Form S-3
Table of Contents

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 2, 2011

Registration Nos. 333-            

and 333-            

 

 

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM S-3

REGISTRATION STATEMENT

UNDER

THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

 

 

 

CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC  

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND

COMPANY IV, LLC

(Exact name of Registrant and Sponsor

as specified in its charter)

 

(Exact name of Registrant and Issuing Entity

as specified in its charter)

Texas   Delaware

(State or other jurisdiction of

incorporation or organization)

 

(State or other jurisdiction of

incorporation or organization)

22-3865106   45-3687039

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification No.)

 

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification No.)

1111 Louisiana
Houston, Texas 77002
(713) 207-3000
 

1111 Louisiana

Suite 4664B
Houston, Texas 77002
(713) 207-5776

(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of Registrant’s principal executive offices)   (Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of Registrant’s principal executive offices)

 

 

Christopher J. Arntzen

1111 Louisiana

Houston, Texas 77002

(713) 207-3000

(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of agent for service)

 

 

With copies to:

 

Timothy S. Taylor

Jason A. Rocha

Baker Botts L.L.P.

910 Louisiana

One Shell Plaza

Houston, Texas 77002-4995

(713) 229-1234

 

Steven R. Loeshelle

Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP

1301 Avenue of the Americas

New York, New York 10019-6092

(212) 259-8000

 

 

Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public: From time to time after the effective date of this registration statement as determined by market conditions.

If the only securities being registered on this Form are being offered pursuant to dividend or interest reinvestment plans, please check the following box.    ¨

If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, other than securities offered only in connection with dividend or interest reinvestment plans, check the following box.    x

If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.    ¨

If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.    ¨

If this Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction I.D. or a post-effective amendment thereto that shall become effective upon filing with the Commission pursuant to Rule 462(e) under the Securities Act, check the following box.    ¨

If this Form is a post-effective amendment to a registration statement filed pursuant to General Instruction I.D. filed to register additional securities or additional classes of securities pursuant to Rule 413(b) under the Securities Act, check the following box.    ¨

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b2 of the Exchange Act.

 

Large accelerated filer   ¨    Accelerated filer   ¨
Non-accelerated filer   x  (Do not check if a smaller reporting company)    Smaller reporting company   ¨

 

 

CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE

 

 

Title of each class of

securities to be registered

 

Amount

to be

registered

 

Proposed

maximum

offering price

per unit(1)

 

Proposed

maximum

aggregate

offering price(1)

 

Amount of

registration fee

Transition Bonds Issuable in Series

  $1,695,000,000   100%   $1,695,000,000   $194,247

 

 

(1) Estimated pursuant to Rule 457 under the Securities Act solely for the purpose of calculating the registration fee.

 

 

The Registrants hereby amend this Registration Statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrants shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration Statement shall become effective on such date as the Securities and Exchange Commission, acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.

 

 

 


Table of Contents

The information in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus is not complete and may be changed. The transition bonds may not be sold until the registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus are not an offer to sell these securities and they are not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted.

 

Subject to Completion, dated                     , 2011.

PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

(To Prospectus Dated                     , 2011)

$        

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC

Issuing Entity

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor

2011 Senior Secured Transition Bonds

 

 

 

Tranche

   Expected
Weighted
Average  Life

(Years)
   Initial
Principal
Balance
   Interest
Rate
   Price to
Public
   Underwriting
Discounts and
Commissions
   Proceeds
to the
Issuing Entity
(Before
Expenses)
   Scheduled Final
Payment Date
   Final
Maturity Date
                       
                       

The total price to the public is $        . The total amount of the underwriting discounts and commissions is $        . The total amount of proceeds to the issuing entity after underwriting discounts and commissions and before deduction of expenses (estimated to be $        ) is $        .

Investing in the 2011 Senior Secured Transition Bonds involves risks. Please read “Risk Factors” beginning on page 14 of the accompanying prospectus.

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC is issuing up to $         of its 2011 Senior Secured Transition Bonds, referred to herein as the “Bonds,” in multiple tranches. CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC is the seller, initial servicer and sponsor with regard to the Bonds. The Bonds are senior secured obligations of the issuing entity and will be supported by transition property which includes the right to a special, irrevocable nonbypassable charge, known as a transition charge, paid by retail electric customers in CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC’s service territory as discussed herein. The utility restructuring provisions of the Public Utility Regulatory Act mandate and the Public Utility Commission of Texas requires that transition charges be adjusted at least annually, and semi-annually as necessary, to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all scheduled payments of principal, interest and other required amounts and charges in connection with the Bonds. Credit enhancement for the Bonds will be provided by such statutory true-up mechanism, as well as by general and capital subaccounts held under the indenture.

The Bonds represent obligations only of the issuing entity, CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, and do not represent obligations of the sponsor or any of its affiliates other than the issuing entity. The Bonds are secured only by the assets of the issuing entity, consisting principally of the transition property and funds on deposit in the collection account for the Bonds and related subaccounts. Please read “The Bonds—The Collateral,” “—The Transition Property” and “Credit Enhancement” in this prospectus supplement. The Bonds are not a debt or obligation of the State of Texas, the Public Utility Commission of Texas or any other governmental agency or instrumentality and are not a charge on the full faith and credit or the taxing power of the State of Texas or any governmental agency or instrumentality.

The Public Utility Commission of Texas guarantees that it will act pursuant to its irrevocable financing order, dated October 27, 2011, as expressly authorized by the utility restructuring provisions of the Public Utility Regulatory Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to pay on a timely basis scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. The financing order provides that the true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the Public Utility Commission of Texas set forth in the financing order are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the Bonds, and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the Public Utility Commission of Texas.

All matters relating to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the Bonds have been considered jointly by CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC and the Public Utility Commission of Texas or its designated representative.

Additional information is contained in the accompanying prospectus. You should read this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus carefully before you decide to invest in the Bonds. This prospectus supplement may not be used to offer or sell the Bonds unless accompanied by the prospectus.

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus are truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

The underwriters expect to deliver the Bonds through the book-entry facilities of The Depository Trust Company against payment in New York, New York on                     , 2011. Each Bond will be entitled to interest on                      and                      of each year. The first scheduled payment date is                     , 2012. Interest will accrue from                     , 2011 and must be paid by the purchaser if the Bonds are delivered after that date. There currently is no secondary market for the Bonds, and we cannot assure you that one will develop.

 

 

The date of this prospectus supplement is                     , 2011.


Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

 

ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE PROSPECTUS

     S-1   

THE BONDS

     S-11   

The Collateral

     S-11   

The Transition Property

     S-12   

The Financing Order

     S-13   

Payment and Record Dates and Payment Sources

     S-13   

Principal Payments

     S-13   

Weighted Average Life Sensitivity

     S-16   

Fees and Expenses

     S-17   

Distribution Following Acceleration

     S-17   

Interest Payments

     S-17   

Optional Redemption

     S-18   

THE TRUSTEE

     S-19   

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

     S-19   

Statutory True-Up Mechanism for Payment of Scheduled Principal and Interest

     S-19   

Collection Account and Subaccounts

     S-19   

How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated

     S-20   

THE TRANSITION CHARGES

     S-22   

Initial Transition Charges

     S-22   

ASSURANCES OF FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

     S-23   

UNDERWRITING THE BONDS

     S-24   

The Underwriters’ Sales Price for the Bonds

     S-24   

No Assurance as to Resale Price or Resale Liquidity for the Bonds

     S-24   

Various Types of Underwriter Transactions that May Affect the Price of the Bonds

     S-24   

MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES

     S-25   

RATINGS FOR THE BONDS

     S-25   

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

     S-26   

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

     S-26   

LEGAL MATTERS

     S-26   

OFFERING RESTRICTIONS IN CERTAIN JURISDICTIONS

     S-26   
 

 

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Table of Contents

PROSPECTUS

 

ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS

     1   

CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION

     1   

PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

     3   

RISK FACTORS

     14   

THE RESTRUCTURING ACT

     28   

CENTERPOINT HOUSTON’S FINANCING ORDER

     33   

RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

     36   

THE SELLER, INITIAL SERVICER AND SPONSOR OF THE TRANSITION PROPERTY

     40   

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC, THE ISSUING ENTITY

     49   

USE OF PROCEEDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SERIES 2001-1 TRANSITION BONDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS, SERIES A

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE 2008 SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED SYSTEM RESTORATION BONDS

     54   

THE TRANSITION BONDS

     54   

WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     79   

THE SALE AGREEMENT

     80   

THE SERVICING AGREEMENT

     89   

HOW A BANKRUPTCY MAY AFFECT YOUR INVESTMENT

     100   

MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES FOR THE TRANSITION BONDHOLDERS

     104   

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

     108   

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     110   

RATINGS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     111   

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

     112   

LEGAL MATTERS

     113   

GLOSSARY OF DEFINED TERMS

     114   

 

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ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE PROSPECTUS

This prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus provide information about us, the Bonds and CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC, as seller, initial servicer and sponsor. This prospectus supplement describes the specific terms of the Bonds, while the accompanying prospectus describes more general terms of the Bonds.

References in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus to the terms “we,” “us,” “our” or “the issuing entity” mean CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC. References to “CenterPoint Houston,” “the sponsor,” “the initial servicer” or “the seller” mean CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC. References to “CenterPoint Energy” mean CenterPoint Energy, Inc., the ultimate parent company of CenterPoint Houston. References to the “Bonds” or, unless the context otherwise requires, the “transition bonds” mean our 2011 Senior Secured Transition Bonds offered pursuant to this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus. References to the “bondholders” or the “holders” refer to the registered holders of the transition bonds. References to “the servicer” refer to CenterPoint Houston and any successor servicer under the servicing agreement referred to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus, and references to the “integrated utility” mean Reliant Energy, Incorporated, the legal predecessor to CenterPoint Houston, as it existed prior to its restructuring and the onset of competition in the retail electric services market in Texas on January 1, 2002, as mandated by the 1999 utility restructuring amendments to the Public Utility Regulatory Act, as subsequently amended, which we refer to as the “Restructuring Act.” We refer to the geographical certificated service area of the integrated utility as it existed on May 1, 1999 as “CenterPoint Houston’s service territory,” within which CenterPoint Houston may recover qualified costs through nonbypassable transition charges assessed on retail electric customers within that area. Unless the context otherwise requires, the term “customer” means a retail end user of electricity and related services provided by a retail electric provider via the transmission and distribution system of an electric utility such as CenterPoint Houston. We also refer to the Public Utility Commission of Texas as the “PUCT.” You can find a glossary of some of the other defined terms we use in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus on page 114 of the accompanying prospectus.

We have included cross-references to sections in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus where you can find further related discussions. You can also find references to key topics in the table of contents on the previous page.

You should rely only on the information contained or incorporated by reference in this prospectus supplement, the accompanying prospectus and in any written communication from us or the underwriters specifying the final terms of the offering. Neither we nor any underwriter, agent, dealer, salesperson, the PUCT or CenterPoint Houston has authorized anyone else to provide you with any different information. If anyone provides you with different or inconsistent information, you should not rely on it. We are not offering to sell the Bonds in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. The information in this prospectus supplement is current only as of the date of this prospectus supplement.

 

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Table of Contents

SUMMARY OF TERMS

The following section is only a summary of selected information and does not provide you with all the information you will need to make your investment decision. There is more detailed information in this prospectus supplement and in the accompanying prospectus. To understand all of the terms of the offering of the Bonds, carefully read this entire document and the accompanying prospectus.

 

Securities offered:

$            2011 Senior Secured Transition Bonds.

 

Issuing entity and capital structure:

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC is a direct, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston and a limited liability company formed under Delaware law. We were formed solely to purchase and own transition property, to issue transition bonds and to perform activities incidental thereto. Please read “CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, The Issuing Entity” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

  In addition to the transition property, the assets of the issuing entity will include a capital investment by CenterPoint Houston in the amount of 0.5% of the Bonds’ initial principal amount (to be held in the capital subaccount). We will also have an excess funds subaccount to retain, until the next payment date, any amounts collected and remaining after all scheduled payments on the Bonds have been timely made.

 

Our relationship with the PUCT:

Pursuant to the financing order,

 

   

the PUCT or its designated representative has a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint Houston with respect to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the Bonds and all matters related to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds will be determined through a joint decision of CenterPoint Houston and the PUCT or its designated representative,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston is directed to take all necessary steps to ensure that the PUCT or its designated representative is provided sufficient and timely information to allow the PUCT or its designated representative to fully participate in, and exercise its decision making power over, the proposed securitization, and

 

   

the servicer will file periodic adjustments to transition charges with the PUCT on our behalf.

 

  We have agreed that certain reports will be submitted to the PUCT by us or on our behalf.

 

Our address:

1111 Louisiana, Suite 4664B, Houston, Texas 77002

 

Our telephone number:

(713) 207-5776

 

 

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Our manager and executive officers:

The following is a list of our sole manager and principal executive officers as of the date of this prospectus supplement:

 

Name

   Age      Background

Marc Kilbride

     59       Manager, Vice President and Treasurer of
the issuing entity; Vice President and
Treasurer of CenterPoint Houston since
June 2002 and Treasurer since 1997.

Gary L. Whitlock

     62       President of the issuing entity; Executive
Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer of CenterPoint Energy, Inc. since
September 2002.

Walter L. Fitzgerald

     54       Senior Vice President and Chief
Accounting Officer of the issuing entity;
Vice President and Controller of
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. since 2001 and
Senior Vice President and Chief
Accounting Officer since 2007.

 

Credit ratings:

We expect the Bonds will receive credit ratings from three nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. Please read “Ratings for the Bonds” in this prospectus supplement.

 

Seller, sponsor and initial servicer of the transition property:

CenterPoint Houston is a regulated electric transmission and distribution utility wholly owned indirectly by CenterPoint Energy. CenterPoint Houston is engaged in the transmission and distribution of electric energy in a 5,000 square-mile area of the Texas Gulf Coast that includes Houston. CenterPoint Houston, acting as the initial servicer, and any successor servicer, referred to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus as the “servicer,” will service the transition property securing the Bonds under the servicing agreement with us. Please read “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property” in the accompanying prospectus. Neither CenterPoint Houston nor CenterPoint Energy nor any other affiliate (other than us) is an obligor on the Bonds.

 

CenterPoint Houston’s address:

1111 Louisiana, Houston, Texas 77002

 

CenterPoint Houston’s telephone number:

(713) 207-3000

 

Use of proceeds:

We are required to use the proceeds of the Bonds to pay the expenses of the issuance and sale of the Bonds and to purchase the transition property from CenterPoint Houston. Please read “Use of Proceeds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Bond structure:

Sinking fund bond, issued in tranches, scheduled to pay principal semi-annually and sequentially; tranche A-1, expected weighted average life [    ] years, scheduled final payment date of                    , and final maturity date of                     , tranche A-2, expected weighted average life [    ] years, scheduled final payment date of                    , and final maturity date of                    , and tranche A-3, expected weighted

 

 

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average life [    ] years, scheduled final payment date of                    , and final maturity date of                    . Please read the Expected Amortization Schedule in “The Bonds—The Principal Payments” in this prospectus supplement.

 

Trustee:

 

Trustee’s experience:

                     currently serves as trustee for other securitizations that are structurally similar to the Bonds. Please read “The Trustee” in this prospectus supplement for further information.

 

Average life:

Prepayment is not permitted. Extension risk is possible but is expected to be statistically remote. Please read “The Bonds—Weighted Average Life Sensitivity” in this prospectus supplement and “Weighted Average Life and Yield Considerations for the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Optional redemption:

None. Non-call for the life of the Bonds.

 

Minimum denomination:

$100,000, or integral multiples of $1,000 in excess thereof, except for one bond of each tranche which may be of a smaller denomination.

 

Credit enhancement/security:

Pursuant to the financing order issued by the PUCT, the irrevocable right to impose, collect and receive a nonbypassable electricity consumption-based transition charge from retail electric providers serving over 2 million individuals, corporations and other business or governmental entities who purchase electricity at retail in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. Transition charges are set and adjusted to collect amounts sufficient to pay principal, interest and other required amounts and charges on a timely basis. Please read “Credit Enhancement—Statutory True-Up Mechanism for Payment of Scheduled Principal and Interest” in this prospectus supplement, as well as “Prospectus Summary—Parties to Transaction and Responsibilities,” “The Restructuring Act” and “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

  The transition property securing the Bonds is not a pool of receivables. It consists of all of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests under the financing order transferred to us in connection with the issuance of the Bonds, including the irrevocable right to impose, collect and receive nonbypassable transition charges and the right to implement the statutory true-up mechanism. Transition property is a present property right created by the Restructuring Act and the financing order and is protected by the state pledge in the Restructuring Act described below. For a description of the transition property, please read “The Bonds—The Transition Property” in this prospectus supplement.

 

 

The Bonds are secured only by our assets, consisting principally of the transition property relating to the Bonds and funds on deposit in the collection account for the Bonds and related subaccounts. The subaccounts consist of a capital subaccount, which will be funded at

 

 

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closing in the amount of 0.5% of the initial aggregate principal amount of the Bonds, a general subaccount, into which the servicer will deposit all transition charge collections, and an excess funds subaccount, into which we will transfer any amounts collected and remaining on a payment date after all scheduled payments to bondholders and other parties have been made. Amounts on deposit in each of these subaccounts will be available to make payments on Bonds on each payment date. Please read “Credit Enhancement—Collection Account and Subaccounts” and “Credit Enhancement—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in this prospectus supplement.

 

State pledge:

The State of Texas has pledged in the Restructuring Act that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property, or reduce, alter or impair the transition charges until the Bonds are fully repaid or discharged, other than specified true-up adjustments to correct any overcollections or undercollections. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Statutory true-up mechanism for payment of scheduled principal and interest:

The Restructuring Act mandates and the irrevocable financing order requires that transition charges on all retail electric customers be reviewed and adjusted at least annually, and semi-annually as necessary, to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide payment of scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. Pursuant to the financing order, adjustments other than the annual adjustments may be made generally not more than once in any six-month period. In the financing order, the PUCT guarantees that it will act pursuant to the financing order as expressly authorized by the Restructuring Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to timely pay scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds.

 

  There is no “cap” on the level of transition charges that may be imposed on the consumers of electricity in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory to timely pay scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds.

 

  The financing order provides that the statutory true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the PUCT set forth in the financing order are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the Bonds, and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the PUCT. Please read “The Transition Charges” in this prospectus supplement and “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Servicing Agreement—Adjustment Process for Transition Charges” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Nonbypassable transition charges:

The Regulatory Act and the PUCT require the imposition on, and collection of transition charges from, existing and future retail electric customers located within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory,

 

 

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regardless of the retail electric provider serving those customers, and even if those customers choose to operate new on-site generation or the CenterPoint Houston goes out of business, its service area is acquired by another utility or its services are municipalized, subject to limited exceptions. Please read “Risk Factors—Other Risks Associated with an Investment in the Transition Bonds—Alternatives to purchasing electricity through CenterPoint Houston’s distribution facilities may be more widely utilized by retail electric customers in the future” in the accompanying prospectus. The transition charges are applied to retail electric customers individually and are adjusted and reallocated among all customers as necessary under the statutory true-up mechanism. Please read “The Transition Charges” in this prospectus supplement and “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Servicing Agreement—Adjustment Process for Transition Charges” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Priority of distributions:

On each payment date, the trustee will allocate or pay all amounts on deposit in the general subaccount of the collection account for the Bonds in the following order of priority in accordance with instructions provided by the servicer:

 

  1. payment of the trustee’s fees, expenses and any outstanding indemnity amounts relating to the Bonds not to exceed $         in any 12-month period,

 

  2. payment of the servicing fee relating to the Bonds, plus any unpaid servicing fees relating to the Bonds from prior payment dates,

 

  3. payment of the fees of our independent manager(s) (which are billed annually), which will be in an amount specified in an agreement between us and our independent manager(s), and a pro rata portion of the administration fee,

 

  4. payment of all of our other ordinary periodic operating expenses relating to the Bonds, such as accounting and audit fees, rating agency fees, legal fees and certain reimbursable costs of the administrator under the administration agreement and of the servicer under the servicing agreement,

 

  5. payment of the interest then due on the Bonds, including any past-due interest,

 

  6. at final maturity or upon acceleration upon an event of default, payment of the principal then required to be paid on the Bonds,

 

  7. payment of the principal then scheduled to be paid on the Bonds in accordance with the expected sinking fund schedule, including any previously unpaid scheduled principal,

 

  8. payment of any of our remaining unpaid operating expenses and any remaining amounts owed pursuant to the basic documents relating to the Bonds, including all remaining indemnity amounts owed to the trustee,

 

 

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  9. replenishment of any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount, including investment earnings in the capital subaccount to the extent used for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8,

 

  10. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing and that CenterPoint Houston makes a contribution in satisfaction of applicable legal requirements to the capital subaccount in an amount greater than 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the Bonds, release to us an amount calculated at CenterPoint Houston’s then authorized rate of return on equity, which is currently 10% per annum, on the amount contributed to the capital subaccount in excess of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the Bonds,

 

  11. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing, release the investment earnings relating to the contribution to the capital subaccount in the amount of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance (the “0.5% contribution”) to us,

 

  12. allocation of the remainder, if any, to the excess funds subaccount, and

 

  13. after the Bonds have been paid in full and discharged, the balance, together with all amounts in the capital subaccount and the excess funds subaccount, to us free and clear of the lien of the indenture.

