Common use of General Obligation Bonds Clause in Contracts

General Obligation Bonds. General obligation bonds are typically secured by the issuer's pledge of faith, credit and taxing power for the repayment of principal and the payment of interest. The taxing power of any governmental entity may be limited, however, by provisions of its state constitution or laws, and an entity's creditworthiness will depend on many factors, including potential erosion of its tax base due to population declines, natural disasters, declines in the state's industrial base or inability to attract new industries, economic limits on the ability to tax without eroding the tax base, state legislative proposals or voter initiatives to limit ad valorem real property taxes and the extent to which the entity relies on federal or state aid, access to capital markets or other factors beyond the state's or entity's control. Accordingly, the capacity of the issuer of a general obligation bond as to the timely payment of interest and the repayment of principal when due is affected by the issuer's maintenance of its tax base.

Appears in 8 contracts

Samples: Shares Fee Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/), Shares Fee Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/), VRDP Shares Purchase Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/)

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General Obligation Bonds. General obligation bonds are typically secured by the issuer's pledge of its faith, credit and taxing power for the repayment of principal and the payment of interest. The taxing power of any governmental entity may be limited, however, by provisions of its state constitution or laws, and an entity's creditworthiness will depend on many factors, including potential erosion of its tax base due to population declines, natural disasters, declines in the state's industrial base or inability to attract new industries, economic limits on the ability to tax without eroding the tax base, state legislative proposals or voter initiatives to limit ad valorem real property taxes and the extent to which the entity relies on federal or state aid, access to capital markets or other factors beyond the state's or entity's control. Accordingly, the capacity of the issuer of a general obligation bond as to the timely payment of interest and the repayment of principal when due is affected by the issuer's maintenance of its tax base.

Appears in 4 contracts

Samples: Shares Fee Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/), VRDP Shares Purchase Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/), VRDP Shares Purchase Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/)

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General Obligation Bonds. General obligation bonds are typically secured by the issuer's ’s pledge of its faith, credit and taxing power for the repayment of principal and the payment of interest. The taxing power of any governmental entity may be limited, however, by provisions of its state constitution or laws, and an entity's ’s creditworthiness will depend on many factors, including potential erosion of its tax base due to population declines, natural disasters, declines in the state's ’s industrial base or inability to attract new industries, economic limits on the ability to tax without eroding the tax base, state legislative proposals or voter initiatives to limit ad valorem real property taxes and the extent to which the entity relies on federal or state aid, access to capital markets or other factors beyond the state's ’s or entity's ’s control. Accordingly, the capacity of the issuer of a general obligation bond as to the timely payment of interest and the repayment of principal when due is affected by the issuer's ’s maintenance of its tax base.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: VRDP Shares Fee Agreement (Toronto Dominion Investments, Inc.), VRDP Shares Purchase Agreement (Bank of America Corp /De/)

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