HomeMy WebLinkAbout20-15 Investment PolicyRESOLUTION NO. 20-15
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE TOWN OF
FIRESTONE, COLORADO, ADOPTING THE TOWN OF FIRESTONE
INVESTMENT POLICY
WHEREAS, the Town of Firestone has previously adopted the Investment Policy for the
Town; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees finds that such policy should be updated and that the
adoption of a current Investment policy will promote and support the efficient and effective use of
Town resources and promote the best interests of the Town; and
WHEREAS, there has been presented to the Board of Trustees for adoption a proposed
Investment policy, which has been developed through the collaborative efforts of the Town
Manager, Director of Finance and consultants; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees finds that the adoption of such policy is authorized by
law; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees finds that the proposed Investment Policy is solely in
support of the Town's fiscal responsibilities; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees by this Resolution to desires to adopt said policy;
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF
THE TOWN OF FIRESTONE, COLORADO:
Section 1. The Board of Trustees hereby approves and adopts the Town of Firestone
Investment Policy, which is attached to this Resolution.
Section 2. The Policy approved and adopted by this Resolution shall take effect January
23, 2020.
Section 3. All resolutions and policies or portions thereof previously adopted that are
inconsistent or conflicting with the policy adopted by this Resolution are hereby repealed to the
extent of such inconsistency or conflict.
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ATTEST:
TOWN OF FIRESTONE, COLORADO
2
BOARD OF TRUSTEES ADOPTED POLICY
TOWN OF FIRESTONE
SUBJECT: Investment Policy
ISSUE DATE
January 23, 2020
INTENT
EFFECTIVE DATE
January 23, 2020
The Town of Firestone (Town) understands the need to adopt an investment policy to establish
parameters and guidelines for the efficient management of the Town's funds and for the purchase
and sale of investments. This policy applies to the investments of all funds of the Town. Except
For funds held in trust or special funds that are otherwise specifically provided for, the Town will
consolidate the balances from all funds to maximize investment earnings and meet the liquidity
requirements of the Town subject to the primary objective of providing security of principal
amounts. This policy supersedes any and all previous investment policies adopted by the Town.
POLICY
The Town has established the following fiscal policy related to investments.
Objectives
It is the policy of the Town to invest idle public funds in a manner to meet the daily cash flow
demands of the Town with the primary objectives, in priority order, being:
a) Liquidity sufficient to meet cash flow requirements as defined by allocation of assets
b) Preservation of Principal
c) Market rate of return commensurate with risk tolerance
A.) Liquidity
The investment portfolio shall retain sufficient liquidity to meet all of the Town's operating
requirements that maybe reasonably anticipated during the annual budget cycle. Investments
shall be managed in order to avoid, although not prohibit, the need to sell securities in order to
meet anticipated cash flow needs. Since all possible cash demands cannot be anticipated, the
investment portfolio should contain a significant quantity of securities with active secondary
markets. As such, at least ten percent (10%) of the investment portfolio will be invested in
overnight instruments, money market funds, Colorado local government pools, or in
marketable securities which can be sold to raise cash with one business day's notice.
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B.) Preservation of Principal
Preservation of principal is the next objective for the Town's investment portfolio. The
portfolio should be managed in a manner that seeks to ensure stability of the overall investment
portfolio by mitigating the following risks:
1.) Ci°edit Default Risk
The Town will minimize credit default risk, or loss due to the failure of the investment
issuer or backer. By monitoring credit risk by restricting the minimum credit ratings on
securities that may be purchased and through portfolio diversification, exposure to any one
security type or issuer is minimized. As such, the Town shall place reliance upon
Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations (NRSRO) in evaluating credit risk
of obligations not issued by the U. S. government and Federal Instrumentality's (Agencies
and Government Sponsored Enterprises),
2.) Inter^est Rate Risk
The Town will minimize its interest rate risk, by employing an asset allocation strategy for
portfolio management based on the Town's liquidity needs, structuring the portfolio to:
first meet the cash requirements of the Town's ongoing operations, thereby mitigating the
need to liquidate securities at a loss prior to maturity. The investment portfolio will be
divided into three categories, Cash (overnight liquidity), Core Operating, and Reserves.