 

  The annual servicing fee in clause 2 may not exceed 0.05% of the original principal amount of the Bonds (for so long as CenterPoint Houston is the servicer) and the annual administration fee in clause 3 may not exceed $100,000, plus reimbursable expenses.

 

Initial transition charge as a percentage of customer’s total electricity bill:

The initial transition charge would represent approximately 2.2% of the total bill received by a 1,000 kWh residential customer of the largest retail electric provider in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory as of September 30, 2011. When combined with the transition charges and system restoration charges related to the prior transition bonds and system restoration bonds, the cumulative charges would represent approximately 9.1% of the total bill.

 

Other transition bonds and system restoration bonds being serviced by CenterPoint Houston:

CenterPoint Houston will be the initial servicer of the Bonds. CenterPoint Houston currently acts as servicer with respect to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC, which we refer to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus as “Transition Bond Company I,” with respect to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC, which we refer to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus as “Transition Bond Company II,” with respect to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC, which we

 

 

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refer to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus as “Transition Bond Company III” and with respect to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Restoration Bond Company, LLC, which we refer to in this prospectus supplement and accompanying prospectus as “Restoration Bond Company.” Please read “Relationship to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds,” “Relationship to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A,” “Relationship to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A” and “Relationship to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds” in this Summary of Terms.

 

Relationship to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds:

In October 2001, Transition Bond Company I, a special purpose wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued and sold $749 million of Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds in accordance with a financing order issued by the PUCT on May 31, 2000. CenterPoint Houston currently acts as servicer with respect to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. Transition Bond Company I will have no obligations under the Bonds, and we have no obligations under the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. The security pledged to secure the Bonds will be separate from the security that is securing the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. Please read “Relationship to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Relationship to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A:

In December 2005, Transition Bond Company II, a special purpose wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued and sold $1.851 billion of Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, in accordance with a financing order issued by the PUCT on March 16, 2005. CenterPoint Houston currently acts as servicer with respect to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. Transition Bond Company II will have no obligations under the Bonds, and we have no obligations under Transition Bond Company II’s Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. The security pledged to secure the Bonds will be separate from the security that is securing the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. Please read “Relationship to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Relationship to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A:

In February 2008, Transition Bond Company III, a special purpose wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued and sold $488 million of 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds in accordance with a financing order issued by the PUCT on September 18, 2007. CenterPoint Houston currently acts as servicer with respect to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. Transition Bond Company III will have no obligations under the Bonds, and we have no obligations under Transition Bond Company III’s 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds. The security pledged to secure the Bonds will be separate from the security that is securing the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds. Please read “Relationship to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Relationship to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds:

In November 2009, Restoration Bond Company, a special purpose wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued and sold

 

 

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$665 million of Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds, in accordance with a financing order issued by the PUCT on August 26, 2009. CenterPoint Houston currently acts as servicer with respect to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. Restoration Bond Company will have no obligations under the Bonds, and we have no obligations under Restoration Bond Company’s Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. The security pledged to secure the Bonds will be separate from the security that is securing the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. Please read “Relationship to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Continuing disclosure:

The indenture under which the Bonds will be issued requires all of the periodic reports that we file with the SEC, the principal transaction documents and other information concerning the transition charges and security relating to the Bonds to be posted on the website associated with our parent company, located at www.centerpointenergy.com.

 

Tax treatment:

The Bonds will be treated as debt for U.S. federal income and estate tax purposes. Please read “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

ERISA eligible:

Yes; please read “ERISA Considerations” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Legal Defeasance and Covenant Defeasance Options:

We may by making certain deposits in trust and meeting specified conditions, at any time, terminate all of our obligations under the indenture with respect to the Bonds or our obligations to comply with some of the covenants in the indenture, including some of the covenants described under “The Transition Bonds—Our Covenants” in the accompanying prospectus. Please read “Our Legal Defeasance and Covenant Defeasance Options” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

Payment dates and interest accrual:

Interest payable semi-annually, on                    and                     . Interest will be calculated on a 30/360 basis. The first scheduled interest and principal payment date is                     , 2012. If any interest payment date is not a business day, payments scheduled to be made on such date may be made on the next succeeding business day and no interest shall accrue upon such payment during the intervening period.

 

  Interest is due on each payment date and principal is due upon the final maturity date for each tranche.

 

Events of Default:

The failure to pay principal of any tranche of Bonds by the final maturity date for that tranche is an event of default under the indenture, but the failure to pay principal of any tranche of Bonds by the respective scheduled final payment date will not be an event of default under the indenture. Please read “The Transition Bonds—Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds” and “—What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

 

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Expected settlement:

                    , 2011, settling flat. DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear.

 

Risk factors:

You should consider carefully the risk factors beginning on page 14 of the accompanying prospectus before you invest in the Bonds.

 

 

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THE BONDS

We will issue the Bonds and secure their payment under an indenture that we will enter into with             , as trustee, referred to in this prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus as the “trustee.” We will issue the Bonds in minimum denominations of $100,000, or in integral multiples of $1,000 in excess thereof, except that we may issue one Bond in each tranche in a smaller denomination. The expected weighted average life in years, initial principal balance, scheduled final payment date, final maturity date and interest rate for each tranche of the Bonds are stated in the table below.

 

Tranche  

Expected

Weighted

Average Life

(Years)

 

Initial Principal

Balance

  Scheduled Final
Payment Date
 

Final

Maturity Date

 

Interest

Rate

         
         
         
         
         

The scheduled final payment date for each tranche of the Bonds is the date when the outstanding principal balance of that tranche will be reduced to zero if we make payments according to the expected sinking fund schedule for that tranche. The final maturity date for each tranche of the Bonds is the date when we are required to pay the entire remaining unpaid principal balance, if any, of all outstanding Bonds of that tranche. The failure to pay principal of any tranche of Bonds by the final maturity date for that tranche is an event of default under the indenture, but the failure to pay principal of any tranche of Bonds by the respective scheduled final payment date will not be an event of default under the indenture. Please read “The Transition Bonds—Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds” and “—What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

The Collateral

The Bonds will be secured under the indenture by the indenture’s trust estate. The principal asset of the indenture’s trust estate for the Bonds is the transition property relating to the Bonds, which is a present property right created under the Restructuring Act by the financing order issued by the PUCT on October 27, 2011, referred to in this prospectus supplement as the “financing order.” The indenture’s trust estate also consists of:

 

   

our rights under the sale agreement pursuant to which we will acquire the transition property relating to the Bonds, under the administration agreement and under the bill of sale delivered by CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement,

 

   

our rights under the servicing agreement and any subservicing, agency, intercreditor or collection agreements executed in connection with the servicing agreement,

 

   

the collection account and all subaccounts of the collection account,

 

   

our rights in all deposits, guarantees, surety bonds, letters of credit and other forms of credit support provided by or on behalf of retail electric providers pursuant to the financing order or a tariff,

 

   

all of our other property, other than any cash released to us by the trustee on any payment date from earnings on the capital subaccount,

 

   

all present and future claims, demands, causes and choses in action in respect of any or all of the foregoing, and

 

   

all payments on or under and all proceeds in respect of any or all of the foregoing.

 

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The Transition Property

In general terms, the portion of all of the rights and interests of CenterPoint Houston that relate to the Bonds under the financing order, upon transfer to us pursuant to the sale agreement, are referred to in this prospectus supplement as the “transition property.” The transition property includes the right to impose, collect and receive, through the applicable transition charges payable by retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory that, subject to certain limitations specified in the Restructuring Act, consume electricity that is delivered through CenterPoint Houston’s transmission and distribution system or produced by new on-site generation, an amount sufficient to pay principal and interest and other required amounts and charges in connection with the Bonds. During the twelve months ended September 30, 2011, approximately 35% of CenterPoint Houston’s total deliveries were to industrial customers, approximately 29% were to commercial customers and approximately 36% were to residential and other customers.

We will purchase the transition property from CenterPoint Houston. The transition property is not a receivable, and the principal collateral securing the Bonds is not a pool of receivables. Transition charges authorized in the financing order that relate to the Bonds are irrevocable and not subject to reduction, impairment, or adjustment by further action of the PUCT, except for annual and interim true-up adjustments to correct overcollections or undercollections and to provide the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with the Bonds. Please read “Credit Enhancement—Statutory True-Up Mechanism for Payment of Scheduled Principal and Interest” in this prospectus supplement. All revenues and collections resulting from transition charges provided for in the financing order that relate to the Bonds are part of the transition property. CenterPoint Houston’s qualified costs authorized in the financing order approving the issuance of the Bonds include:

 

   

the “Securitizable Balance” of $1.695 billion as approved by the PUCT in Docket No. 39809, and

 

   

the ongoing costs of supporting, maintaining and servicing the Bonds, subject to certain caps.

The transition property relating to the Bonds is described in more detail under “The Sale Agreement—CenterPoint Houston’s Sale and Assignment of the Transition Property” in the accompanying prospectus.

The servicer will bill and collect transition charges allocable to the Bonds from “retail electric providers,” which are entities certified under Texas law that provide electricity and related services to retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. The retail electric providers will in turn bill and collect the transition charges from retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. Each retail electric provider will include the transition charges in its bill to its retail electric customers but is not required to show the transition charges as a separate line item or footnote. However, each retail electric provider will be required to provide annual written notice to its customers that transition charges have been included in the customers’ bills.

Each retail electric provider will be required to pay the transition charges on or before the 35th day after it receives the bill from the servicer, less an agreed allowance for expected uncollectible amounts, whether or not the retail electric provider has collected all amounts owed to it by its retail electric customers. Prior to the date on which the retail electric provider remits the transition charges to the servicer, the transition charges may be commingled with the retail electric provider’s other funds. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers,” “Retail Electric Providers” and “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment—Bankruptcy of a Retail Electric Provider” in the accompanying prospectus.

The servicer will have only limited rights to collect the transition charges directly from retail electric customers if a retail electric provider does not remit such payments to the servicer but will have certain rights against the retail electric provider. Please read “Retail Electric Providers” in the accompanying prospectus. For information on how electric service to retail electric customers may be terminated, please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks—Limits on rights to terminate service might make it more difficult to collect the transition charges” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

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Under the Restructuring Act and the indenture, the trustee or the holders of the Bonds have the right to foreclose or otherwise enforce a lien on the transition property. However, in the event of foreclosure, there is likely to be a limited market, if any, for the transition property. Therefore, foreclosure might not be a realistic or practical remedy. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property—Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect” in the accompanying prospectus.

The Financing Order

On October 27, 2011, the PUCT issued the financing order relating to the Bonds to CenterPoint Houston. The financing order will become final and non-appealable on November 12, 2011 unless an appeal is filed prior to that date. The financing order authorizes CenterPoint Houston to cause us to issue transition bonds in one or more series in an aggregate amount equal to the Securitizable Balance. The financing order also authorizes transition charges in amounts sufficient to recover the principal and interest on the Bonds plus ongoing qualified costs. Our ability to recover servicing fees and administration agreement costs through transition charges is subject to caps imposed by the financing order. The PUCT guarantees that it will take specific actions pursuant to the irrevocable financing order as expressly authorized by the Restructuring Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to timely pay scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. The financing order provides that the true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the PUCT set forth in the financing order are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the Bonds, and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the PUCT. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” in the accompanying prospectus.

Payment and Record Dates and Payment Sources

Beginning                    , 2012, we will make payments of interest on the Bonds semi-annually on                      and                      of each year, or, if that day is not a business day, the following business day (each, a “payment date”). So long as the Bonds are in book-entry form, on each payment date, we will make interest and principal payments to the persons who are the holders of record as of the business day immediately prior to that payment date, which is referred to as the “record date.” If we issue certificated transition bonds to beneficial owners of the Bonds as described in “The Transition Bonds—Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus, the record date will be the last business day of the calendar month immediately preceding the payment date. On each payment date, we will pay amounts on outstanding Bonds from amounts available in the collection account and the related subaccounts held by the trustee in the priority set forth under “Credit Enhancement—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in this prospectus supplement. These available amounts, which will include amounts collected by the servicer for us with respect to the transition charges, are described in greater detail under “The Transition Bonds—The Collection Account for the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus.

Principal Payments

On each payment date, we will pay principal of the Bonds to the bondholders equal to the sum, without duplication, of:

 

   

the principal amount scheduled to be paid on that payment date,

 

   

the unpaid principal amount due on the final maturity date, if such payment date is the final maturity date,

 

   

the unpaid principal amount upon acceleration following an event of default, and

 

   

any unpaid and previously scheduled payments of principal and overdue amounts of principal,

 

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but only to the extent funds are available in the collection account (including all applicable subaccounts) after payment of certain of our fees and expenses and after payment of interest as described below under “—Interest Payments.” To the extent funds are so available, we will make scheduled payments of principal of the Bonds in the following order:

 

  1. to the holders of the [tranche A-1] Bonds, until the principal balance of that tranche has been reduced to zero,

 

  2. to the holders of the [tranche A-2] Bonds, until the principal balance of that tranche has been reduced to zero, and

 

  3. to the holders of the [tranche A-3] Bonds, until the principal balance of that tranche has been reduced to zero.

However, unless the Bonds have been accelerated following an event of default, we will not pay principal of any tranche of Bonds on any payment date if making the payment would reduce the principal balance of that tranche to an amount lower than the amount specified in the expected amortization schedule below for that tranche on that payment date. Any excess funds remaining in the collection account after payment of principal, interest, applicable fees and expenses and payments to the applicable subaccounts of the collection account will be retained in the excess funds subaccount until applied on a subsequent payment date. The entire unpaid principal balance of each tranche of the Bonds will be due and payable on the final maturity date for the tranche.

If an event of default under the indenture has occurred and is continuing, the trustee or the holders of a majority in principal amount of the Bonds then outstanding may declare the unpaid principal balance of the Bonds, together with accrued interest thereon, to be due and payable. However, the nature of our business will result in payment of principal upon an acceleration of the Bonds being made as funds become available. Although principal of the Bonds will be due and payable upon acceleration of the Bonds before maturity, the transition charges likely would not be accelerated. The true-up mechanism may be used to adjust transition charges to meet scheduled principal payments but not accelerated maturity. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property—Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect” and “—You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited” in the accompanying prospectus. If there is a shortfall in the amounts available to make principal payments on the Bonds that are due and payable, including upon an acceleration following an event of default under the indenture, the trustee will distribute principal from the collection account pro rata to each tranche of the Bonds based on the principal amount then due and payable on the payment date.

The expected amortization schedule below sets forth the principal balance that is scheduled to remain outstanding on each payment date for each tranche of the Bonds from the issuance date to the scheduled final payment date. Similarly, the expected sinking fund schedule below sets forth the corresponding principal payment that is scheduled to be made on each payment date for each tranche of the Bonds from the issuance date to the scheduled final payment date. In establishing these schedules, we have made the assumptions specified in the bullet points under the weighted average life sensitivity table below under “—Weighted Average Life Sensitivity,” among other assumptions.

 

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Expected Amortization Schedule

Outstanding Principal Balance Per Tranche

 

Tranche Size Date   Tranche A-1 Balance   Tranche A-2 Balance   Tranche A-3 Balance
                    , 2011(Closing Date)   $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            

On each payment date, the trustee will make principal payments to the extent the principal balance of each tranche of the Bonds exceeds the amount indicated for that payment date in the table above and to the extent of funds available in the collection account after payment of certain of our fees and expenses and after payment of interest. If sufficient funds are available on each payment date, principal payments will be in the amounts indicated for each payment date in the expected sinking fund schedule below.

Expected Sinking Fund Schedule

 

Tranche Size Date   Tranche A-1 Balance   Tranche A-2 Balance   Tranche A-3 Balance
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            
  $               $               $            

Total Payments

  $               $               $            

 

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We cannot assure you that principal payments will be made or that the principal balance of any tranche of the Bonds will be reduced at the rates indicated in the schedules above. Principal payments and the actual reduction in tranche principal balances may occur more slowly. Principal payments and the actual reduction in tranche principal balances will not occur more quickly than indicated in the above schedules, except to the extent that the total outstanding principal balance of and interest accrued on the Bonds are accelerated upon an event of default under the indenture. The Bonds will not be in default if principal is not paid as specified in the schedules above unless the principal of any tranche is not paid in full on or before the final maturity date of that tranche.

Weighted Average Life Sensitivity

Weighted average life refers to the average amount of time from the date of issuance of a security until each dollar of principal of the security has been repaid to the investor. The rate of principal payments on each tranche of Bonds, the aggregate amount of each interest payment on each tranche of Bonds and the actual final payment date of each tranche of Bonds will depend primarily on the timing of the servicer’s receipt of transition charges from retail electric providers. Please read “Weighted Average Life and Yield Considerations for the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus for further information. Changes in the expected weighted average lives of the tranches of the Bonds in relation to variances in actual energy consumption levels (retail electric sales) from forecast levels are shown below.

Weighted Average Life Sensitivity

 

        WAL
Tranche  

Expected

Weighted

Avg. Life

(“WAL”)

(yrs)

  5%   15%
   

WAL

(yrs)

 

Change

(days)

 

WAL

(yrs)

 

Change

(days)

A-1

         

A-2

         

A-3

         

For the purposes of preparing the above table, we have assumed, among other things, that:

 

   

the forecast error stays constant over the life of the Bonds and is equal to an overestimate of electricity consumption for all customer classes of 5% or 15% as stated in the chart above (i.e., actual electricity consumption 100/105ths or 100/115ths of the forecast at issuance of the Bonds);

 

   

the servicer makes timely and accurate filings to true-up the transition charges on a semi-annual basis (and, in each case, reforecasts electricity consumption to reflect actual experience);

 

   

customer charge-off rates are held constant at     % for the residential class and     % for all other classes of customers;

 

   

retail electric providers remit all transition charges 35 days after such charges are billed;

 

   

operating expenses are equal to projections;

 

   

there is no acceleration of the final maturity date of the Bonds; and

 

   

a permanent loss of all customers has not occurred.

There can be no assurance that the weighted average lives of the various tranches of the Bonds will be as shown in the above table.

 

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Fees and Expenses

As set forth in the table below, we are obligated to pay fees to the servicer, the trustee, our independent manager(s) and CenterPoint Houston as administrator. The following table illustrates this arrangement.

 

Recipient

  

Source of Payment

  

Fees and Expenses Payable

Servicer

   Transition charge collections and investment earnings.    0.05% of initial principal
amount of the Bonds issued per
annum, as long as CenterPoint
Houston or an affiliate is the
servicer

Trustee

   Transition charge collections and investment earnings.    $         per annum, plus expenses

Independent manager(s)

   Transition charge collections and investment earnings.    $         per annum, plus expenses

Administrator

   Transition charge collections and investment earnings.    $100,000 per annum, plus
expenses
Other operating expenses (accounting, rating agency, legal fees, etc.)    Transition charge collections and investment earnings.    $         per annum (estimated)

In accordance with the terms of the financing order and subject to the approval of the trustee, the PUCT will permit a successor servicer to CenterPoint Houston to recover a higher servicer fee if CenterPoint Houston ceases to serve as the servicer and service the transition property. The annual servicing fee payable to any other servicer not affiliated with CenterPoint Houston shall not at any time exceed 0.6% of the original principal amount of the Bonds unless such higher rate is approved by the PUCT.

