The choice depends on the investor's risk tolerance and yield requirements. Conservative investors may value the insurance; yield-focused investors may prefer the uninsured 4.5% bond and accept the issuer's Baa2 rating.
Key Takeaways: Insurance as a Market Stabilizer
Bond insurance remains a credit-enhancement tool for municipal issuers with Baa or lower credit profiles, or volatile revenue streams. Since the 2008 crisis, remaining insurers maintain Aa3 ratings and underwrite 5.8% of new issuance (Bond Buyer 2024), down from 57% in 2006 (SIFMA), reflecting tighter credit selection (Assured Guaranty 2023 10-K; BAM 2023 Annual Report). Based on 2023-2024 spread data, insurance provides the largest net spread savings for healthcare (120–150 bps) and lower-rated GO issuers (Bond Buyer 2023–2024 data), while less relevant for already-strong service utilities. Investors may wish to evaluate insured bonds on both their yield and the value of the insurance backstop, recognizing that insurance transfers credit risk to the insurer rather than eliminating it.