Cash is available to meet daily and unforeseen liquidity needs.
Core Operating is invested to meet budgeted cash demands throughout the fiscal year.
Reserves are generally not scheduled to spend and may be invested longer term.
3.) Concentr°ation Risk
The Town will minimize concentrated credit risk, by diversifying its investment portfolio
so that the impact of potential losses from any one type of security or issuer will be
minimized. Investments issued or explicitly guaranteed by the U.S. government and
investments in mutual funds, external investment pools, and other pooled investments are
excluded from this requirement.
Issuers not described in the preceding paragraph will be limited to 5%portfolio exposure
per issuer, to include all security types, i.e. commercial paper, banker's acceptance and
corporate debt.
C.) Return on Investment
The investment portfolio shall be designed and managed with the objective of attaining a
rnarlcet rate of return throughout interest rate cycles, taking into account the investment risk
constraints and liquidity needs described in A. Return on investment is of secondary
importance compared to liquidity and preservation of principal. Portfolio investments are
limited to relatively low risk securities. Portfolio return objective is a fair, albeit lower, return
relative to the risk being assumed. The portfolio return shall be measured vs. a benchmark with
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characteristics commensurate with the investment policy and asset allocation of the portfolio
based on the Town's cash flow requirements; examples include 2 year Constant Maturity
Treasury Index, ICE BAML Government and Corporate Indexes and may be blended or
modified as the portfolio grows and duration increases, as authorized by the Finance Director.
Delegation of Authority
Authority to oversee and manage the Town's investment program is granted to the Town's
Finance Director. Responsibility for the operation of the investment portfolio may be
delegated to Finance Department staff and/or investment advisor, acting in accordance with
established written procedures and internal controls for the operation of the investment
program consistent with this investment policy. Procedures should include references to:
safekeeping, delivery vs. payment, investment accounting, repurchase agreements, wire
transfer agreements, and collateral/depository agreements. No person may engage in an
investment transaction except as provided under the terms of this policy along with the
procedures established by the Finance Director. The Finance Director will be responsible for
all investment transactions undertaken and shall establish a system of controls to regulate the
activities of any Finance Department staff or the investment advisor.
Authorized Investments
The Town's authorized investments shall consist of the following:
1.) U.S. government obligations, U.S. government agency obligations and U.S.
government instrumentality obligations that have an active, liquid market.
2.) Any U.S. dollar denominated corporate or bank debt issued by a corporation or bank
which is organized and operated with the United States with net worth in excess of two
hundred fifty million dollars; except that the notes evidencing the debt must mature
within three years from the date of settlement. At the time of purchase, the debt must
carry at least two credit ratings from any of the nationally recognized credit agencies
and must be rated at least "AA- or Aa3" or the equivalent by any two NRSRO credit
rating agencies. Concentration in this sector is limited to 30% of the book value of the
Town's investments at the time of purchase, with no more than 5% of the book value
concentrated in any single obligor regardless of investment type.
3) Commercial paper rated A-1, P-1, or their equivalent by any nationally recognized
credit rating agencies. Total portfolio credit exposure shall not exceed 30% of the book
value of the Town's investment portfolio with no greater than 5% total portfolio
exposure to any single issuer at the time of purchase.
4) Securitized Certificates of Deposit, including Yankee CDs, and bankers acceptances,
the issuers of which are banks organized under U.S. laws or their parent companies,
are rated A-1, P-1 or their equivalent by any NRSROs. Total credit exposure including
Authorized Investments 2, 3, 4 and shall not exceed 50% of the Town's total portfolio
value.
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5) Repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements may be enacted with
approved dealers with whom the Town has signed a master agreement governing such
transactions, and must mature within 90 days. U.S. Treasury, agency, or instrumentality
securities must collateralize any such transactions, the market value of which shall be
at least 102%. Securities collateralizing such transactions shall be held by a tri-party
custodian.