Distribution Following Acceleration

Upon an acceleration of the maturity of the Bonds, the total outstanding principal balance of and interest accrued on the Bonds will be payable without priority of interest over principal or principal over interest and without regard to tranche. Although principal will be due and payable upon acceleration, the nature of our business will result in principal being paid as funds become available. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property—Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect” and “—You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited” in the accompanying prospectus. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs—The State Pledge” and “—Constitutional Matters” in the accompanying prospectus.

Interest Payments

Holders of Bonds will receive interest at the rate for the tranche of Bonds such holder owns as set forth in the table on the cover of this prospectus supplement and on page S-11.

Interest on each tranche of Bonds will accrue from and including the date of issuance to but excluding the first payment date, and thereafter from and including the previous payment date to but excluding the applicable payment date until the Bonds have been paid in full. Each of those periods is referred to as an “interest accrual period.” On each payment date, we will pay interest on each tranche of the Bonds equal to the following amounts:

 

   

if there has been a payment default, any interest payable but unpaid on any prior payment date, together with interest on such unpaid interest, if any, and

 

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accrued interest on the principal balance of each tranche of the Bonds as of the close of business on the preceding payment date, or the date of the original issuance of the Bonds in the case of the first interest accrual period, after giving effect to all payments of principal made on the preceding payment date, if any.

We will pay interest on the Bonds before we pay principal on the Bonds. Please read “The Transition Bonds—Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds” in the accompanying prospectus. If there is a shortfall in the amounts available in the collection account to make interest payments on the Bonds, the trustee will distribute interest pro rata to each tranche of Bonds based on the amount of interest payable on each such outstanding tranche. Please read “Credit Enhancement—Collection Account and Subaccounts” in this prospectus supplement. We will calculate interest on tranches of the Bonds on the basis of a 360-day year consisting of twelve 30-day months.

Optional Redemption

We may not voluntarily redeem any tranche of the Bonds.

 

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THE TRUSTEE

                    is a [national bank][New York banking corporation].                    has acted as trustee on numerous asset-backed securities transactions, including acting as trustee on various auto loan and auto lease securitization transactions and for other securitizations that are structurally similar to the Bonds.                     is experienced in administering transactions of this kind. Please read “The Transition Bonds,” “The Sale Agreement” and “The Servicing Agreement” in the accompanying prospectus for further information.

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

Credit enhancement for the Bonds is intended to protect you against losses or delays in scheduled payments on your Bonds. Please read “Risk Factors—You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited” in the accompanying prospectus.

Statutory True-Up Mechanism for Payment of Scheduled Principal and Interest

The Restructuring Act mandates and the irrevocable financing order guarantees that transition charges on all retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory will be reviewed and adjusted at least annually, and semi-annually as necessary, to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide payment of scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. Transition charges may be adjusted semi-annually if necessary to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with the Bonds. In the irrevocable financing order, the PUCT guarantees that it will act pursuant to the financing order as expressly authorized by the Restructuring Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to pay on a timely basis, scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. There is no “cap” on the level of transition charges that may be imposed on the consumers of electricity in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory to timely pay scheduled principal and interest on the Bonds. The financing order provides that the true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the PUCT set forth in the financing order are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the Bonds and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the PUCT. Please read “The Transition Charges” below and “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Servicing Agreement—Adjustment Process for Transition Charges” in the accompanying prospectus.

Collection Account and Subaccounts

The trustee will establish a collection account for the Bonds to hold the capital contribution from CenterPoint Houston and collected transition charges periodically remitted to the trustee by the servicer. The collection account will consist of various subaccounts, including the following:

 

   

the general subaccount,

 

   

the excess funds subaccount,

 

   

the capital subaccount, and

 

   

other subaccounts, if necessary.

Withdrawals from and deposits to these subaccounts will be made as described below in this prospectus supplement and under “The Transition Bonds—The Collection Account for the Transition Bonds” and “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in the accompanying prospectus.

The General Subaccount. The trustee will deposit collected transition charges remitted to it by the servicer with respect to the Bonds into the general subaccount. On each payment date, the trustee will allocate amounts in the general subaccount as described under “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” below in accordance with instructions provided by the servicer.

 

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The Excess Funds Subaccount. The excess funds subaccount will be funded on any payment date with collected transition charges and earnings on amounts in the collection account, other than earnings on amounts allocated to the capital subaccount, in excess of the amount necessary to pay:

 

   

fees and expenses, including any indemnity payments, of the trustee, our independent manager(s), the servicer and the administrator and other fees, expenses, costs and charges,

 

   

principal and interest payments on the Bonds required to be paid or scheduled to be paid on that payment date, and

 

   

any amount required to replenish any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount.

The periodic adjustments of the transition charges will be calculated to eliminate any amounts held in the excess funds subaccount. These adjustments generally will occur annually. Under limited circumstances, these adjustments may occur more frequently, but not more frequently than every six months during the first thirteen years the transition charges are collected in respect of the Bonds and every three months during the fourteenth and fifteenth years.

If amounts available in the general subaccount are not sufficient to pay the fees and expenses due on any payment date, to make required or scheduled payments to the bondholders and to replenish any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount, the trustee will first draw on any amounts in the excess funds subaccount to make those payments.

The Capital Subaccount. On the date we issue the Bonds, CenterPoint Houston will deposit $         into the capital subaccount as a capital contribution to us, which is equal to 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the Bonds. If amounts available in the general subaccount and the excess funds subaccount are not sufficient to make required or scheduled payments to the bondholders and to pay the fees and expenses specified in the indenture due on any payment date, the trustee will draw on amounts in the capital subaccount to make those payments.

Other Subaccounts. Other subaccounts may be used to provide credit enhancements for the transaction provided that the PUCT’s designated representative and CenterPoint Houston agree in advance that such enhancements provide benefits greater than their tangible and intangible costs.

How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated

Amounts remitted by the servicer to the trustee with respect to the Bonds, including any indemnity amounts and all investment earnings on amounts in the general subaccount of the collection account, will be deposited into the general subaccount.

On each payment date, the trustee will allocate or pay all amounts on deposit in the general subaccount of the collection account for the Bonds in the following priority in accordance with instructions provided by the servicer:

 

  1. payment of the trustee’s fees, expenses and any outstanding indemnity amounts relating to the Bonds not to exceed $             in any 12-month period,

 

  2. payment of the servicing fee relating to the Bonds, plus any unpaid servicing fees relating to the Bonds from prior payment dates,

 

  3. payment of the fees of our independent manager(s) (which are billed annually), which will be in an amount specified in an agreement between us and our independent manager(s), and a pro rata portion of the administration fee,

 

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  4. payment of all of our other ordinary periodic operating expenses relating to the Bonds, such as accounting and audit fees, rating agency fees, legal fees and certain reimbursable costs of the administrator under the administration agreement and of the servicer under the servicing agreement,

 

  5. payment of the interest then due on the Bonds, including any past-due interest,

 

  6. at final maturity or upon acceleration upon an event of default, payment of the principal then required to be paid on the Bonds,

 

  7. payment of the principal then scheduled to be paid on the Bonds in accordance with the expected sinking fund schedule, including any previously unpaid scheduled principal,

 

  8. payment of any of our remaining unpaid operating expenses and any remaining amounts owed pursuant to the basic documents relating to the Bonds, including all remaining indemnity amounts owed to the trustee,

 

  9. replenishment of any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount, including investment earnings in the capital subaccount to the extent used for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8,

 

  10. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing and that CenterPoint Houston makes a contribution in satisfaction of applicable legal requirements to the capital subaccount in an amount greater than 0.5% of the initial outstanding balance of the Bonds, release to us an amount calculated at CenterPoint Houston’s then authorized rate of return on equity, which is currently 10% per annum, on the amount contributed to the capital subaccount in excess of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the Bonds;

 

  11. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing, release the investment earnings relating to the 0.5% contribution to the capital subaccount to us,

 

  12. allocation of the remainder, if any, to the excess funds subaccount, and

 

  13. after the Bonds have been paid in full and discharged, the balance, together with all amounts in the capital subaccount and the excess funds subaccount, to us free and clear of the lien of the indenture.

The annual servicing fee in clause 2 may not exceed 0.05% of the original principal amount of the Bonds (for so long as CenterPoint Houston is the servicer) and the annual administration fee in clause 3 may not exceed $100,000, plus expenses.

If, on any payment date, funds in the general subaccount are insufficient to make the allocations or payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 9 of the first paragraph of this subsection, the trustee will draw from amounts on deposit in the following subaccounts in the following order up to the amount of the shortfall:

 

  1. from the excess funds subaccount for allocations and payments contemplated in clauses 1 through 10, and

 

  2. from the capital subaccount for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8.

If, on any payment date, available collections of transition charges allocable to the Bonds, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay interest due on all outstanding Bonds on that payment date, amounts available will be allocated pro rata based on the amount of interest payable on each tranche of the Bonds. If, on any payment date, remaining collections of transition charges allocable to the Bonds, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay principal due and payable on all outstanding Bonds on that payment date, amounts available will be allocated pro rata based on the principal amount of each tranche then due and payable. If, on any payment date, remaining collections of transition charges allocable to the Bonds, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay principal scheduled to be paid on all outstanding Bonds, amounts available will be allocated sequentially to each

 

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tranche then scheduled to be paid on the payment date. If the trustee uses amounts on deposit in the capital subaccount to pay those amounts or make those transfers, as the case may be, subsequent adjustments to the transition charges will take into account, among other things, the need to replenish those amounts.

THE TRANSITION CHARGES

CenterPoint Houston will be the initial servicer of the Bonds. Beginning on the date we issue the Bonds, the initial transition charges listed in the table below will be imposed on retail electric customers in each transition charge customer class at the applicable rate for the class determined pursuant to the financing order. These transition charges may be adjusted annually, or more frequently under certain circumstances, by the servicer in accordance with its filings with the PUCT. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” in the accompanying prospectus.

Initial Transition Charges

 

Transition Charge Customer Class

  

Initial Transition Charge Rate

Residential

   $             per kWh

MGS (miscellaneous general service)

   $             per kW; $             per kWh

LGS (large general service)

   $            per kVa; $             per kWh

LOS-A (large overhead service – A)

   $             per kW

LOS-B (large overhead service – B)

   $             per kW

Non-Metered Lighting

     $             per kWh

Standby Electric Service – Distribution

   $             per kW

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Distribution

   $             per kW

Interruptible Service – 30 Minute Notice

   $             per kW

Interruptible Service – 10 Minute Notice

   $             per kW

Interruptible Service – Instantaneous

   $             per kW

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Transmission

   $             per kW

Standby Electric Service – Transmission

   $             per kW

Standby Interruptible Service

   $             per kW

SCP (special contract pricing)

   $             per kW

Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Allocation” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

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ASSURANCES OF FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

Each retail electric provider in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory is obligated to collect and remit transition charges to the servicer as described under “Retail Electric Providers” in the accompanying prospectus. The financing order provides that each retail electric provider that does not maintain a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from S&P and Moody’s, respectively, must provide:

 

   

a cash deposit of two months’ maximum expected transition charge collections,

 

   

an affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit from an entity with a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from S&P and Moody’s, respectively, providing for payment of such amount of transition charge collections in the event that the retail electric provider defaults in its payment obligations, or

 

   

a combination of any of the foregoing.

A retail electric provider that does not have or maintain the requisite credit rating may select which alternate form of deposit, credit support or combination thereof it will utilize. As of September 30, 2011, there were approximately 85 retail electric providers providing service in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, all of which did business with CenterPoint Houston. A significant portion of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers are from affiliates of NRG Energy, Inc. (“NRG”) and Energy Future Holdings Corp. (“Energy Future Holdings”). In May 2009, NRG acquired the successor to Reliant Energy, Incorporated’s Texas retail electric business. As of September 30, 2011, affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings accounted for approximately 41% and 12%, respectively, of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers.

Retail electric provider cash deposits will be held by the trustee, maintained in a segregated account, and invested in short-term high quality investments, as permitted by the rating agencies rating the Bonds. If a retail electric provider defaults in making a payment of transition charges to the servicer and does not remedy the default within a 10 calendar-day grace period, the amounts on deposit or available from other credit support (up to an amount of the lesser of the payment default of the retail electric provider or the amount of the deposit or other credit support amount) will be used to make transition charge payments in respect of the Bonds. Please read “Retail Electric Providers—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements” “—Remedies Upon Default” and “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers” in the accompanying prospectus.

 

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UNDERWRITING THE BONDS

Subject to the terms and conditions in the underwriting agreement among us, CenterPoint Houston and the underwriters, for whom                     and                     are acting as representatives, we have agreed to sell to the underwriters, and the underwriters have severally agreed to purchase, the principal amount of the Bonds listed opposite each underwriter’s name below:

 

Underwriter

 

Tranche A-1

 

Tranche A-2

 

Tranche A-3

     
     
     
     
     

Under the underwriting agreement, the underwriters will take and pay for all of the Bonds we offer, if any are taken. If an underwriter defaults, the underwriting agreement provides that the purchase commitments of the non-defaulting underwriters may be increased or the underwriting agreement may be terminated.

The Underwriters’ Sales Price for the Bonds

The Bonds sold by the underwriters to the public will be initially offered at the prices to the public set forth on the cover of this prospectus supplement. The underwriters propose initially to offer the Bonds to dealers at such prices, less a selling concession not to exceed the percentage listed below for each tranche. The underwriters may allow, and dealers may reallow, a discount not to exceed the percentage listed below for each tranche.

 

     Selling
Concession
   Reallowance
Discount
     

Tranche A-1

     

Tranche A-2

     

Tranche A-3

     

After the initial public offering, the public offering prices, selling concessions and reallowance discounts may change.

No Assurance as to Resale Price or Resale Liquidity for the Bonds

The Bonds are a new issue of securities with no established trading market. They will not be listed on any securities exchange. The underwriters have advised us that they intend to make a market in the Bonds, but they are not obligated to do so and may discontinue market making at any time without notice. We cannot assure you that a liquid trading market will develop for the Bonds.

Various Types of Underwriter Transactions that May Affect the Price of the Bonds

The underwriters may engage in overallotment transactions, stabilizing transactions, syndicate covering transactions and penalty bids with respect to the Bonds in accordance with Regulation M under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Overallotment transactions involve syndicate sales in excess of the offering size, which create a syndicate short position. Stabilizing transactions are bids to purchase the Bonds, which are permitted, so long as the stabilizing bids do not exceed a specific maximum price. Syndicate covering transactions involve purchases of the Bonds in the open market after the distribution has been completed in order to cover syndicate short positions. Penalty bids permit the underwriters to reclaim a selling concession from a syndicate member when the Bonds originally sold by the syndicate member are purchased in a syndicate covering transaction. These overallotment transactions, stabilizing transactions, syndicate covering transactions and penalty bids may cause the prices of the Bonds to be higher than they would otherwise be. Neither we, CenterPoint Houston, the trustee, our managers nor any of the underwriters represent that the underwriters will engage in any of these transactions or that these transactions, if commenced, will not be discontinued without notice at any time.

 

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Certain of the underwriters and their affiliates have in the past provided, and may in the future from time to time provide, investment banking and general financing and banking services to CenterPoint Houston and its affiliates for which they have in the past received, and in the future may receive, customary fees. In addition, each underwriter may from time to time take positions in the Bonds.

We estimate that the total expenses of the offering will be approximately $        million.

We and CenterPoint Houston have agreed to indemnify the underwriters against some liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, or to contribute to payments the underwriters may be required to make in respect of those liabilities.

The underwriters are offering the Bonds, subject to prior sale, when, as and if issued to and accepted by them, subject to approval of legal matters, including the validity of the Bonds and other conditions contained in the underwriting agreement, such as receipt of ratings confirmations, officers’ certificates and legal opinions. The underwriters reserve the right to withdraw, cancel or modify offers to the public and to reject offers in whole or in part.

MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES

Based on guidance from the IRS and certain representations from us, including a representation by us that we will not make, or allow there to be made, any election to be treated as a separate taxable entity, Baker Botts L.L.P., counsel to us and to CenterPoint Houston, has rendered its opinion that for federal income tax purposes (1) we will not be treated as a taxable entity separate and apart from CenterPoint Energy, (2) the Bonds will constitute indebtedness of CenterPoint Energy and (3) interest paid on the Bonds generally will be taxable to a U.S. bondholder as ordinary income at the time it accrues or is received in accordance with the U.S. bondholder’s method of accounting. For so long as we are not treated as a taxable entity separate and apart from CenterPoint Energy for federal income tax purposes, each beneficial owner of a Bond, by acquiring a beneficial interest, agrees to treat such Bond as indebtedness of CenterPoint Energy for federal income (and, to the extent applicable, state and local income and franchise) tax purposes unless otherwise required by appropriate taxing authorities. Please read “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders” in the accompanying prospectus.

CenterPoint Houston expects to receive a ruling from the Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas to the effect that (i) our receipt of transition property, (ii) our receipt of the transition charges, and (iii) our earnings on eligible investments of the transition charges and the amounts held in the excess funds subaccount and the collection account will not be subject to Texas franchise tax.

RATINGS FOR THE BONDS

We expect that the Bonds will receive credit ratings from three nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (“NRSRO”).

A security rating is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities and may be revised or withdrawn at any time by the assigning NRSRO. Each rating should be evaluated independently of any other rating. No person is obligated to maintain its rating on the Bonds, and accordingly, we cannot assure you that a rating assigned to any tranche of the Bonds upon initial issuance will not be revised or withdrawn by an NRSRO at any time thereafter. If a rating of any tranche of the Bonds is revised or withdrawn, the liquidity of that tranche may be adversely affected. In general, ratings address credit risk and do not represent any assessment of the likelihood of any particular level of principal payments on the Bonds other than payment in full of each tranche of the Bonds by the applicable final maturity date, as well as the timely payment of interest.

 

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Under Rule 17g-5 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, NRSROs providing the sponsor with the requisite certification will have access to all information posted on a website by the sponsor for the purpose of determining the initial rating and monitoring the rating after the closing date in respect of the Bonds. As a result, an NRSRO other than the NRSRO hired by the sponsor (the “hired NRSRO”) may issue ratings on the Bonds (“Unsolicited Ratings”), which may be lower, and could be significantly lower, than the ratings assigned by the hired NRSROs. The Unsolicited Ratings may be issued prior to, or after, the closing date in respect of the Bonds. Issuance of any Unsolicited Rating will not affect the issuance of the Bonds. Issuance of an Unsolicited Rating lower than the ratings assigned by the hired NRSRO on the Bonds might adversely affect the value of the Bonds and, for regulated entities, could affect the status of the Bonds as a legal investment or the capital treatment of the Bonds. Investors in the Bonds should consult with their legal counsel regarding the effect of the issuance of a rating by a non-hired NRSRO that is lower than the rating of a hired NRSRO.

A portion of the fees paid by CenterPoint Houston to an NRSRO that is hired to assign a rating on the Bonds is contingent upon the issuance of the Bonds. In addition to the fees paid by CenterPoint Houston to a hired NRSRO at closing, CenterPoint Houston may pay a fee to the NRSRO for ongoing surveillance for so long as the Bonds are outstanding. However, no NRSRO is under any obligation to continue to monitor or provide a rating on the Bonds.

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

There are no legal or governmental proceedings pending against us, the sponsor, seller, trustee or servicer, or of which any property of the foregoing is subject, that is material to the holders of the Bonds.

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

To the extent that we are required to file such reports and information with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, we will file annual, quarterly and current reports and other information with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We are incorporating by reference any future filings which we (file no. 333-            ) or CenterPoint Houston, but solely in its capacity as our sponsor, make with the Securities and Exchange Commission under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 until we sell all the Bonds, excluding any information that is furnished to, and not filed with, the Securities and Exchange Commission. These reports will be filed under our own name as issuing entity. Please also read “Where You Can Find More Information” in the accompanying prospectus.

LEGAL MATTERS

Certain legal matters relating to us and the issuance of the Bonds will be passed upon for CenterPoint Houston and for us by Baker Botts L.L.P., Houston, Texas and Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware. Christopher J. Arntzen, Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Assistant Corporate Secretary of CenterPoint Energy, may pass upon other legal matters for CenterPoint Houston and for us. Mr. Arntzen is the beneficial owner of less than 1% of CenterPoint Energy’s outstanding common stock. Certain legal matters relating to the issuance of the Bonds will be passed upon for the underwriters by Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP, New York, New York. Certain legal matters relating to the federal income tax consequences of the issuance of the Bonds will be passed upon for us by Baker Botts L.L.P.

