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Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program

 Information by State
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About Section 108
 -   Program Overview
 -   Case Studies
 -   Application Details
 -   Contact Information
 -   Project Summaries:
- 2006
- 2005
- 2004
- 2003
- 2002
 -   Public-Sector Loans to Private-Sector Businesses: An Assessment of HUD-Supported Local Economic Development Lending Activities
more... | HUDuser website


Want More Information?
 -   Laws, Regulations, and Notices
 -   Funding Allocations
 -   Use of CDBG Funds by Matrix Code
 -   CDBG Local Contacts
 -   Field Office Directors

The Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program is a source of financing alotted for the economic development, housing rehabilitiation, public facilities rehab, construction or installation for the benefit of low- to moderate-income persons, or to aid in the prevention of slums.


What's New
HUD Announces a Public Offering of Section 108 Loans

HUD has scheduled a Section 108 Public Offering during the first week in June 2008.

This public offering will enable Section 108 borrowers to obtain long-term, fixed-rate financing for approved community and economic development projects. The public offering will permit Section 108 recipients with interim loans to convert from variable-rate to permanent, fixed-rate financing. Communities that have not received the full amount of approved commitments are also eligible to participate in the public offering.

Contact the Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program staff at 202.708.1871 for more information on accessing fixed interest rate financing for your community and economic development projects.


Jump To...
 -   Introduction
 -   Eligible Applicants
 -   Eligible Activities
 -   Max. Commitment Amount
 -   Loan Details
 -   For More Information

Introduction

Section 108 is the loan guarantee provision of the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program. Section 108 provides communities with a source of financing for economic development, housing rehabilitation, public facilities, and large-scale physical development projects. This makes it one of the most potent and important public investment tools that HUD offers to local governments. It allows them to transform a small portion of their CDBG funds into federally guaranteed loans large enough to pursue physical and economic revitalization projects that can renew entire neighborhoods. Such public investment is often needed to inspire private economic activity, providing the initial resources or simply the confidence that private firms and individuals may need to invest in distressed areas. Section 108 loans are not risk-free, however; local governments borrowing funds guaranteed by Section 108 must pledge their current and future CDBG allocations to cover the loan amount as security for the loan.

Loan commitments are often paired with Economic Development Initiative (EDI) or Brownfield Economic Development Initiative (BEDI) grants, which can be used to pay predevelopment costs of a Section 108-funded project. They can also be used as a loan loss reserve (in lieu of CDBG funds), to write-down interest rates, or to establish a debt service reserve.

Regulations governing the Section 108 program may be found at 24 CFR 570, Subpart M, "Loan Guarantees."

Eligible Applicants

Eligible applicants include the following public entities:

  • metropolitan cities and urban counties (i.e. CDBG entitlement recipients);
  • nonentitlement communities that are assisted in the submission of applications by States that administer the CDBG program; and
  • nonentitlement communities eligible to receive CDBG funds under the HUD-Administered Small Cities CDBG program (Hawaii). The public entity may be the borrower or it may designate a public agency as the borrower.

Eligible Activities

Activities eligible for Section 108 financing include:

  • economic development activities eligible under CDBG;
  • acquisition of real property;
  • rehabilitation of publicly owned real property;
  • housing rehabilitation eligible under CDBG;
  • construction, reconstruction, or installation of public facilities (including street, sidewalk, and other site improvements);
  • related relocation, clearance, and site improvements;
  • payment of interest on the guaranteed loan and issuance costs of public offerings;
  • debt service reserves;
  • public works and site improvements in colonias; and
  • in limited circumstances, housing construction as part of community economic development, Housing Development Grant, or Nehemiah Housing Opportunity Grant programs.

For purposes of determining eligibility, the CDBG rules and requirements apply. As with the CDBG program, all projects and activities must either principally benefit low- and moderate-income persons, aid in the elimination or prevention of slums and blight, or meet urgent needs of the community.

Maximum Commitment Amount

Commitments are limited as follows:

  1. Entitlement public entities. An entitlement public entity may apply for up to five times the public entity's latest approved CDBG entitlement amount, minus any outstanding Section 108 commitments and/or principal balances of Section 108 loans.

  2. State assisted public entities. A nonentitlement public entity may apply for up to five times the latest approved CDBG amount received by its State, minus any outstanding Section 108 commitments and/or principal balances on Section 108 loans for which the State has pledged its CDBG funds as security.

  3. Nonentitlement public entities eligible under the HUD administered Small Cities Program. For a public entity in Hawaii, the maximum commitment amount is five times the public entity's latest grant under 24 CFR 570, Subpart F, minus any outstanding Section 108 commitments and/or principal balances on Section 108 loans.

Loan Details

Security:The principal security for the loan guarantee is a pledge by the applicant public entity or the State (in the case of a nonentitlement public entity) of its current and future CDBG funds. Additional security will also be required to assure repayment of guaranteed obligations. The additional security requirements will be determined on a case-by-case basis, but could include assets financed by the guaranteed loan.

Repayment: The maximum repayment period for a Section 108 loan is twenty years. HUD has the ability to structure the principal amortization to match the needs of the project and borrower. Each annual principal amount will have a separate interest rate associated with it.

Financing Source: Section 108 obligations are financed through underwritten public offerings. Financing between public offerings is provided through an interim lending facility established by HUD.

Interest Rates: Interest rates on interim borrowing are priced at the 3 month London Interbank Offered (LIBO) rate plus 20 basis points (0.2%). Permanent financing is pegged to yields on U.S. Treasury obligations of similar maturity to the principal amount. A small additional basis point spread, depending on maturity, will be added to the Treasury yield to determine the actual rate.

Default: To date, there has been no default under Section 108 resulting in a repayment by HUD. In the event of default requiring a payment, HUD would continue to make payments on the loan in accordance with its terms. The source of payments by HUD pursuant to its guarantee would almost always be pledged CDBG funds. However, HUD does have borrowing authority with the U.S. Treasury if the pledged funds are insufficient.

For More Information

 
Content current as of 8 April 2008   Follow this link to go  Back to top   
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