6) Municipal bonds can include the general obligation or revenue bonds of any state of
the United States, the District of Columbia, or any territorial possession of the United
States or of any political subdivision, institution, department, agency, instrumentality,
or authority of any such governmental entities. No security may be purchased pursuant
to this paragraph unless, at the time of purchase, the security is rated in one of the three
highest rating categories by any NRSRO(A3/A-or better Colorado issuers, AA3/Aa- or
non -Colorado issuers)Municipal bonds shall not exceed 25% of the total par value of
the Town's investment portfolio.
7) Guaranteed investment contracts of domestically -regulated insurance companies
having a claims -paying ability rating AAA or its equivalent by any nationally
recognized credit rating agencies.
8) Money market mutual funds and local government investment pools as permitted by
Colorado statute, provided that such funds are either registered with the SEC or rated
AAA by any NRSRO.
Interest Earnings
Investment income will be allocated to the various funds based on the respective participation of
capital in the overall investment portfolio, unless otherwise decided upon by the Finance Director.
Investment Limitations
The Town will adhere to the following investment limitations:
A.) Diversification
The Town's investments shall be diversified by:
1.) Limit investments in securities from a specific issuer (excluding U.S. Treasury and
Government Sponsored Entity (GSE) securities) to 5%.
2.) Limit investment in securities to those with minimum credit ratings as follows:
a. AA3/AA- or equivalent corporate and GSE issues
b. A3/A- Colorado state and local government issues
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3.) To the extent possible, match maturities with cash flow requirements; assure liquidity
when needed.
4.) Limit portfolio sector concentration to:
a. Maximum 25% municipal securities, 5 year max maturity
b. Maximum 50% corporate issuers, 3 year max maturity
5.) Maintain a portion of the Town's investment portfolio in readily available asset classes
including local government investment pools (LGIPs), money market funds, overnight
repurchase agreements and marketable securities to ensure that appropriate liquidity is
maintained to meet the Town's ongoing obligations.
B.) Maturity
To the extent possible, the Town shall match its investments with anticipated cash flow needs.
Unless matched to a specific cash flow, the Town will not invest in securities with maturities
of more than five (5) years from the date of settlement.
C.) Sale of investments prior to maturity
Investments may be sold prior to their maturity date if the investment official determines that
it is in the best interest of the Town to do so. It is the Town's intent to purchase and hold
securities until maturity; however, from time to time, it may become necessary to sell a security
at a gain or loss in order to meet cash flow requirements or to take advantage of certain
exchange advantages for the overall enhancement of the portfolio.
D.) Derivatives
Securities which derive their value from an underlying asset, group of assets, reference rate, or
index value are not permitted as an authorized investment under this policy unless allowed
under C.R.S. § 24-75-601, et se .
Reporting of Investments
A report containing current investment activity and balances will be provided to the Town Board
on a monthly basis unless another frequency (e.g., quarterly) is deemed satisfactory to the Town
Board.
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Policy Review
The Finance Director will review the Investment Policy annually in concert with the preparation
of the Town's year-end financial statements to ensure that the Town is adhering to the framework
outlined in this policy and to statutory requirements for permissible investments of public funds
under C.R.S. § 24-75-601, et se Furthermore, the Finance Committee and Finance Director will
be responsible for reviewing the Capitalization Threshold and Depreciation Policy every two years
and will make recommendations for revisions to the policy as deemed appropriate. Adoption and
modifications to this policy will require the approval of a simple majority vote by the entire Town
Board.
Ethics and Conflicts of Interest
Town officials and employees involved in the investment process shall refrain from personal
business activity that conflicts with proper execution of the Town's investment program or that
impairs their ability to make impartial investment decisions. Town officials and employees shall
disclose, in accordance with state law, any substantial financial interest they have in financial
institutions that conduct business with the Town. Town employees shall notify the Town Manager
in writing of any such interest. Board members shall disclose any such interest in accordance with
state law.
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