OFFERING RESTRICTIONS IN CERTAIN JURISDICTIONS

NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF SINGAPORE

EACH UNDERWRITER ACKNOWLEDGES THAT THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS HAVE NOT BEEN REGISTERED AS A PROSPECTUS WITH THE MONETARY AUTHORITY OF SINGAPORE. ACCORDINGLY, EACH UNDERWRITER REPRESENTS,

 

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WARRANTS AND AGREES THAT IT HAS NOT OFFERED OR SOLD ANY BONDS OR CAUSED THE BONDS TO BE MADE THE SUBJECT OF AN INVITATION FOR SUBSCRIPTION OR PURCHASE, AND WILL NOT OFFER OR SELL ANY BONDS OR CAUSE THE BONDS TO BE MADE THE SUBJECT OF AN INVITATION FOR SUBSCRIPTION OR PURCHASE, AND HAS NOT CIRCULATED OR DISTRIBUTED, NOR WILL IT CIRCULATE OR DISTRIBUTE THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT OR THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS OR ANY OTHER DOCUMENT OR MATERIAL IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFER OR SALE, OR INVITATION FOR SUBSCRIPTION OR PURCHASE, OF BONDS, WHETHER DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, TO PERSONS IN SINGAPORE OTHER THAN (I) TO AN INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR UNDER SECTION 274 OF THE SECURITIES AND FUTURES ACT, CHAPTER 289 OF SINGAPORE (THE “SFA”), OR ANY PERSON PURSUANT TO SECTION 275(1A), AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 275 OF THE SFA OR (II) TO A RELEVANT PERSON PURSUANT TO SECTION 275(1) OR ANY PERSON PURSUANT TO SECTION 275(1A) OF THE SFA, AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 275 OF THE SFA OR (III) OTHERWISE PURSUANT TO, AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF, ANY OTHER APPLICABLE PROVISION OF THE SFA.

WHERE THE BONDS ARE SUBSCRIBED OR PURCHASED UNDER SECTION 275 BY A RELEVANT PERSON WHICH IS:

(A) A CORPORATION (WHICH IS NOT AN ACCREDITED INVESTOR (AS DEFINED IN SECTION 4A OF THE SFA)) THE SOLE BUSINESS OF WHICH IS TO HOLD INVESTMENTS AND THE ENTIRE SHARE CAPITAL OF WHICH IS OWNED BY ONE OR MORE INDIVIDUALS, EACH OF WHOM IS AN ACCREDITED INVESTOR; OR

(B) A TRUST (WHERE THE TRUSTEE IS NOT AN ACCREDITED INVESTOR) WHOSE SOLE PURPOSE IS TO HOLD INVESTMENTS AND EACH BENEFICIARY OF THE TRUST IS AN INDIVIDUAL WHO IS AN ACCREDITED INVESTOR,

SHARES, DEBENTURES AND UNITS OF SHARES AND DEBENTURES OF THAT CORPORATION OR THE BENEFICIARIES’ RIGHTS AND INTEREST (HOWSOEVER DESCRIBED) IN THAT TRUST SHALL NOT BE TRANSFERRED WITHIN 6 MONTHS AFTER THAT CORPORATION OR THAT TRUST HAS ACQUIRED THE BONDS PURSUANT TO AN OFFER MADE UNDER SECTION 275 EXCEPT:

(1) TO AN INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR (FOR CORPORATIONS, UNDER SECTION 274 OF THE SFA) OR TO A RELEVANT PERSON DEFINED IN SECTION 275(2) OF THE SFA, OR TO ANY PERSON PURSUANT TO AN OFFER THAT IS MADE ON TERMS THAT SUCH RIGHTS OR INTEREST ARE ACQUIRED AT A CONSIDERATION OF NOT LESS THAN S$200,000 (OR ITS EQUIVALENT IN A FOREIGN CURRENCY) FOR EACH TRANSACTION, WHETHER SUCH AMOUNT IS TO BE PAID FOR IN CASH OR BY EXCHANGE OF SECURITIES OR OTHER ASSETS, AND FURTHER FOR CORPORATIONS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 275 OF THE SFA;

(2) WHERE NO CONSIDERATION IS OR WILL BE GIVEN FOR THE TRANSFER; OR

(3) WHERE THE TRANSFER IS BY OPERATION OF LAW. THE PROSPECTUS RELATING TO THE BONDS (“PROSPECTUS”) WILL, PRIOR TO ANY SALE OF SECURITIES PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 106D OF THE COMPANIES ACT (CAP.50), BE LODGED, PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 106D, WITH THE REGISTRAR OF COMPANIES IN SINGAPORE, WHICH WILL TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ITS CONTENTS. HOWEVER, NEITHER THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT NOR THE PROSPECTUS HAS BEEN AND NOR WILL THEY BE REGISTERED AS A PROSPECTUS WITH THE REGISTRAR OF COMPANIES IN SINGAPORE. ACCORDINGLY, THE BONDS MAY NOT BE OFFERED, AND NEITHER THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT NOR ANY OTHER OFFERING

 

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DOCUMENT OR MATERIAL RELATING TO THE BONDS MAY BE CIRCULATED OR DISTRIBUTED, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, TO THE PUBLIC OR ANY MEMBER OF THE PUBLIC IN SINGAPORE OTHER THAN TO INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS OR OTHER PERSONS OF THE KIND SPECIFIED IN SECTION 106C AND SECTION 106D OF THE COMPANIES ACT OR ANY OTHER APPLICABLE EXEMPTION INVOKED UNDER DIVISION 5A OF PART IV OF THE COMPANIES ACT. THE FIRST SALE OF SECURITIES ACQUIRED UNDER A SECTION 106C OR SECTION 106D EXEMPTION IS SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 106E OF THE COMPANIES ACT.

NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA

THE BONDS HAVE NOT BEEN AND WILL NOT BE REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES LAW OF THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA (AS THE SAME MAY BE AMENDED FROM TIME TO TIME) AND ARE NOT TO BE OFFERED OR SOLD TO PERSONS WITHIN THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA (EXCLUDING THE HONG KONG AND MACAU SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS).

NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF JAPAN

THE BONDS HAVE NOT BEEN AND WILL NOT BE REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE LAW OF JAPAN (THE “SEL”), AND MAY NOT BE OFFERED OR SOLD IN JAPAN OR TO, OR FOR THE ACCOUNT OR BENEFIT OF, ANY RESIDENT OF JAPAN OR TO, OR FOR THE ACCOUNT OR BENEFIT OF, ANY RESIDENT OF JAPAN OR TO OTHERS FOR RE-OFFERING OR RESALE, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, IN JAPAN OR TO, OR FOR THE ACCOUNT OR BENEFIT OF, ANY RESIDENT OF JAPAN, EXCEPT PURSUANT TO AN EXEMPTION FROM THE REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS OF, AND OTHERWISE IN COMPLIANCE WITH, THE SEL, AND IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE OTHER RELEVANT LAWS AND REGULATIONS OF JAPAN. AS USED IN THIS PARAGRAPH, “RESIDENT OF JAPAN” MEANS ANY PERSON RESIDENT IN JAPAN, INCLUDING ANY CORPORATION OR OTHER ENTITY ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF JAPAN.

NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF HONG KONG

EACH UNDERWRITER HAS REPRESENTED AND AGREED THAT:

IT HAS NOT OFFERED OR SOLD AND WILL NOT OFFER OR SELL IN HONG KONG, BY MEANS OF ANY DOCUMENT, ANY BONDS OTHER THAN (A) TO PERSONS WHOSE ORDINARY BUSINESS IS TO BUY OR SELL SHARES OR DEBENTURES (WHETHER AS PRINCIPAL OR AGENT); OR (B) TO PROFESSIONAL INVESTORS WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE SECURITIES AND FUTURES ORDINANCE (CAP. 571) OF THE LAWS OF HONG KONG AND ANY RULES MADE THEREUNDER; OR (C) IN CIRCUMSTANCES THAT DO NOT RESULT IN THE DOCUMENT BEING A “PROSPECTUS” AS DEFINED IN THE COMPANIES ORDINANCE (CAP. 32) OF THE LAWS OF HONG KONG OR THAT DO NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO THE PUBLIC WITHIN THE MEANING OF THAT ORDINANCE; AND

IT HAS NOT ISSUED OR HAD IN ITS POSSESSION FOR THE PURPOSE OF ISSUE, AND WILL NOT ISSUE OR HAVE IN ITS POSSESSION FOR THE PURPOSE OF ISSUE, WHETHER IN HONG KONG OR ELSEWHERE ANY ADVERTISEMENT, INVITATION OR DOCUMENT RELATING TO THE BONDS, WHICH IS DIRECTED AT, OR THE CONTENTS OF WHICH ARE LIKELY TO BE ACCESSED OR READ BY, THE PUBLIC OF HONG KONG (EXCEPT IF PERMITTED TO DO SO UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS OF HONG KONG) OTHER THAN WITH RESPECT TO BONDS THAT ARE INTENDED TO BE DISPOSED OF ONLY TO PERSONS OUTSIDE HONG KONG OR ONLY TO “PROFESSIONAL INVESTORS” AS DEFINED UNDER THE SECURITIES AND FUTURES ORDINANCE (CAP. 571) OF THE LAWS OF HONG KONG AND ANY RULES MADE UNDER THAT ORDINANCE.

 

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NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AREA

IN RELATION TO EACH MEMBER STATE OF THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AREA WHICH HAS IMPLEMENTED THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE, WHICH WE REFER TO HEREIN AS A RELEVANT MEMBER STATE, EACH UNDERWRITER HAS REPRESENTED AND AGREED THAT WITH EFFECT FROM AND INCLUDING THE DATE ON WHICH THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE IS IMPLEMENTED IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE (THE “RELEVANT IMPLEMENTATION DATE”), IT HAS NOT MADE AND WILL NOT MAKE AN OFFER OF BONDS TO THE PUBLIC IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE PRIOR TO THE PUBLICATION OF A PROSPECTUS IN RELATION TO THE BONDS WHICH HAS BEEN APPROVED BY THE COMPETENT AUTHORITY IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE OR, WHERE APPROPRIATE, APPROVED IN ANOTHER RELEVANT MEMBER STATE AND NOTIFIED TO THE COMPETENT AUTHORITY IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE, ALL IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE, EXCEPT THAT IT MAY, WITH EFFECT FROM AND INCLUDING THE RELEVANT IMPLEMENTATION DATE, MAKE AN OFFER OF BONDS TO THE PUBLIC IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE AT ANY TIME:

(A) TO QUALIFIED INVESTORS AS DEFINED IN THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE;

(B) TO FEWER THAN 100 (OR, IF THE RELEVANT MEMBER STATE HAS IMPLEMENTED THE RELEVANT PROVISION OF THE 2010 PD AMENDING DIRECTIVE, 150) NATURAL OR LEGAL PERSONS (OTHER THAN QUALIFIED INVESTORS AS DEFINED IN THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE) SUBJECT TO OBTAINING THE PRIOR CONSENT OF THE REPRESENTATIVES FOR ANY SUCH OFFER; OR

(C) IN ANY OTHER CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH DO NOT REQUIRE THE PUBLICATION BY THE ISSUING ENTITY OF A PROSPECTUS PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 3 OF THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE.

FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS PROVISION, THE EXPRESSION AN “OFFER OF BONDS TO THE PUBLIC” IN RELATION TO ANY BONDS IN ANY RELEVANT MEMBER STATE MEANS THE COMMUNICATION IN ANY FORM AND BY ANY MEANS OF SUFFICIENT INFORMATION ON THE TERMS OF THE OFFER AND THE BONDS TO BE OFFERED SO AS TO ENABLE AN INVESTOR TO DECIDE TO PURCHASE OR SUBSCRIBE THE BONDS, AS THE SAME MAY BE VARIED IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE BY ANY MEASURE IMPLEMENTING THE PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE IN THAT RELEVANT MEMBER STATE, THE EXPRESSION “PROSPECTUS DIRECTIVE” MEANS DIRECTIVE 2003/71/EC AND INCLUDES ANY RELEVANT IMPLEMENTING MEASURE IN EACH RELEVANT MEMBER STATE AND THE EXPRESSION “2010 PD AMENDING DIRECTIVE” MEANS DIRECTIVE 2010/73/EU.

NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM

THE UNDERWRITER HAS REPRESENTED AND AGREED THAT:

(A) IT HAS ONLY COMMUNICATED OR CAUSED TO BE COMMUNICATED AND WILL ONLY COMMUNICATE OR CAUSE TO BE COMMUNICATED AN INVITATION OR INDUCEMENT TO ENGAGE IN INVESTMENT ACTIVITY (WITHIN THE MEANING OF SECTION 21 OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000, AS AMENDED (THE “FSMA”)) RECEIVED BY IT IN CONNECTION WITH THE ISSUE OR SALE OF THE BONDS IN CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH SECTION 21(1) OF THE FSMA DOES NOT APPLY TO THE ISSUING ENTITY; AND

(B) IT HAS COMPLIED AND WILL COMPLY WITH ALL APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF THE FSMA WITH RESPECT TO ANYTHING DONE BY IT IN RELATION TO THE BONDS IN, FROM OR OTHERWISE INVOLVING THE UNITED KINGDOM.

 

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THIS OFFERING DOCUMENT IS DIRECTED ONLY AT PERSONS WHO (I) ARE OUTSIDE THE UNITED KINGDOM OR (II) ARE INVESTMENT PROFESSIONALS FALLING WITHIN ARTICLE 19(5) OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000 (FINANCIAL PROMOTION) ORDER 2005 AS AMENDED (THE “ORDER”) OR (III) ARE HIGH NET WORTH ENTITIES FALLING WITHIN ARTICLE 49(2)(A) TO (D) OF THE ORDER OR (IV) SUCH OTHER PERSONS TO WHOM IT MAY LAWFULLY BE COMMUNICATED (ALL SUCH PERSONS TOGETHER BEING REFERRED TO AS “RELEVANT PERSONS”). THIS OFFERING DOCUMENT MUST NOT BE ACTED ON OR RELIED ON BY PERSONS WHO ARE NOT RELEVANT PERSONS. ANY INVESTMENT OR INVESTMENT ACTIVITY TO WHICH THIS OFFERING DOCUMENT RELATES IS AVAILABLE ONLY TO RELEVANT PERSONS AND WILL BE ENGAGED IN ONLY WITH RELEVANT PERSONS.

 

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The information in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. The transition bonds may not be sold until the registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted.

 

Subject to completion, dated                    , 2011.

PROSPECTUS

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC

Issuing Entity

$1,695,000,000

SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor

 

 

You should carefully consider the risk factors beginning on page 14 of this prospectus before you invest in the transition bonds.

We, the issuing entity, may, in the future, issue the transition bonds described in this prospectus. The transition bonds may have one or more tranches. The transition bonds represent only our obligations and are backed only by our assets. CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC and its affiliates, other than us, are not liable for any payments on the transition bonds. The transition bonds are not a debt or obligation of the State of Texas, the Public Utility Commission of Texas or any other governmental agency or instrumentality and are not a charge on the full faith and credit or the taxing power of the State of Texas or any governmental agency or instrumentality.

We are a special purpose entity and own no property other than the collateral described in this prospectus. The collateral is the sole source of payment for the transition bonds.

There currently is no secondary market for the transition bonds, and we cannot assure you that one will develop.

We may offer and sell the transition bonds by use of this prospectus. We will provide the specific terms of the offering of the transition bonds in a supplement to this prospectus. You should read this prospectus and the prospectus supplement carefully before you invest in the transition bonds. This prospectus may not be used to offer and sell the transition bonds unless accompanied by a prospectus supplement.

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

 

 

The date of this prospectus is                     , 2011.


Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS

     1   

CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION

     1   

PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

     3   

Summary of the Transition Bonds

     3   

Parties to Transaction and Responsibilities

     6   

Flow of Funds

     7   

The Collateral

     7   

The Transition Property

     8   

Interest Payments

     9   

Principal Payments and Record Dates and Payment Sources

     9   

Priority of Distributions

     9   

Credit Enhancement

     10   

Allocations Among Transition Bond and System Restoration Bond Issuances

     11   

State Pledge

     11   

Optional Redemption

     11   

Payment and Record Dates

     11   

Scheduled Final Payment Dates and Final Maturity Dates

     12   

Credit Ratings

     12   

Reports to Transition Bondholders

     12   

Servicing Compensation

     12   

Prohibition from Issuing More than One Series of Transition Bonds

     12   

Federal Income Tax Status

     12   

ERISA Considerations

     13   

RISK FACTORS

     14   

Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions

     14   

Servicing Risks

     16   

Storm-Related Risks

     19   

Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property

     20   

Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or the Servicer

     20   

Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers

     23   

Other Risks Associated with an Investment in the Transition Bonds

     25   

THE RESTRUCTURING ACT

     28   

The Restructuring Act’s General Effect on the Electric Utility Industry in Texas

     28   

Recovery of Qualified Costs for CenterPoint Houston and Other Texas Utilities

     29   

CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs

     30   

CENTERPOINT HOUSTON’S FINANCING ORDER

     33   

RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

     36   

THE SELLER, INITIAL SERVICER AND SPONSOR OF THE TRANSITION PROPERTY

     40   

About CenterPoint Houston

     40   

Customer Classes

     43   

How CenterPoint Houston Forecasts the Number of Retail Electric Customers and the Amount of Electricity Usage

     45   

The Billing Process

     47   

The Collection Process

     47   

Delinquencies

     48   

Days Sales Outstanding

     48   

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC, THE ISSUING ENTITY

     49   

General

     49   

Our Purpose

     49   

Our Relationship With CenterPoint Houston

     50   

 

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Our Relationship With the PUCT

     50   

Our Managers and Executive Officers

     50   

Manager Fees and Limitation on Liabilities

     51   

We Are a Separate and Distinct Legal Entity from CenterPoint Houston

     51   

Administration Agreement

     52   

USE OF PROCEEDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SERIES 2001-1 TRANSITION BONDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS, SERIES A

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE 2008 SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS

     53   

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED SYSTEM RESTORATION BONDS

     54   

THE TRANSITION BONDS

     54   

General Terms of the Transition Bonds

     54   

Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds

     55   

Credit Enhancement for the Transition Bonds

     57   

Transition Bonds Will Be Issued in Book-Entry Form

     57   

Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds

     60   

Registration and Transfer of the Transition Bonds

     61   

The Security for the Transition Bonds

     61   

The Collection Account for the Transition Bonds

     63   

How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated

     66   

Reports to Holders of the Transition Bonds

     67   

Website

     68   

We and the Trustee May Modify the Indenture

     68   

What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds

     71   

Our Covenants

     74   

Access to the List of Transition Bondholders

     76   

We Must File an Annual Compliance Statement

     76   

The Trustee May Be Required to Provide an Annual Report to All Transition Bondholders

     76   

What Will Trigger Satisfaction and Discharge of the Indenture

     77   

Our Legal Defeasance and Covenant Defeasance Options

     77   

The Trustee

     78   

Governing Law

     79   

WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     79   

THE SALE AGREEMENT

     80   

CenterPoint Houston’s Sale and Assignment of the Transition Property

     80   

CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties

     81   

CenterPoint Houston’s Covenants

     84   

CenterPoint Houston’s Obligation to Indemnify Us and the Trustee and to Take Legal Action

     87   

Successors to CenterPoint Houston

     88   

Amendment

     88   

THE SERVICING AGREEMENT

     89   

Servicing Procedures

     89   

Adjustment Process for Transition Charges

     91   

Servicer Compensation

     92   

CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties as Servicer

     93   

The Servicer Will Indemnify Us, Other Entities and the PUCT in Limited Circumstances

     94   

The Servicer Will Provide Statements to Us, the PUCT, the Rating Agencies and the Trustee

     95   

The Servicer Will Provide Compliance Reports Concerning the Servicing Agreement

     95   

Matters Regarding CenterPoint Houston as the Servicer

     96   

Events Constituting a Default by the Servicer

     97   

The Trustee’s Rights if the Servicer Defaults

     98   

Waiver of Past Defaults

     98   

 

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The Obligations of a Successor Servicer

     98   

Amendment

     99   

Intercreditor Agreement

     99   

HOW A BANKRUPTCY MAY AFFECT YOUR INVESTMENT

     100   

MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES FOR THE TRANSITION BONDHOLDERS

     104   

General

     104   

Income Tax Status of the Transition Bonds and the Issuing Entity

     104   

Taxation of Transition Bondholders

     105   

Definition of U.S. Holder and Non-U.S. Holder

     105   

Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders

     105   

Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders

     106   

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

     108   

Plan Asset Issues for an Investment in the Transition Bonds

     108   

Prohibited Transaction Exemptions

     108   

General Investment Considerations for Prospective Plan Investors in the Transition Bonds

     109   

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     110   

Distribution

     110   

Compensation to Underwriters

     110   

Other Distribution Matters

     110   

RATINGS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

     111   

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

     112   

LEGAL MATTERS

     113   

GLOSSARY OF DEFINED TERMS

     114   

 

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ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS

This prospectus is part of a registration statement we have filed with the SEC. This prospectus provides you with a general description of the transition bonds we may offer. When we offer transition bonds, we will provide a supplement to this prospectus. The prospectus supplement will describe the specific terms of the offering. The prospectus supplement may also contain information that supplements the information contained in this prospectus, and you should rely on the supplementary information in the prospectus supplement. Please carefully read this prospectus, the prospectus supplement and the information, if any, contained in the documents we refer to in this prospectus under the heading “Where You Can Find More Information.”

References in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement to the terms “we,” “us,” “our” or “the issuing entity” mean CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC. References to “CenterPoint Houston,” “the sponsor,” “the initial servicer” or “the seller” mean CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC. References to “CenterPoint Energy” mean CenterPoint Energy, Inc., the ultimate parent company of CenterPoint Houston. References to the “Bonds” or, unless the context otherwise requires, the “transition bonds” mean the transition bonds offered pursuant to the prospectus supplement. References to the “bondholders” or the “holders” refer to the registered holders of the transition bonds. References to “the servicer” refer to CenterPoint Houston and any successor servicer under the servicing agreement referred to in this prospectus and references to the “integrated utility” mean Reliant Energy, Incorporated, the legal predecessor to CenterPoint Houston, as it existed prior to its restructuring and the onset of competition in the retail electric services market in Texas on January 1, 2002, as mandated by the 1999 utility restructuring amendments to the Public Utility Regulatory Act, as subsequently amended, which we refer to as the “Restructuring Act.” We refer to the geographical certificated service area of the integrated utility as it existed on May 1, 1999 as “CenterPoint Houston’s service territory,” within which CenterPoint Houston may recover qualified costs through nonbypassable transition charges assessed on retail electric customers within that area. Unless the context otherwise requires, the term “customer” means a retail end user of electricity and related services provided by a retail electric provider via the transmission and distribution system of an electric utility such as CenterPoint Houston. We also refer to the Public Utility Commission of Texas as the “PUCT.” You can find a glossary of some of the other defined terms we use in this prospectus on page 114 of this prospectus.

You should rely only on the information contained or incorporated by reference in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement. We have not authorized anyone else to provide you with any different information. If anyone provides you with different or inconsistent information, you should not rely on it. We are not making an offer to sell the transition bonds in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. The information in this prospectus is current only as of the date of this prospectus.

CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION

Some statements contained in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement concerning expectations, beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, strategies, future events or performance and underlying assumptions and other statements that are not historical facts, including statements in the documents that are incorporated by reference as discussed in this prospectus under the heading “Where You Can Find More Information,” are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Actual events or results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these statements. In some cases, you can identify our forward-looking statements by the words “anticipate,” “believe,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “goal,” “intend,” “may,” “objective,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “projection,” “should,” “will” or other similar words.

We have based our forward-looking statements on our management’s beliefs, expectations and assumptions based on information available to our management at the time the statements are made. We caution you that assumptions, beliefs, expectations, intentions and projections about future events may and often do vary materially from actual results. Therefore, we cannot assure you that actual results will not differ materially from those expressed or implied by our forward-looking statements.

 

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The following are some of the factors that could cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied by our forward-looking statements:

 

   

changes in market demand, including the effects of energy efficiency measures, and demographic patterns;

 

   

weather variations and other natural phenomena, including, among others, hurricanes, tropical storms, ice or snow storms, floods and other weather-related events and natural disasters, affecting retail electric customer energy usage in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory;

 

   

damage to and the general operating performance of CenterPoint Houston’s facilities and third-party suppliers of electric energy in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory;

 

   

state and federal legislative and regulatory actions or developments affecting various aspects of CenterPoint Houston’s business, including, among others, energy deregulation or re-regulation, health care reform, financial reform and tax legislation;

 

   

the accuracy of the servicer’s forecast of electrical consumption or the payment of transition charges;

 

   

non-payment of transition charges by retail electric providers;

 

   

the reliability of the systems, procedures and other infrastructure necessary to operate the retail electric business in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, including the systems owned and operated by the independent system operator in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Inc.;

 

   

the direct or indirect effects of cyber attacks, data security breaches or other attempts to disrupt the business of CenterPoint Houston or retail electric providers operating in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory;

 

   

the servicer’s ability to perform its billing, collection and other functions;

 

   

national or regional economic conditions affecting retail electric customer energy usage in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory;

 

   

acts of war or terrorism or other catastrophic events affecting retail electric customer energy usage in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory; and

 

   

other factors we discuss in this prospectus, any prospectus supplement and our other Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular statement, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement.

 

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PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

This summary contains a brief description of the transition bonds we may offer by use of this prospectus. You will find a more detailed description of the terms of the offering of the transition bonds following this summary and in the prospectus supplement.

You should carefully consider the risk factors beginning on page 14 of this prospectus before you invest in the transition bonds.

Summary of the Transition Bonds

 

The issuing entity:

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, a direct, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston and a limited liability company formed under Delaware law. We were formed solely to purchase and own transition property, to issue transition bonds secured by transition property and to perform any activity incidental thereto.

 

Our relationship with the PUCT:

Pursuant to the financing order,

 

   

the PUCT or its designated representative has a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint Houston with respect to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds and all matters related to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds will be determined through a joint decision of CenterPoint Houston and the PUCT or its designated representative,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston is directed to take all necessary steps to ensure that the PUCT or its designated representative is provided sufficient and timely information to allow the PUCT or its designated representative to fully participate in, and exercise its decision making power over, the proposed securitization, and

 

   

the servicer will file periodic adjustments to transition charges with the PUCT on our behalf.

 

  We have agreed that certain reports concerning transition charge collections will be provided to the PUCT.

 

Our address:

1111 Louisiana, Suite 4664B, Houston, Texas 77002

 

Our telephone number:

(713) 207-5776

 

The seller, initial servicer and sponsor of the transition property:

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC is a regulated electric transmission and distribution utility organized under Texas law. CenterPoint Houston is engaged in the transmission and distribution of electric energy in a 5,000 square-mile area of the Texas Gulf Coast that includes Houston. As of September 30, 2011, CenterPoint Houston provided electric transmission and distribution service to over 2 million metered customers in this area. CenterPoint Houston is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Energy.

 

 

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  CenterPoint Houston, acting as the initial servicer, and any successor servicer, referred to in this prospectus as the “servicer,” will service the transition property under the servicing agreement with us. CenterPoint Houston currently services under separate servicing agreements other transition property and system restoration property securing (i) the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC, also a wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, which we refer to in this prospectus as “Transition Bond Company I,” (ii) the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC, also a wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, which we refer to in this prospectus as “Transition Bond Company II,”(iii) the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC, also a wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, which we refer to in this prospectus as “Transition Bond Company III” and (iv) the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Restoration Bond Company, LLC, also a wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, which we refer to in this prospectus as “Restoration Bond Company.” Please read “Relationship to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds,” “Relationship to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A,” “Relationship to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds” and “Relationship to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds.”

 

CenterPoint Houston’s address:

1111 Louisiana, Houston, Texas 77002

 

CenterPoint Houston’s telephone number:

(713) 207-3000

 

The trustee:

The trustee for the transition bonds will be named in the prospectus supplement.

 

Transaction overview:

The Restructuring Act’s mandate to transition to a competitive electric market created stranded investment and other balances for electric utilities within the State of Texas. The Restructuring Act permits electric utilities to recover true-up balances through the issuance of transition bonds pursuant to and supported by an irrevocable financing order issued by the PUCT. The Restructuring Act also permits the PUCT to impose an irrevocable nonbypassable transition charge on all retail electric customers within a utility’s certificated service territory as it existed on May 1, 1999, for payment of the transition bonds. We refer to this area in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement, with regard to CenterPoint Houston and the integrated utility, as “CenterPoint Houston’s service territory.” The amount and terms for collections of these transition charges are governed by one or more financing orders issued to an electric utility by the PUCT. The Restructuring Act permits an electric utility to transfer its rights and interests under a financing order, including the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges, to a special purpose entity formed by the electric utility to issue debt securities secured by the right to receive revenues arising from the transition

 

 

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charges. The electric utility’s right to receive the transition charges, all revenues and collections resulting from the transition charges and its other rights and interests under a financing order, upon transfer to the issuing entity, constitute transition property. Under the Restructuring Act, transition property does not come into existence until an electric utility first transfers to an assignee or pledges in connection with the issuance of transition bonds its rights under a related financing order. However, for convenience of reference in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement, the transfer of CenterPoint Houston’s rights under such a financing order is sometimes referred to as the sale or purchase of transition property. References in this prospectus to a “financing order” are to a financing order of the PUCT as described above. Unless the context indicates otherwise, the reference is to the financing order issued by the PUCT on October 27, 2011, which is further described below.

 

  On October 27, 2011, the PUCT issued a financing order to CenterPoint Houston authorizing the issuance of transition bonds in an aggregate amount equal to $1.695 billion (the “Securitizable Balance”). Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” for a discussion of the qualified costs authorized in the financing order, which we refer to in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement as “qualified costs.”

 

  The primary transactions underlying the offering of the transition bonds are as follows:

 

   

We will sell the transition bonds, which will be secured primarily by the transition property, to the underwriters named in the prospectus supplement,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston will sell transition property to us in exchange for the net proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds, and

 

   

CenterPoint Houston will act as the initial servicer of the transition property.

 

  The transition bonds are not obligations of the trustee, our managers, CenterPoint Houston, CenterPoint Energy or of any of their affiliates other than us. The transition bonds are also not obligations of the State of Texas or any governmental agency, authority or instrumentality of the State of Texas.

 

 

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Parties to Transaction and Responsibilities

The following chart represents a general summary of the parties to the transactions underlying the offering of the transition bonds, their roles and their various relationships to the other parties:

LOGO

 

 

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Flow of Funds

The following chart represents a general summary of the flow of funds:

LOGO

The Collateral

The transition bonds will be secured under the indenture by the indenture’s trust estate. The principal asset of the trust estate will be the transition property, which is a present property right created under the Restructuring Act by a financing order issued by the PUCT. The indenture’s trust estate will also consist of:

 

   

our rights under the sale agreement pursuant to which we will acquire the transition property, under the administration agreement and under the bill of sale delivered by CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement,

 

   

our rights under the servicing agreement and any subservicing, agency, intercreditor or collection agreements executed in connection with such servicing agreement,

 

   

the collection account for the transition bonds and all subaccounts of the collection account,

 

   

our rights in all deposits, guarantees, surety bonds, letters of credit and other forms of credit support provided by or on behalf of retail electric providers pursuant to the financing order or a tariff,

 

   

all of our other property related to the transition bonds, other than any cash released to us by the trustee on any payment date from earnings on the capital subaccount,

 

   

all present and future claims, demands, causes and choses in action in respect of any or all of the foregoing, and

 

   

all payments on or under and all proceeds in respect of any or all of the foregoing.

 

 

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The Transition Property

In general terms, all of the rights and interests of CenterPoint Houston under a financing order that are transferred to us pursuant to a sale agreement are referred to in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement as “transition property.” These rights and interests include the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges in amounts sufficient to pay principal and interest and to make other deposits in connection with the transition bonds, to obtain periodic adjustments to such charges as provided in the financing order and to all revenues, collections, claims, rights to payment, payments, money or proceeds arising from the foregoing rights and interests. Transition charges are payable by retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, who, subject to certain limitations specified in the Restructuring Act, consume electricity that is delivered through the distribution system or produced by new on-site generation. During the twelve months ended September 30, 2011, approximately 35% of CenterPoint Houston’s total deliveries were to industrial customers, approximately 29% were to commercial customers and approximately 36% were to residential and other customers.

The transition property is not a receivable, and the principal collateral securing the transition bonds will not be a pool of receivables. Transition charges authorized in a financing order are irrevocable and not subject to reduction, impairment, or adjustment by further action of the PUCT, except for annual and interim true-up adjustments to correct overcollections or undercollections and to provide for the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with the transition bonds. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups.” All revenues and collections resulting from transition charges are part of the transition property with respect to the transition bonds.

We will purchase transition property from CenterPoint Houston to support the issuance of the transition bonds. The servicer will collect the applicable transition charges from “retail electric providers,” which are entities certified under Texas law that provide electricity and related services to retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, and will remit the collections to the trustee. The retail electric providers will in turn bill and collect the transition charges from retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. Each retail electric provider will include the transition charges in its bills to its retail electric customers but is not required to show the transition charges as a separate line item or footnote. However, each retail electric provider will be required to provide annual written notice to its customers that transition charges have been included in the customers’ bills.

Each retail electric provider will be required to pay the transition charges on or before the 35th day after it receives the bill from the servicer, less an agreed allowance for expected uncollectible amounts, whether or not the retail electric provider has collected all amounts owed to it by its retail electric customers. Prior to the date on which the retail electric provider remits the transition charges to the servicer, the transition charges may be commingled with the retail electric provider’s other funds. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers,” “Retail Electric Providers” and “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment—Bankruptcy of a Retail Electric Provider” in this prospectus.

The servicer will have only limited rights to collect the transition charges directly from retail electric customers if a retail electric provider does not remit such payments to the servicer, but will have certain rights against the retail electric provider. Please read “Retail Electric Providers” in this prospectus. For information on how electric service to retail electric customers may be terminated, please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks—Limits on rights to terminate service might make it more difficult to collect the transition charges” in this prospectus. Because the amount of transition charge collections will largely depend on the amount of electricity consumed by customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, the amount of collections may vary substantially from month to month and year to year. Please read “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property” in this prospectus.

 

 

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Interest Payments

Interest on the transition bonds will accrue from the date we issue the transition bonds at the interest rate stated in the prospectus supplement. On each payment date, we will pay interest on the transition bonds equal to the following amounts:

 

   

if there has been a payment default, any interest payable but unpaid on any prior payment dates, together with interest on such unpaid interest, if any, and

 

   

accrued interest on the principal balance of the transition bonds as of the close of business on the preceding payment date or the date of the original issuance of the transition bonds in the case of the first interest payment date, as applicable, after giving effect to all payments of principal made on the preceding payment date, if any.

We will pay interest on the transition bonds before we pay the principal of the transition bonds. Please read “The Transition Bonds—Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds.” If there is a shortfall in the amounts available in the collection account to make interest payments, the trustee will distribute interest pro rata to each tranche of the transition bonds based on the amount of interest payable on each outstanding tranche. We will calculate interest on the basis of a 360-day year of twelve 30-day months.

Principal Payments and Record Dates and Payment Sources

On each payment date specified in the prospectus supplement for the transition bonds, referred to in this prospectus as a “payment date,” we will pay amounts then due or scheduled to be paid on the transition bonds from amounts available in the collection account and the related subaccounts held by the trustee. We will make these payments to the holders of record of the transition bonds on each record date specified in the prospectus supplement, referred to in this prospectus as a “record date.” These available amounts, which will include the applicable transition charges collected by the servicer for us since the last payment date, are described in greater detail under “The Transition Bonds—The Collection Account for the Transition Bonds.”

Priority of Distributions

On each payment date for the transition bonds, the trustee will allocate or pay all amounts on deposit in the general subaccount of the collection account in the following order of priority in accordance with instructions provided by the servicer:

 

  1. payment of the trustee’s fees, expenses and any outstanding indemnity amounts not to exceed a specified amount in any 12-month period, which amount will be fixed in the indenture,

 

  2. payment of the servicing fee, the total amount of which will be fixed as specified in the servicing agreement, plus any unpaid servicing fees relating to the transition bonds from prior payment dates,

 

  3. payment of the fees of our independent manager(s) (which are billed annually), which will be in an amount specified in an agreement between us and our independent manager(s), and a pro rata portion of the administration fee, which will be a fixed amount specified in the administration agreement between us and CenterPoint Houston,

 

  4. payment of all of our other ordinary periodic operating expenses relating to the transition bonds, such as accounting and audit fees, rating agency fees, legal fees and certain reimbursable costs of the administrator under the administration agreement and of the servicer under the servicing agreement,

 

  5. payment of the interest then due on the transition bonds, including any past due interest,

 

  6. at final maturity or upon acceleration upon an event of default, payment of the principal then required to be paid on the transition bonds,

 

 

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  7. payment of the principal then scheduled to be paid on the transition bonds, in accordance with the expected sinking fund schedule, including any previously unpaid scheduled principal,

 

  8. payment of any of our remaining unpaid operating expenses and any remaining amounts owed pursuant to the basic documents relating to the transition bonds, including all remaining indemnity amounts owed to the trustee,

 

  9. replenishment of any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount for the transition bonds, including investment earnings in the capital subaccount for the transition bonds to the extent used for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8,

 

  10. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing and that CenterPoint Houston makes a contribution in satisfaction of applicable legal requirements to the capital subaccount in an amount greater than 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds, release to us an amount calculated at CenterPoint Houston’s then authorized rate of return on equity, which is 10% per annum as of the date of this prospectus, on the amount contributed to the capital subaccount in excess of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds,

 

  11. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing, release the investment earnings relating to the contribution to the capital subaccount in the amount of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds (the “0.5% contribution”) to us,

 

  12. allocation of the remainder, if any, to the excess funds subaccount for the transition bonds, and

 

  13. after the transition bonds have been paid in full and discharged, the balance, together with all amounts in the capital subaccount and the excess funds subaccount for the transition bonds, to us free and clear of the lien of the indenture.

The amount of the servicer’s fee referred to in clause 2 above and the amount of the administration fee referred to in clause 3 will be described in the prospectus supplement. The priority of distributions for the collected transition charges, as well as available amounts in the subaccounts, are described in more detail under “The Transition Bonds—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated,” as well as in the prospectus supplement.

Credit Enhancement

Credit enhancement for the transition bonds will be as follows:

 

   

The PUCT will approve adjustments to the transition charges, but only upon petition of the servicer, to make up for any shortfall or reduce any excess in collected transition charges. We sometimes refer to these adjustments as the “true-up adjustments” or the “statutory true-up mechanism.” These adjustments will be made at least annually, and semi-annually if necessary to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with the transition bonds. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups.”

 

   

Collection Account—Under the indenture, the trustee will hold a collection account for the transition bonds, divided into various subaccounts. The primary subaccounts for credit enhancement purposes are:

 

   

the general subaccount—the trustee will deposit into the general subaccount all transition charge collections remitted to it by the servicer with respect to the transition bonds and investment earnings on amounts in the general subaccount,

 

   

the capital subaccount—CenterPoint Houston will deposit an amount specified in the prospectus supplement into the capital subaccount for the transition bonds on the date of issuance of the transition bonds, and

 

 

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the excess funds subaccount—any excess amount of collected transition charges for the transition bonds and investment earnings on amounts in the excess funds subaccount will be held in the excess funds subaccount.

These subaccounts and other possible subaccounts for the transition bonds will be available to make payments on the transition bonds on each payment date.

Retail electric providers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory that do not maintain a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from S&P and Moody’s, respectively, are required to provide a cash deposit of two months’ maximum expected transition charge collections, an affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit from an entity with such a credit rating providing for payment of such amount of transition charge collections in the event that the retail electric provider defaults in its payment obligations or a combination of any of the foregoing. If a retail electric provider defaults in making a payment of transition charges to the servicer and does not remedy the default within a 10 calendar-day grace period, amounts on deposit or available from other credit support (up to an amount of the lesser of the payment default of the retail electric provider or the amount of the deposit or other credit support amount) will be used to make payments in respect of the transition bonds. Please also read “Retail Electric Providers—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements” and “—Remedies Upon Default.”

Credit enhancement for the transition bonds is intended to protect you against losses or delays in scheduled payments on the transition bonds.

Allocations Among Transition Bond and System Restoration Bond Issuances

In the event a retail electric provider does not pay in full all amounts owed under any bill, including transition charges for the transition bonds, the amount remitted shall first be allocated ratably among the transition charges and other fees and charges (including delivery charges, transition charges and system restoration charges related to other transition bonds or system restoration bonds, and nuclear decommissioning charges) other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the remittance shall be attributed to late fees. Please read “Retail Electric Providers—Payment of Transition Charges” in this prospectus.

State Pledge

The State of Texas has pledged in the Restructuring Act that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property, or, except as permitted in connection with a true-up adjustment authorized by the Restructuring Act, reduce, alter or impair the transition charges until the principal and interest, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the transition bonds, have been paid and performed in full. The transition bonds are not a debt or an obligation of the State of Texas, the PUCT or any other governmental agency or instrumentality and are not a charge on the full faith and credit or the taxing power of the State of Texas or any governmental agency or instrumentality.

Optional Redemption

We may not voluntarily redeem the transition bonds.

Payment and Record Dates

The payment and record dates for the transition bonds will be specified in the prospectus supplement.

 

 

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Scheduled Final Payment Dates and Final Maturity Dates

Failure to pay a scheduled principal payment on any payment date or the entire outstanding amount of the transition bonds of any tranche by the scheduled final payment date will not result in a default on the transition bonds. The failure to pay the entire outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds of any tranche will result in a default only if such payment has not been made by the final maturity date for the tranche. We will specify the scheduled final payment date and the final maturity date of each tranche of the transition bonds in the prospectus supplement.

Credit Ratings

We expect the transition bonds will receive credit ratings from three nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. Please read “Ratings for the Transition Bonds” in this prospectus.

Reports to Transition Bondholders

Pursuant to the indenture, the trustee will provide to the holders of record of the transition bonds regular reports prepared by the servicer containing information concerning, among other things, us and the collateral for the transition bonds. Unless and until the transition bonds are issued in definitive certificated form, the reports for the transition bonds will be provided to The Depository Trust Company. The reports will be available to beneficial owners of the transition bonds upon written request to the trustee or the servicer. These reports will not be examined and reported upon by an independent public accountant. In addition, no independent public accountant will provide an opinion thereon. Please read “The Transition Bonds—The Trustee May Be Required to Provide an Annual Report to All Transition Bondholders.”

Servicing Compensation

We will pay the servicer on each payment date the servicing fee with respect to the transition bonds. As long as CenterPoint Houston or any affiliated entity acts as servicer, this fee will be 0.05% of the initial principal balance of the transition bonds on an annualized basis. If a successor servicer is appointed, the servicing fee will be negotiated by the successor servicer and the trustee (acting at the direction of the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds then outstanding), but will not, unless the PUCT consents, exceed 0.60% of the initial principal balance of the transition bonds on an annualized basis. In no event will the trustee be liable for any servicing fee in its individual capacity.

Prohibition from Issuing More than One Series of Transition Bonds

Our amended and restated limited liability company agreement and the indenture will prohibit us from issuing any transition bonds (as such term is defined in the Restructuring Act) other than the transition bonds that we will offer pursuant to the prospectus supplement.

Federal Income Tax Status

In the opinion of Baker Botts L.L.P., counsel to us and CenterPoint Houston, for United States federal income tax purposes, we will not be considered an entity separate from CenterPoint Energy and the transition bonds will constitute debt of CenterPoint Energy. This opinion is based upon guidance from the Internal Revenue Service and certain representations that we have made to Baker Botts L.L.P. If you purchase a transition bond, you agree to treat it as debt of CenterPoint Energy for United States federal, state and local income and franchise tax purposes. Please read “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders.”

 

 

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ERISA Considerations

Pension plans and other investors subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), may acquire the transition bonds subject to specified conditions. The acquisition and holding of the transition bonds could be treated as a direct or indirect prohibited transaction under ERISA. Accordingly, by purchasing the transition bonds, each investor purchasing on behalf of a pension plan, or other investor subject to ERISA, will be deemed to certify that the purchase and subsequent holding of the transition bonds would be exempt from the prohibited transaction rules of ERISA. For further information regarding the application of ERISA, please read “ERISA Considerations.”

 

 

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RISK FACTORS

Please carefully consider all the information we have included or incorporated by reference in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement, including the risks described below and the statements in “Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information,” before deciding whether to invest in the transition bonds.

You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited.

The only source of funds for payment of the transition bonds will be our assets, which consist of the transition property securing the transition bonds, including:

 

   

the rights under a financing order, including:

 

   

the right to impose, collect and receive the transition charges; and

 

   

the right to the statutory true-up mechanism;

 

   

the funds on deposit in the accounts held by the trustee;

 

   

our rights under various contracts we describe in this prospectus; and

 

   

any credit enhancement as set forth in the prospectus supplement.

The transition bonds are not a charge on the full faith and credit or taxing power of the State of Texas or any governmental agency or instrumentality, nor will the transition bonds be insured or guaranteed by CenterPoint Houston, including in its capacity as the servicer, or by its ultimate parent, CenterPoint Energy, any of its affiliates (other than us), the trustee or by any other person or entity. Thus, you must rely for payment of the transition bonds solely upon the Restructuring Act, legal rights to enforcement of the Restructuring Act, the financing order and collections of the transition charges, funds on deposit in the related accounts held by the trustee and any other credit enhancement described in the prospectus supplement. Our organizational documents restrict our right to acquire other assets unrelated to the transactions described in this prospectus. Please read “CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, The Issuing Entity” in this prospectus.

Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions

We are not obligated to indemnify you for changes in law.

Neither we nor CenterPoint Houston, nor any affiliate, successor or assignee, will indemnify you for any changes in the law, including any federal preemption or repeal or amendment of the Restructuring Act, that may affect the value of your transition bonds. CenterPoint Houston will agree in the sale agreement to institute any legal or administrative action or proceeding as may be reasonably necessary to block or overturn any attempts to cause a repeal, modification or amendment to the Restructuring Act that would be materially adverse to us, the trustee or the transition bondholders. Please read “The Sale Agreement—CenterPoint Houston’s Covenants” in this prospectus. However, we cannot assure you that CenterPoint Houston would be able to take this action or that any such action would be successful.

Future judicial action could reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

The transition property is the creation of the Restructuring Act and the financing order for the transition bonds that has been issued by the PUCT to CenterPoint Houston. There is uncertainty associated with investing in bonds payable from an asset that depends for its existence on legislation because there is limited judicial or regulatory experience implementing and interpreting the legislation. Because the transition property is a creation of the Restructuring Act, any judicial determination affecting the validity of or interpreting the Restructuring Act, the transition property or our ability to make payments on the transition bonds might have an adverse effect on

 

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the transition bonds. A federal or state court could be asked in the future to determine whether the relevant provisions of the Restructuring Act are unlawful or invalid. In June 2001, the Supreme Court of the State of Texas upheld the constitutionality of certain securitization provisions of the Restructuring Act. Notwithstanding that decision, a federal or state court could be asked in the future to determine whether the relevant provisions of the Restructuring Act are unlawful or invalid. If the Restructuring Act is invalidated, the financing order authorizing us to issue these securities might also be invalidated.

Other states have passed laws permitting the securitization of electric utility costs similar to the Restructuring Act, and some of these laws have been challenged by judicial actions. To date, none of these challenges has succeeded, but future challenges might be made. An unfavorable decision regarding another state’s law would not automatically invalidate the Restructuring Act or the financing order, but it might provoke a challenge to the Restructuring Act, establish a legal precedent for a successful challenge to the Restructuring Act or heighten concern regarding the political and other risks of the transition bonds, and in that way may limit the liquidity and value of the transition bonds. Therefore, legal activity in other states may indirectly affect the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

The federal government might preempt the Restructuring Act without full compensation.

Congress could pass a law or adopt a rule or regulation negating the existence of or reducing the value of the transition property. If federal legislation preempting the Restructuring Act or the financing order is enacted, there is no assurance that the courts would consider it a “taking” under the United States Constitution for which the government would be required to pay just compensation or, if it is considered a “taking,” that any amount provided as compensation would be sufficient to pay the full amount of principal of and interest on the transition bonds or to pay these amounts on a timely basis.

Future state legislative action could reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

Despite its pledge in the Restructuring Act not to take or permit certain actions that would impair the value of the transition property or the transition charges, the Texas legislature might attempt to repeal or amend the Restructuring Act in a manner that limits or alters the transition property so as to reduce its value. For a description of the State’s pledge, please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs” in this prospectus. It might be possible for the Texas legislature to repeal or amend the Restructuring Act notwithstanding the State’s pledge if the legislature acts in order to serve a significant and legitimate public purpose. Any such action, as well as the costly and time-consuming litigation that likely would ensue, might adversely affect the price and liquidity, the dates of payment of interest and principal and the weighted average lives of the transition bonds. Moreover, the outcome of any litigation cannot be predicted. Accordingly, you might incur a loss on or delay in recovery of your investment in the transition bonds.

If an action of the Texas legislature adversely affecting the transition property or the ability to collect transition charges were considered a “taking” under the United States or Texas Constitutions, the State of Texas might be obligated to pay compensation for the taking. However, even in that event, there is no assurance that any amount provided as compensation would be sufficient for you to recover fully your investment in the transition bonds or to offset interest lost pending such recovery.

Unlike the citizens of some other states, the citizens of the State of Texas currently do not have the constitutional right to adopt or revise state laws by initiative or referendum. Thus, absent an amendment of the Texas Constitution, the Restructuring Act cannot be amended or repealed by direct action of the electorate of the State of Texas.

The enforcement of any rights against the State of Texas or the PUCT under the State’s pledge may be subject to the exercise of judicial discretion in appropriate cases and to the limitations on legal remedies against

 

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state and local governmental entities in Texas. These limitations might include, for example, the necessity to exhaust administrative remedies prior to bringing suit in a court, or limitations on type and locations of courts in which the State of Texas or the PUCT may be sued.

The PUCT might take actions that could reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

The Restructuring Act provides that a financing order is irrevocable and that the PUCT may not directly or indirectly, by any subsequent action, rescind or amend a financing order or reduce or impair the transition charges authorized under a financing order, except for the true-up adjustments to the transition charges. However, the PUCT retains the power to adopt, revise or rescind rules or regulations affecting CenterPoint Houston. The PUCT also retains the power to interpret the financing order granted to CenterPoint Houston, and in that capacity might be called upon to rule on the meanings of provisions of the order that might need further elaboration. Any new or amended regulations or orders from the PUCT might affect the ability of the servicer to collect the transition charges in full and on a timely basis, the rating of the transition bonds or their price and, accordingly, the amortization of the transition bonds and their weighted average lives.

The servicer is required to file with the PUCT, on our behalf, certain adjustments of the transition charges. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups” and “—Adjustments to Allocation of Transition Charges” in this prospectus. True-up adjustment procedures have been challenged in the past and may be challenged in the future. Challenges to or delays in the true-up process might adversely affect the market perception and valuation of the transition bonds. Also, any litigation might materially delay transition charge collections due to delayed implementation of true-up adjustments and might result in missing payments or payment delays and lengthened weighted average life of the transition bonds.

Servicing Risks

Inaccurate consumption forecasting might result in transition charges that result in inadequate collections to make scheduled payments on the transition bonds.

The transition charges are generally assessed based on forecasted customer usage, i.e., kilowatt-hours of electricity consumed by customers. The amount and timeliness of transition charge collections will depend in part on actual electricity usage and the amount of collections and write-offs for each customer class. If the servicer inaccurately forecasts electricity consumption when setting or adjusting the transition charges, there could be a shortfall or material delay in transition charge collections, which might result in missed or delayed payments of principal and interest and lengthened weighted average life of the transition bonds. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups” and “—Adjustments to Allocation of Transition Charges” in this prospectus.

Inaccurate forecasting of electricity consumption by the servicer might result from, among other things, the general economic environment in the service territory being worse than expected, causing retail electric customers to migrate from CenterPoint Houston’s service territory or reduce their electricity consumption; the impact of weather conditions, resulting in less electricity consumption than forecast; the levels of business activity; customers consuming less electricity than anticipated because of increased energy prices, unanticipated increases in conservation efforts or unanticipated increases in electric usage efficiency; the occurrence of a natural or other disaster, such as a hurricane, or an act of terrorism, cyber attack or other catastrophic event; unanticipated changes in the market structure of the electric industry; or customers switching to alternative sources of energy, including self-generation of electric power.

Your investment in the transition bonds depends on the actions of CenterPoint Houston or its successor or assignee, as servicer of the transition property.

CenterPoint Houston, as servicer, will be responsible for, among other things, calculating, billing and collecting the transition charges from retail electric providers, submitting requests to the PUCT to adjust these charges, monitoring the collateral for the transition bonds and taking certain actions in the event of non-payment

 

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by a retail electric provider. The trustee’s receipt of collections in respect of the transition charges, which will be used to make payments on the transition bonds, will depend in part on the skill and diligence of the servicer in performing these functions. Difficulties or failures in the servicer’s handling of the collateral could result in a shortfall in funds to pay debt service on the transition bonds. The systems the State of Texas and the servicer have in place for transition charge billings and collections might, in particular circumstances, cause the servicer to experience difficulty in performing these functions in a timely and completely accurate manner. CenterPoint Houston, as servicer of the transition charges of Transition Bond Company I, experienced some difficulties in 2002 in implementing and maintaining the systems and procedures required to perform the duties required of it by the servicing agreement relating to Transition Bond Company I.

If the servicer fails to make collections for any reason, then the servicer’s payments to the trustee in respect of the transition charges might be delayed or reduced. In that event, our payments on the transition bonds might be delayed or reduced.

If we have to replace CenterPoint Houston as the servicer, we may experience difficulties finding and using a replacement servicer.

If CenterPoint Houston ceases to service the transition property, it might be difficult to find a successor servicer. Also, any successor servicer might have less experience and ability than CenterPoint Houston and might experience difficulties in collecting transition charges and determining appropriate adjustments to the transition charges and billing and/or payment arrangements may change, resulting in delays or disruptions in collections. In the event of the commencement of a case by or against the servicer under the United States Bankruptcy Code or similar laws, we and the trustee might be prevented from effecting a transfer of servicing due to operation of the bankruptcy code. Any of these factors and others might delay the timing of payments and may reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds. Please read “The Servicing Agreement” in this prospectus.

It might be difficult to collect transition charges from retail electric providers.

As required by the Restructuring Act, retail electric customers will pay the transition charges to retail electric providers who supply them with electric power. The retail electric providers will be obligated to remit payments of the transition charges, less a specified percentage allowance for charge-offs of delinquent customer accounts, within 35 days of billing from the servicer, even if they do not collect the transition charges from retail electric customers. Please read “Retail Electric Providers” in this prospectus. Because the retail electric providers will bill retail electric customers for the transition charges, we will have to rely on a relatively small number of entities for the collection of the bulk of the transition charges. A significant portion of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers are from affiliates of NRG Energy, Inc. (“NRG”) and affiliates of Energy Future Holdings Corp. (“Energy Future Holdings”). As of September 30, 2011, affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings accounted for approximately 41% and 12%, respectively, of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers.

Failure by the retail electric providers to remit transition charges to the servicer might cause delays in payments on the transition bonds and adversely affect your investment in the transition bonds. Adverse economic conditions or financial difficulties of one or more retail electric providers could impair the ability of these retail electric providers to remit payments of the transition charges or could cause them to delay such payments. The servicer will not pay any shortfalls resulting from the failure of any retail electric provider to forward transition charge collections.

Adjustments to the transition charges and any credit support provided by a retail electric provider, while available to compensate for a failure by a retail electric provider to pay the transition charges to the servicer, might not be sufficient to protect the value of your investment in the transition bonds. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-ups” in this prospectus.

 

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The Restructuring Act provides for one or more retail electric providers in each area to be designated the “provider of last resort” for that area or a specified customer class. The provider of last resort is required to offer basic electric service to retail electric customers in its designated area, regardless of the creditworthiness of the customer. The provider of last resort might face greater difficulty in bill collection than other retail electric providers and therefore the servicer may face greater difficulty in collecting transition charges from the provider of last resort.

Retail electric providers may issue a single bill to individual retail customers that includes all charges related to the purchase of electricity, without separately itemizing the transition charge component of the bill. A retail electric provider’s use of a consolidated bill might increase the risk that customers who have claims against the retail electric provider will attempt to offset those claims against transition charges or increase the risk that, in the event of a bankruptcy of a retail electric provider, a bankruptcy court would find that the retail electric provider has an interest in the transition property and would make it more difficult to terminate the services of a bankrupt retail electric provider or collect transition charges from its customers.

Competitive metering services might result in unexpected problems in receiving accurate metering data.

Commercial and industrial retail customers that are required by ERCOT to have an interval data recorder meter may choose to own the settlement and billing meters that are used to measure electric energy delivered to their location or to have those meters owned by a retail electric provider, the transmission and distribution utility or another person authorized by the customer. As of September 30, 2011, one retail customer had a competitively owned data recorder meter but CenterPoint Houston continued to provide metering services related to the installation and removal of meters, meter testing and calibration, data collection and data management. Should the PUCT allow third parties to perform those metering services in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, there might be problems converting to the third party’s metering system, taking accurate meter readings and collecting and processing accurate metering data. Inaccurate metering data might lead to inaccuracies in the calculation and imposition of transition charges and might give rise to disputes between the servicer and retail electric providers regarding payments and payment shortfalls resulting in missing or delayed payments of principal and interest and lengthened weighted average life of the transition bonds.

The Advanced Metering System (AMS) being deployed throughout CenterPoint Houston’s service territory may experience unexpected problems with respect to the timely receipt of accurate metering data.

CenterPoint Houston is deploying an AMS throughout its service territory with completion of deployment of advanced meters expected to occur in 2012. The deployment consists, among other elements, of replacing existing meters with new electronic meters that will record metering data at 15-minute intervals and wirelessly communicate that information to CenterPoint Houston over a bi-directional communications system being installed for that purpose. The AMS integrates equipment and computer software from various vendors in order to eliminate the need for physical meter readings to be taken at consumers’ premises, such as monthly readings for billing purposes and special readings associated with a customer’s change in retail electric providers or the connection or disconnection of electric service. Unanticipated difficulties could be encountered during the installation and operation of the AMS, including failures or inadequacy of equipment or software, difficulties in integrating the various components of the AMS, insufficient staff or training to implement the AMS, changes in technology, cybersecurity issues and factors outside the control of CenterPoint Houston, which could result in delayed or inaccurate metering data that might lead to delays or inaccuracies in the calculation and imposition of the transition charges.

Changes to billing and collection practices might reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

The financing order specifies the methodology for determining the amount of the transition charges we may impose. The servicer may not change this methodology without approval from the PUCT. However, the servicer may set its own billing and collection arrangements with retail electric providers and retail electric customers, if any, from whom it collects transition charges directly, provided that these arrangements comply with the PUCT’s

 

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customer safeguards. Also, the servicer may change billing and collection practices, which might adversely impact the timing and amount of retail electric customer payments and might reduce transition charge collections, thereby limiting our ability to make scheduled payments on the transition bonds. Separately, the PUCT might require changes to these practices. Any changes in billing and collection practices regulations might make it more difficult for the servicer to collect the transition charges and adversely affect the value of your investment in the transition bonds. Please read “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property—How CenterPoint Houston Forecasts the Number of Retail Electric Customers and the Amount of Electricity Usage” in this prospectus.

Limits on rights to terminate service might make it more difficult to collect the transition charges.

Texas statutory requirements and the rules and regulations of the PUCT, which may change from time to time, regulate and control the right to disconnect service. For example, retail electric providers generally may not terminate service to a customer (1) on a holiday or weekend day or the day immediately preceding a holiday or weekend, (2) during certain extreme weather conditions, (3) if such disconnection would cause a person to become seriously ill or more seriously ill, (4) if such customer is an energy assistance client under certain circumstances or (5) if the customer is a master-metered apartment complex unless certain notices are given. To the extent these retail electric customers do not pay for their electric service, retail electric providers will not be able to collect transition charges from these retail electric customers. Although retail electric providers will have to pay the servicer the transition charges on behalf of those customers (subject to any charge-off allowance and reconciliation rights), required service to non-paying end-use customers could affect the ability of retail electric providers to make such payment.

Future adjustments to the transition charges by customer class might result in insufficient collections.

The customers who pay the transition charges are divided into customer classes. The transition charges will be allocated among customer classes and assessed in accordance with the formula required under the Restructuring Act and specified in the financing order. A shortfall in collections of the transition charges in one customer class may be corrected by making adjustments to the transition charges payable by that customer class and any other customer class. If enough customers in a class fail to pay the transition charges or cease to be customers, the servicer might have to substantially increase the transition charges for the remaining customers in that customer class and for other customer classes. This effect might be more extreme in the case of the large industrial and the interruptible customer classes, which consist of a small number of large customers. These increases could lead to further failures by the remaining customers to pay the transition charges, thereby increasing the risk of a shortfall in funds to pay debt service on the transition bonds.

Storm-Related Risks

Storm damage to the service territory could impair payment of the transition bonds.

CenterPoint Houston’s service territory was impacted by Hurricane Ike in September 2008, disrupting CenterPoint Houston’s operations. Future storms could have similar effects. Transmission, distribution and usage of electricity could be interrupted temporarily, reducing the amount of transition charges collected. There could be longer-lasting weather-related adverse effects on residential and commercial development and economic activity in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, which could cause the per-KWh transition charge to be greater than expected after adjustment pursuant to the true-up process. Legislative action adverse to the transition bondholders might be taken in response, and such legislation, if challenged as violative of the State of Texas’ pledge, might be defended on the basis of public necessity. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs—the State Pledge” and “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions—Future state legislative action could reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds” in this prospectus.

 

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Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property

We will not receive the transition charges in respect of electric service provided more than 15 years from the date of issuance of the transition bonds.

Transition charges may not be collected on electricity delivered after the fifteenth anniversary of the issuance of the transition bonds. If the collections from transition charges for electricity delivered through the fifteenth anniversary of the transition bonds, or from any credit enhancement funds, are not sufficient to repay the transition bonds in full, no other funds will be available to pay the unpaid balance due on the transition bonds.

Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect.

Under the Restructuring Act and the indenture, the trustee or the transition bondholders have the right to foreclose or otherwise enforce the lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds. However, in the event of foreclosure, there is likely to be a limited market, if any, for the transition property. Therefore, foreclosure might not be a realistic or practical remedy. Moreover, although principal of the transition bonds will be due and payable upon acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity, the transition charges likely would not be accelerated. The true-up mechanism may be used to adjust transition charges to meet scheduled principal payments but not accelerated maturity. As a result, the nature of our business will result in principal of the transition bonds being paid as funds become available. If there is an acceleration of the transition bonds, all tranches of the transition bonds will be paid pro rata; therefore, some tranches might be paid earlier than expected and some tranches might be paid later than expected.

Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or the Servicer

For a detailed discussion of the following bankruptcy risks, please read “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment” in this prospectus.

The servicer will commingle the transition charges with other revenues it collects, which might obstruct access to the transition charges in case of the servicer’s bankruptcy and reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

The servicer will be required to remit collections to the trustee within two business days of receipt. The servicer will not segregate the transition charges from the other funds it collects from retail electric customers or retail electric providers or its general funds. The transition charges will be segregated only when the servicer pays them to the trustee.

Despite this requirement, the servicer might fail to pay the full amount of the transition charges to the trustee or might fail to do so on a timely basis. This failure, whether voluntary or involuntary, might materially reduce the amount of transition charge collections available to make payments on the transition bonds.

The Restructuring Act provides that our rights to the transition property are not affected by the commingling of these funds with any other funds of the servicer. In a bankruptcy of the servicer, however, a bankruptcy court might rule that federal bankruptcy law does not recognize our right to collections of the transition charges that are commingled with other funds of the servicer as of the date of bankruptcy. If so, the collections of the transition charges held by the servicer as of the date of bankruptcy would not be available to pay amounts owing on the transition bonds. In this case, we would have only a general unsecured claim against the servicer for those amounts. This decision could cause material delays in payments of principal or interest, or losses, on your transition bonds and could materially reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds, particularly if it occurred in the fifteenth year of the transition bonds after the completion of which no transition charges can be charged. Please read “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment” in this prospectus.

 

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The bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston or any successor seller might result in losses or delays in payments on the transition bonds.

The Restructuring Act and the financing order provide that as a matter of Texas state law:

 

   

the rights and interests of a selling utility under a financing order, including the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges, are contract rights of the seller,

 

   

the seller may make a present transfer of its rights under a financing order, including the right to impose, collect and receive future transition charges that retail customers do not yet owe,

 

   

upon the transfer to us, the rights will become transition property, and transition property constitutes a present property right, even though the imposition and collection of transition charges depend on further acts that have not yet occurred, and

 

   

a transfer of the transition property from the seller, or its assignee, to us that expressly states the transfer is a sale or other absolute transfer is a true sale of the transition property, not a pledge of the transition property to secure a financing by the seller.

Please read “The Restructuring Act” in this prospectus. These provisions are important to maintaining payments on the transition bonds in accordance with their terms during any bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston.

A bankruptcy court generally follows state property law on issues such as those addressed by the state law provisions described above. However, a bankruptcy court does not follow state law if it determines that the state law is contrary to a paramount federal bankruptcy policy or interest. If a bankruptcy court in a CenterPoint Houston bankruptcy refused to enforce one or more of the state property law provisions described above, the effect of this decision on you as a beneficial owner of the transition bonds might be similar to the treatment you would receive in a CenterPoint Houston bankruptcy if the transition bonds had been issued directly by CenterPoint Houston. A decision by the bankruptcy court that, despite our separateness from CenterPoint Houston, our assets and liabilities and those of CenterPoint Houston should be consolidated would have a similar effect on you as a bondholder.

We have taken steps together with CenterPoint Houston, as the seller of the transition property, to reduce the risk that in the event the seller or an affiliate of the seller were to become the debtor in a bankruptcy case, a court would order that our assets and liabilities be substantively consolidated with those of CenterPoint Houston or an affiliate. Nonetheless, these steps might not be completely effective, and thus if CenterPoint Houston or one of its affiliates were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, a court might order that our assets and liabilities be consolidated with those of CenterPoint Houston or such affiliate. This might cause material delays in payment of, or losses on, your transition bonds and might materially reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds. For example:

 

   

without permission from the bankruptcy court, the trustee might be prevented from taking actions against CenterPoint Houston or recovering or using funds on your behalf or replacing CenterPoint Houston as the servicer,

 

   

the bankruptcy court might order the trustee to exchange the transition property for other property, of lower value,

 

   

tax or other government liens on CenterPoint Houston’s property might have priority over the trustee’s lien and might be paid from collected transition charges before payments on the transition bonds,

 

   

the trustee’s lien might not be properly perfected in the collected transition property collections prior to or as of the date of CenterPoint Houston’s bankruptcy, with the result that the transition bonds would represent only general unsecured claims against CenterPoint Houston,

 

   

the bankruptcy court might rule that neither our property interest nor the trustee’s lien extends to transition charges in respect of electricity consumed after the commencement of CenterPoint Houston’s bankruptcy case, with the result that the transition bonds would represent only general unsecured claims against CenterPoint Houston,

 

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we and CenterPoint Houston might be relieved of any obligation to make any payments on the transition bonds during the pendency of the bankruptcy case and might be relieved of any obligation to pay interest accruing after the commencement of the bankruptcy case,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston might be able to alter the terms of the transition bonds as part of its plan of reorganization,

 

   

the bankruptcy court might rule that the transition charges should be used to pay, or that we should be charged for, a portion of the cost of providing electric service, or

 

   

the bankruptcy court might rule that the remedy provisions of the sale agreement are unenforceable, leaving us with an unsecured claim for actual damages against CenterPoint Houston that may be difficult to prove or, if proven, to collect in full.

Furthermore, if CenterPoint Houston enters bankruptcy proceedings, it might be permitted to stop acting as servicer and it may be difficult to find a third party to act as servicer. The failure of the servicer to perform its duties or the inability to find a successor servicer might cause payment delays or losses on your investment in the transition bonds. Also, the mere fact of a servicer or seller bankruptcy proceeding might have an adverse effect on the resale market for the transition bonds and on the value of the transition bonds.

The sale of the transition property might be construed as a financing and not a sale in a case of CenterPoint Houston’s bankruptcy which might delay or limit payments on the transition bonds.

The Restructuring Act provides that the characterization of a transfer of transition property as a sale or other absolute transfer will not be affected or impaired by treatment of the transfer as a financing for federal or state tax purposes or financial reporting purposes. We and CenterPoint Houston will treat the transaction as a sale under applicable law, although for financial reporting and state income and franchise tax purposes the transaction is intended to be treated as a financing. In the event of a bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston, a party in interest in the bankruptcy might assert that the sale of the transition property to us was a financing transaction and not a “sale or other absolute transfer” and that the treatment of the transaction for financial reporting and tax purposes as a financing and not a sale lends weight to that position. If a court were to characterize the transaction as a financing, we expect that we would, on behalf of ourselves and the trustee, be treated as a secured creditor of CenterPoint Houston in the bankruptcy proceedings, although a court might determine that we only have an unsecured claim against CenterPoint Houston. Please read “—The servicer will commingle the transition charges with other revenues it collects, which might obstruct access to the transition charges in case of the servicer’s bankruptcy and reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds” above. Even if we had a security interest in the transition property, we would not likely have access to the transition charge collections during the bankruptcy and would be subject to the risks of a secured creditor in a bankruptcy case, including the possible bankruptcy risks described in the immediately preceding risk factor. As a result, repayment of the transition bonds might be significantly delayed and a plan of reorganization in the bankruptcy might permanently modify the amount and timing of payments to us of the transition charge collections and therefore the amount and timing of funds available to us to pay transition bondholders.

If the servicer enters bankruptcy proceedings, the collections of the transition charges held by the servicer as of the date of bankruptcy might constitute preferences, which means these funds might be unavailable to pay amounts owing on the transition bonds.

In the event of a bankruptcy of the servicer, a party in interest might take the position that the remittance of funds prior to bankruptcy of the servicer, pursuant to the servicing agreement or intercreditor agreement, constitutes a preference under bankruptcy law if the remittance of those funds was deemed to be paid on account of a preexisting debt. If a court were to hold that the remittance of funds constitutes a preference, any such remittance within 90 days of the filing of the bankruptcy petition could be avoidable, and the funds could be required to be returned to the bankruptcy estate of the servicer. To the extent that transition charges have been

 

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commingled with the general funds of the servicer, the risk that a court would hold that a remittance of funds was a preference would increase. Also, we or the servicer may be considered an “insider” with any retail electric provider that is affiliated with us or the servicer. If the servicer or we are considered to be an “insider” of the retail electric provider, any such remittance made within one year of the filing of the bankruptcy petition could be avoidable as well if the court were to hold that such remittance constitutes a preference. In either case, we or the trustee would merely be an unsecured creditor of the servicer. If any funds were required to be returned to the bankruptcy estate of the servicer, we would expect that the amount of any future transition charges would be increased through the statutory true-up mechanism to recover such amount.

Claims against CenterPoint Houston or any successor seller might be limited in the event of a bankruptcy of the seller.

If the seller were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, claims, including indemnity claims, by us against the seller under the sale agreement and the other documents executed in connection with the sale agreement would be unsecured claims and would be disposed of in the bankruptcy case. In addition, the bankruptcy court might estimate any contingent claims that we have against the seller and, if it determines that the contingency giving rise to these claims is unlikely to occur, estimate the claims at a lower amount. A party in interest in the bankruptcy of the seller might challenge the enforceability of the indemnity provisions in a sale agreement. If a court were to hold that the indemnity provisions were unenforceable, we would be left with a claim for actual damages against the seller based on breach of contract principles, which would be subject to estimation and/or calculation by the court. We cannot give any assurance as to the result if any of the above-described actions or claims were made. Furthermore, we cannot give any assurance as to what percentage of their claims, if any, unsecured creditors would receive in any bankruptcy proceeding involving the seller.

The bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston or any successor seller might limit the remedies available to the trustee.

Upon an event of default for the transition bonds under the indenture, the Restructuring Act permits the trustee to enforce the security interest in the transition property in accordance with the terms of the indenture. In this capacity, the trustee is permitted to request the PUCT or a Travis County, Texas district court to order the sequestration and payment to bondholders of all revenues arising with respect to the transition property. There can be no assurance, however, that the PUCT or the Travis County, Texas district court would issue this order after a CenterPoint Houston bankruptcy in light of the automatic stay provisions of Section 362 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. In that event, the trustee would be required to seek an order from the bankruptcy court lifting the automatic stay to permit this action by the Texas court, and an order requiring an accounting and segregation of the revenues arising from the transition property. There can be no assurance that a court would grant either order.

Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers

Retail electric providers may commingle the transition charges with other revenues they collect. This may cause losses on or reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds in the event a retail electric provider enters bankruptcy proceedings.

A retail electric provider is not required to segregate from its general funds the transition charges it collects, but will be required to remit to the servicer amounts billed to it for transition charges, less an amount relating to expected customer charge-offs, within 35 days of the billing by the servicer. A retail electric provider nevertheless might fail to remit the full amount of the transition charges owed to the servicer or might fail to do so on a timely basis. This failure, whether voluntary or involuntary, might materially reduce the amount of transition charge collections available on the next payment date to make timely payments on the transition bonds.

The Restructuring Act provides that our rights to the transition property are not affected by the commingling of these funds with other funds. In a bankruptcy of a retail electric provider, however, a bankruptcy court might rule that federal bankruptcy law takes precedence over the Restructuring Act and does not recognize our right to receive the collected transition charges that are commingled with other funds of a retail electric provider as of the

 

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date of bankruptcy. If so, the collections of the transition charges held by a retail electric provider as of the date of bankruptcy would not be available to pay amounts owing on the transition bonds. In this case, we would have only a general unsecured claim against the retail electric provider for those amounts. This decision might cause material delays in payments of principal or interest or losses on your transition bonds and could materially reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds, particularly if it occurred in the fifteenth year of the transition bonds after the completion of which no transition charges can be charged. Please read “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment” in this prospectus.

If a retail electric provider enters bankruptcy proceedings, any cash deposit of the retail electric provider held by the trustee might not be available to cover amounts owed by the retail electric provider.

If a retail electric provider does not have the credit rating required by the financing order, it may nevertheless qualify to act as a retail electric provider if, among other alternatives, it provides a cash deposit equal to two months’ maximum expected transition charge collections. Please read “Retail Electric Providers” in this prospectus. That cash deposit will be held by the trustee under the indenture. However, it is unclear whether the Restructuring Act creates a lien on the cash deposit in favor of the trustee. If the retail electric provider becomes bankrupt, the trustee would be stayed from applying that cash deposit to cover amounts owed by the retail electric provider, and the trustee might be required to return that cash deposit to the retail electric provider’s bankruptcy estate if the bankruptcy court determines there is no valid right of set-off or recoupment. In that case, the issuing entity might only have an unsecured claim for any amounts owed by the retail electric provider in the retail electric provider’s bankruptcy proceedings. Three retail electric providers with which CenterPoint Houston has done business have filed for bankruptcy. CenterPoint Houston, as servicer of the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I and Transition Bond Company II, was able to recover the full amount or a substantial majority of the transition charges relating to those transition bonds from cash deposits or a combination of cash deposits and payments from these retail electric providers, but there is no assurance that CenterPoint Houston will be able to recover such amounts from any bankrupt retail electric providers in the future. For additional information regarding the bankruptcies of these retail electric providers, please read “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property—Customer Classes—Relationship With Retail Electric Providers.”

If a retail electric provider enters bankruptcy proceedings, transition charge payments made by that retail electric provider to the servicer might constitute preferences, and the servicer may be required to return such funds to the bankruptcy estate of the retail electric provider.

In the event of a bankruptcy of a retail electric provider, a party in interest might take the position that the remittance of funds by the retail electric provider to the servicer, pursuant to the financing order, prior to bankruptcy constitutes a preference under bankruptcy law if the remittance of those funds was deemed to be paid on account of a preexisting debt. If a court were to hold that the remittance of funds constitutes preferences, any remittance of such funds made within 90 days of the filing of the bankruptcy petition might be avoidable, and the funds might be required to be returned to the bankruptcy estate of the retail electric provider by us or the servicer. To the extent that transition charges have been commingled with the general funds of the retail electric provider, the risk that a court would hold that a remittance of funds was a preference would increase. Also, we or the servicer might be considered an “insider” with any retail electric provider that is affiliated with us or the servicer. If the servicer or we are considered to be an “insider” of the retail electric provider, any such remittance made within one year of the filing of the bankruptcy petition could be avoidable as well if the court were to hold that such remittance constitutes a preference. In either case, we or the servicer would merely be an unsecured creditor of the retail electric provider. If any funds were required to be returned to the bankruptcy estate of the retail electric provider, we would expect that the amount of any future transition charges would be increased through the statutory true-up mechanism to recover the amount returned.

Furthermore, the mere fact of a retail electric provider bankruptcy proceeding could have an adverse effect on the resale market for the transition bonds and on the value of the transition bonds. Please read “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment” in this prospectus.

 

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If a retail electric provider defaults with respect to the payment of transition charges owed to the servicer, any cash deposit or other collateral of the retail electric provider held by the trustee might not cover amounts owed by the retail electric provider.

If a retail electric provider does not have the ratings required by the financing order, the retail electric provider must provide a cash deposit or other collateral which is reviewed as often as each quarter to ensure that the amount of such collateral equals or exceeds two months’ maximum collections. If a retail electric provider defaults with respect to the payment of transition charges, the amount of such collateral may be inadequate as a result of factors that include (a) an increase in a retail electric provider’s number of customers or the electric usage of its customers shortly before the default, (b) the length of time between the initial payment default by a retail electric provider and the date all of such retail electric provider’s retail electric customers are transferred to another retail electric provider, and (c) deficiencies in the collateral documentation or a failure of a guarantor, letter of credit provider or surety to honor a demand for payment.

Other Risks Associated with an Investment in the Transition Bonds

We may incur expenses in excess of caps on such expenses provided in the financing order.

Under the financing order, transition charges may not be imposed for certain of our ongoing expenses to the extent they exceed caps provided in the financing order for such amounts. In addition, our other assets, substantially all of which are pledged to the trustee under the indenture, may not be used by the trustee to pay such excess amounts. Examples of these caps include payment of specified fees to the servicer and the administrator. We cannot be sure that we will not incur expenses for these purposes in excess of the cap levels and, if this were to occur, we would not have funds to make payments for these excess amounts. Creditors of ours which are owed these amounts and not paid may obtain judgment liens against our assets or seek to place us in bankruptcy.

CenterPoint Houston’s indemnification obligations under the sale and servicing agreements are limited and might not be sufficient to protect your investment in the transition bonds.

CenterPoint Houston is obligated under the sale agreement to indemnify us and the trustee, for itself and on behalf of the transition bondholders, only in specified circumstances and will not be obligated to repurchase the transition property in the event of a breach of any of its representations, warranties or covenants regarding the transition property. Similarly, CenterPoint Houston is obligated under the servicing agreement to indemnify us, the trustee, for itself and on behalf of the transition bondholders, and the PUCT only in specified circumstances. Please read “The Sale Agreement” and “The Servicing Agreement” in this prospectus.

Neither the trustee nor the transition bondholders will have the right to accelerate payments on the transition bonds as a result of a breach under the sale agreement or the servicing agreement, absent an event of default under the indenture as described in “The Transition Bonds—What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds.” Furthermore, CenterPoint Houston might not have sufficient funds available to satisfy its indemnification obligations under these agreements, and the amount of any indemnification paid by CenterPoint Houston might not be sufficient for you to recover all of your investment in the transition bonds. In addition, if CenterPoint Houston becomes obligated to indemnify transition bondholders, the ratings on the transition bonds may be downgraded as a result of the circumstances causing the breach and the fact that transition bondholders will be unsecured creditors of CenterPoint Houston with respect to any of these indemnification amounts.

CenterPoint Houston’s ratings might affect the market value of the transition bonds.

A downgrading of the credit ratings on the debt of CenterPoint Houston might have an adverse effect on the market value of your transition bonds. Credit ratings may change at any time. A rating agency has the authority to revise or withdraw its rating based solely upon its own judgment.

 

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The credit ratings are no indication of the expected rate of payment of principal on the transition bonds.

We expect the transition bonds will receive credit ratings from three nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. A rating is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold the transition bonds. The ratings merely analyze the probability that we will repay the total principal amount of the transition bonds at the final maturity date (which is later than the scheduled final payment date) and will make timely interest payments. The ratings are not an indication that the rating agencies believe that principal payments are likely to be paid on time according to the expected sinking fund schedule.

Alternatives to purchasing electricity through CenterPoint Houston’s distribution facilities may be more widely utilized by retail electric customers in the future.

Broader use of distributed generation by retail electric customers may result from customers’ changing perceptions of the merits of utilizing existing generation technology, tax or other economic incentives or from technological developments resulting in smaller-scale, more fuel efficient, more environmentally friendly and/or more cost effective distributed generation. Electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory whose load is served by an on-site power production facility with a rated capacity of 10 megawatts or less are not required to pay transition charges under the Restructuring Act except for transition charges associated with services actually provided by CenterPoint Houston. Therefore, more widespread use of distributed generation might allow greater numbers of retail customers to reduce or eliminate their payment of transition charges causing transition charges to remaining customers to increase.

The absence of a secondary market for the transition bonds and other factors might limit your ability to resell your transition bonds.

The underwriters for the transition bonds might assist in resales of the transition bonds, but they are not required to do so. There is currently no secondary market for the transition bonds and there can be no assurances that a secondary market will develop. If a secondary market does develop, it might not continue or it might not be sufficiently liquid to allow you to resell any of your transition bonds. The transition bonds are not anticipated to be listed on any securities exchange. Please read “Plan of Distribution for the Transition Bonds” in this prospectus.

Many factors may adversely affect the liquidity of the market for the transition bonds, even if one should develop, including, among others, adverse economic conditions and increased legal requirements affecting securitization transactions.

You might receive principal payments on the transition bonds later than you expect.

The amount and the timeliness of collection of the transition charges, together with the transition charge adjustments, will generally determine whether there is a delay in the scheduled repayments of transition bond principal. If the servicer collects the transition charges at a slower rate than the rate estimated when the schedule for the repayments of transition bond principal was established and true up adjustments to the transition charges are not timely and accurate, you might experience a delay in payments of principal and interest and a decrease in the value of your investment in the transition bonds. Please read “The Transition Bonds” in this prospectus.

If the investment of collected transition charges and other funds held by the trustee in the collection account results in investment losses or the investments become illiquid, you may receive payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds later than you expect.

Funds held by the trustee in the collection account and cash collateral provided by retail electric providers will be invested in eligible investments. Eligible investments include money market funds having a rating from Moody’s and S&P of “Aaa” and “AAA”, respectively. Although investments in these money market funds have traditionally been viewed as highly liquid with a low probability of principal loss, illiquidity and principal losses have been experienced by investors in certain of these funds as a result of disruptions in the financial markets in recent years. If investment losses or illiquidity is experienced, you might experience a delay in payments of principal and interest and a decrease in the value of your investment in the transition bonds.

 

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Other subsidiaries or affiliates of CenterPoint Houston may issue bonds similar to the transition bonds in the future without your prior review or approval.

CenterPoint Houston has previously sold property created pursuant to other financing orders to other subsidiaries of CenterPoint Houston in connection with the issuance of transition bonds and system restoration bonds. CenterPoint Houston may sell property created pursuant to a financing order it may obtain in the future, to other subsidiaries or affiliates of CenterPoint Houston in connection with the issuance of other transition bonds or system restoration or similar bonds in the future without your prior review or approval. In the event a retail electric provider does not pay in full all amounts owed under any bill, including transition charges for the transition bonds and other similar bonds, the amount remitted shall first be allocated ratably among the transition charges and system restoration charges relating to all such bonds and other fees and charges (including delivery charges and nuclear decommissioning charges) other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the remittance shall be attributed to late fees. We cannot assure you that the issuance of additional bonds similar to the transition bonds would not cause reductions or delays in payments on the transition bonds.

 

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THE RESTRUCTURING ACT

The Restructuring Act’s General Effect on the Electric Utility Industry in Texas

An Overview of the Restructuring Act. The Restructuring Act was enacted by the Texas legislature in June 1999 and became effective on September 1, 1999 and was last amended in June 2007. The Restructuring Act substantially amended the regulatory structure governing electric utilities in Texas in order to transition to a competitive electric market, thereby creating stranded investment and other balances for electric utilities within the State of Texas. The Restructuring Act, among other things,

 

   

authorized competition in the retail electric market and the electricity generation market for electricity beginning in January 2002, and in some instances sooner,

 

   

required a rate freeze for all retail electric customers until January 2002, and access to certain reduced rates for residential and small commercial retail electric customers through the so-called “price to beat” mechanism for up to five years thereafter,

 

   

permits electric utilities to recover all true-up balances through the issuance of transition bonds pursuant to and supported by an irrevocable financing order issued by the PUCT,

 

   

permits the PUCT to impose an irrevocable nonbypassable transition charge on all retail electric customers within a utility’s certificated service territory as it existed on May 1, 1999, for payment of transition bonds, and

 

   

provided for a proceeding to determine an electric utility’s recoverable stranded cost and other true-up balances.

Unbundling. Each electric utility was required to separate its customer-related energy services activities that are otherwise already widely available in the competitive market from its regulated activities by September 1, 2000. By January 1, 2002, each electric utility was required to separate its business into the following units:

 

   

a power generation company,

 

   

a retail electric provider, and

 

   

a transmission and distribution utility or separate transmission and distribution utilities.

A power generation company generates electricity that is intended to be sold at wholesale. In general, a power generation company may not own a transmission or distribution facility and may not have a certificated service territory. A retail electric provider sells electric energy to retail electric customers. A retail electric provider may not own or operate generation assets. A transmission and distribution utility owns or operates facilities to transmit or distribute electricity. Pursuant to the unbundling provisions of the Restructuring Act, the terms of a business separation plan approved by the PUCT and separation agreements among the companies, the integrated electric utility business of the integrated utility that was a predecessor of CenterPoint Houston was split among three separate companies. CenterPoint Houston is a transmission and distribution utility that now owns and operates the transmission and distribution facilities used to transmit and distribute electricity. CenterPoint Houston is a wholly owned indirect subsidiary of CenterPoint Energy. Texas Genco, LP was, until December 2004, the power generation company that owned and operated the electric generation assets formerly owned by the integrated utility and sold electricity in wholesale transactions. In December 2004 and April 2005, all of Texas Genco, LP’s generation assets were sold to third parties in a two-step transaction. Reliant Energy Retail Services, LLC and Reliant Energy Solutions, LLC (collectively referred to as “Reliant”) are the retail electric providers that succeeded to the retail customers which, prior to January 2002, had been served by the integrated utility. Reliant was acquired by NRG in May 2009.

Retail Competition. Beginning in January 2002, all retail electric customers in most of Texas, including the area historically served by the integrated utility, were able to choose their own retail electric provider. As of September 30, 2011, there were approximately 85 retail electric providers providing electric service in

 

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CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. A significant portion of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers are from affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings. As of September 30, 2011, affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings accounted for approximately 41% and 12%, respectively, of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers.

Each year, the PUCT designates “providers of last resort” for each customer class in each service territory in the state. The providers of last resort are required to offer a standard retail service package for their class of retail electric customers at a fixed rate approved by the PUCT. Each provider of last resort is required to offer the service to any retail electric customer in the class it serves in that service territory who requests service, whose selected retail electric provider goes out of business. The PUCT has designated a number of providers of last resort for each customer class in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory for the 2011-2012 term.

Under the Restructuring Act, commercial and industrial retail customers that are required by ERCOT to have an interval data recorder meter are able to choose to own the settlement and billing meters that are used to measure electric energy delivered to their location or to have those meters owned by a retail electric provider, the transmission and distribution utility or another person authorized by the customer. As of September 30, 2011, only one retail customer had a competitively owned data recorder meter. Whether or not the commercial or industrial retail customer chooses an alternative meter owner, until the PUCT authorizes otherwise, CenterPoint Houston will continue to provide metering services related to the installation and removal of meters, meter maintenance, meter testing and calibration, data collection and data management, including the transfer of meter data to ERCOT. As of September 30, 2011, CenterPoint Houston continued to provide all metering services. The PUCT’s rules require ERCOT to file with the PUCT quarterly updates as to the operational readiness of the support systems necessary for the PUCT to authorize an entity other than the transmission and distribution utility to provide these metering services. For residential and nonresidential customers other than those required by ERCOT to have an interval data recorder meter within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, metering services shall continue to be provided by CenterPoint Houston.

Recovery of Qualified Costs for CenterPoint Houston and Other Texas Utilities

The Restructuring Act allows utilities to recover certain qualified costs associated with the transition to competitive retail electric markets in Texas. Final determination of the amount of utilities’ recoverable costs was required to be made by the PUCT in a final true-up proceeding in 2004. In March 2004, CenterPoint Houston filed its true-up application with the PUCT requesting recovery of $3.7 billion, excluding interest. In December 2004, the PUCT issued an order determining that CenterPoint Houston was entitled pursuant to the Restructuring Act to recover approximately $2.3 billion, which included interest through August 31, 2004, and provided for certain other adjustments.

The Restructuring Act originally provided for recovery of stranded costs and regulatory assets as determined in the final true-up proceeding through nonbypassable competition transition charges on retail electric customers’ bills or through issuance of transition bonds to be paid and secured by nonbypassable transition charges. The PUCT determined that, under the original wording of the Restructuring Act, the other true-up balances could not be securitized and could only be collected through competition transition charges imposed on retail electric customers. However, effective June 15, 2007, the Restructuring Act was amended to permit the recovery of the entire true-up balance through the issuance of transition bonds, including true-up amounts that CenterPoint Houston was then recovering through competition transition charges.

CenterPoint Houston and a number of other parties appealed the PUCT’s 2004 order. These appeals were heard first by a district court in Travis County, Texas, then by the Texas Third Court of Appeals and finally by the Texas Supreme Court. In March 2011, the Texas Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling on the appeal of the PUCT’s order in which it affirmed in part and reversed in part the PUCT order and remanded the matter to the PUCT for further proceedings. In August 2011, CenterPoint Houston filed a request in PUCT Docket No. 39504 based on the March 2011 Supreme Court decision seeking an additional $2.0 billion of true-up recovery, which CenterPoint Houston amended in September 2011 to seek recovery of $2.3 billion. Various parties in the proceeding disputed CenterPoint Houston’s right to recover the full amount it sought on remand.

 

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On October 5, 2011, the parties submitted for PUCT approval a stipulation resolving all issues in the remand proceeding and providing for CenterPoint Houston to securitize $1.695 billion as recovery of additional amounts of its true-up balance. On October 27, 2011, the PUCT issued its financing order in Docket No. 39809 approving the securitization of the Securitizable Balance of $1.695 billion.

CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs

We May Issue Transition Bonds to Recover CenterPoint Houston’s Qualified Costs. The Restructuring Act authorizes the PUCT to issue financing orders approving the issuance of transition bonds to recover certain qualified costs of an electric utility. A utility, its successors or a third-party assignee of a utility may obtain securitization financing through the issuance of transition bonds. Under the Restructuring Act, proceeds of transition bonds must be used to reduce the amount of recoverable transition costs through the refinancing or retirement of the electric utility’s debt or equity and the payment of up-front qualified costs. The transition bonds are secured by, and payable from, transition property, which includes the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges, and may have a maximum maturity of 15 years. The amounts of transition charges must be allocated to customer classes based in part on the methodology used to allocate the costs of the underlying assets in the utility’s most recent PUCT order addressing rate design and in part based on the energy consumption of the customer classes. As part of the stipulation submitted to the PUCT on October 5, 2011, the parties agreed to the factors to be used in determining such allocation. Transition charges can be imposed only when and to the extent that transition bonds are issued.

The Restructuring Act contains a number of provisions designed to facilitate the securitization of qualified costs.

Creation of Transition Property. Under the Restructuring Act, transition property is created when the rights and interests of an electric utility or successor under a financing order, including the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges authorized in the financing order, are first transferred to an assignee, such as us, or pledged in connection with the issuance of transition bonds.

A Financing Order is Irrevocable. A financing order, once effective, together with the transition charges authorized in the financing order, is irrevocable and not subject to reduction, impairment or adjustment by the PUCT except for adjustments pursuant to the Restructuring Act in order to correct overcollections or undercollections and to provide that sufficient funds are available to timely provide for payments of debt service and other required amounts in connection with the related series of transition bonds. Although a financing order is irrevocable, the Restructuring Act allows applicants to apply for one or more new financing orders to provide for retiring and refunding of transition bonds if such retirement or refunding would result in lower transition charges.

The State Pledge. Under the Restructuring Act, the State of Texas has pledged, for the benefit and protection of transition bondholders and the electric utilities covered by the Restructuring Act, that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property or, except for adjustments discussed in “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-ups,” reduce, alter or impair the transition charges to be imposed, collected and remitted to transition bondholders, until the principal and interest, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the transition bonds have been paid and performed in full. For a description of risks related to the enforcement of this pledge, please read “Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions” in this prospectus.

Constitutional Matters. To date, no federal or Texas cases addressing the repeal or amendment of securitization provisions analogous to those contained in the Restructuring Act have been decided. There have been cases in which federal courts have applied the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution and Texas courts have applied the Contract Clause of the Texas Constitution to strike down legislation regarding similar matters, such as legislation reducing or eliminating taxes, public charges or other sources of revenues servicing

 

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other types of bonds issued by public instrumentalities or private issuers, or otherwise substantially impairing or eliminating the security for bonds or other indebtedness. Based upon this case law, Baker Botts L.L.P., counsel to CenterPoint Houston and us, expects to deliver an opinion prior to the closing of the offering of the transition bonds to the effect that the pledge described above creates a binding contractual obligation for purposes of the Contract Clauses of the United States and Texas constitutions, and provides a basis upon which the transition bondholders (or the trustee acting on their behalf) could challenge successfully, under the Contract Clauses of the United States and Texas constitutions, the constitutionality of any action by the State of Texas (including the PUCT) of a legislative character, including the repeal or amendment of the securitization provisions of the Restructuring Act, that a court would determine violates the pledge described above in a way that would substantially reduce, alter or impair the value of the transition property or substantially reduce, alter or impair the transition charges, unless such action is a reasonable exercise of the sovereign powers of the State of Texas and of a character reasonable and appropriate to the public purpose justifying such action. It may be possible for the Texas legislature to repeal or amend the Restructuring Act, or for the PUCT to amend or revoke the financing order notwithstanding the State’s pledge, if the legislature or the PUCT acts in order to serve a significant and legitimate public purpose, such as protecting the public health and safety or responding to a national or regional catastrophe affecting CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, or if the legislature otherwise acts in the valid exercise of the state’s police power.

In addition, any action of the Texas legislature adversely affecting the transition property or the ability to collect transition charges may be considered a “taking” under the United States or Texas Constitutions. Baker Botts L.L.P. has advised us that it is not aware of any federal or Texas court cases addressing the applicability of the Takings Clause of the United States or Texas Constitution in a situation analogous to that which could be involved in an amendment or repeal of the Restructuring Act. It is possible that a court would decline even to apply a Takings Clause analysis to a claim based on an amendment or repeal of the Restructuring Act, since, for example, a court might determine that a Contract Clause analysis rather than a Takings Clause analysis should be applied. Assuming a Takings Clause analysis were applied under the United States or Texas Constitution, Baker Botts L.L.P. expects to render an opinion prior to the closing of the offering of the transition bonds to the effect that under existing case law, if a court concludes that the transition property is protected by the Takings Clause of the United States or Texas Constitution, it would find a compensable taking if the State were to enact a law that, without paying just compensation to the transition bondholders (i) permanently appropriates the transition property or denies all economically productive use of the transition property; or (ii) destroys the transition property, other than in response to emergency conditions; or (iii) substantially reduces, alters or impairs the value of the transition property, if the law unduly interferes with such bondholders’ reasonable investment backed expectations. In examining whether action of the Texas legislature amounts to a regulatory taking, both federal and state courts will consider the character of the governmental action and whether such action substantially advances the State’s legitimate governmental interests, the economic impact of the governmental action on the transition bondholders, and the extent to which the governmental action interferes with distinct investment-backed expectations. There is no assurance, however, that, even if a court were to award just compensation, it would be sufficient for you to recover fully your investment in the transition bonds.

In connection with the foregoing, Baker Botts L.L.P. has advised us that issues relating to the Contract and Takings Clauses of the United States and Texas constitutions are essentially decided on a case by case basis and that the courts’ determinations, in most cases, appear to be strongly influenced by the facts and circumstances of the particular case. Baker Botts L.L.P. has further advised us that there are no reported controlling judicial precedents that are directly on point. The opinions described above will be subject to the qualifications included in them. The degree of impairment necessary to meet the standards for relief under a Takings Clause analysis or Contract Clause analysis could be substantially in excess of what a transition bondholder would consider material. We will file a copy of the Baker Botts L.L.P. opinion as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, or to one of our periodic filings with the SEC.

For a discussion of risks associated with potential judicial, legislation or regulatory actions, please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions” in this prospectus.

 

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The PUCT May Adjust Transition Charges. The Restructuring Act requires the PUCT to provide in all financing orders a mechanism requiring that transition charges relating to the series of transition bonds authorized in such financing order be reviewed and adjusted at least annually, within 45 days of the anniversary of the date of the issuance of such series of transition bonds:

 

   

to correct any overcollections or undercollections during the preceding 12 months, and

 

   

to provide for the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with such series of transition bonds.

Transition Charges are Nonbypassable. The Restructuring Act provides that the transition charges are nonbypassable. Nonbypassable means that a utility collects transition charges attributable to all existing and future retail electric customers located within the utility’s service territory as it existed on May 1, 1999 and certain other customers, except for certain categories of existing customers whose load had been lawfully served by a fully operational qualifying facility before September 1, 2001 if the facility was supported by substantially complete filings for site-specific environmental permits on or before December 31, 1999, or by an on-site power production facility with a rated capacity of 10 megawatts or less, or customers in a multiply certificated service territory that requested to switch providers on or before May 1, 1999, or were not taking service from the utility on, and do not do so after, May 1, 1999. The utility is generally entitled to collect transition charges attributable to non-exempted customers even if they are receiving transmission or distribution service from another utility or choose to operate self-generation equipment.

The Restructuring Act Protects the Transition Bonds’ Lien on Transition Property. The Restructuring Act provides that a valid and enforceable lien and security interest in transition property may be created only by a financing order and the execution and delivery of a security agreement in connection with the issuance of a series of transition bonds. The security interest automatically attaches from the time value is received by the issuer of such series of transition bonds.

On perfection through the filing of a notice with the Secretary of State of Texas, the security interest (1) will be a continuously perfected lien and security interest in the related transition property and all proceeds of such transition property, whether the related transition charges have accrued or not, and (2) will have a priority in the order of filing and take precedence over any subsequent judicial or other lien creditor. If notice is filed within 10 days after value is received for a series of transition bonds, the security interest is perfected retroactive to the date value was received. Otherwise, the security interest is perfected as of the date of filing.

The Restructuring Act provides that priority of security interests in transition property relating to a series of transition bonds will not be impaired by:

 

   

commingling of funds collected from related transition charges with other funds, or

 

   

modifications to the financing order resulting from any true-up adjustment.

Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property.”

The Restructuring Act Characterizes the Transfer of Transition Property as a True Sale. The Restructuring Act provides that an electric utility’s or an assignee’s transfer of transition property is a “true sale” under Texas law and is not a secured transaction and that legal and equitable title passes to the transferee, if the agreement governing that transfer expressly states that the transfer is a sale or other absolute transfer. Please read “The Sale Agreement” and “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or the Servicer” in this prospectus.

Tax Exemption. The Restructuring Act provides that transactions involving the transfer and ownership of transition property and the receipt of transition charges are exempt from state and local income, sales, franchise, gross receipts and other taxes or similar charges.

 

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CENTERPOINT HOUSTON’S FINANCING ORDER

Background. The PUCT issued the financing order on October 27, 2011 authorizing CenterPoint Houston to securitize an amount equal to the Securitizable Balance of $1.695 billion.

Pursuant to the financing order,

 

   

the PUCT or its designated representative has a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint Houston with respect to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds and all matters related to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds will be determined through a joint decision of CenterPoint Houston and the PUCT or its designated representative,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston is directed to take all necessary steps to ensure that the PUCT or its designated representative is provided sufficient and timely information to allow the PUCT or its designated representative to fully participate in, and exercise its decision making power over, the proposed securitization, and

 

   

the servicer will file periodic adjustments to transition charges with the PUCT on our behalf.

We have also agreed that certain reports concerning transition charge collections will be provided to the PUCT.

We have filed the financing order with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part. This summary does not purport to be complete and is subject to and qualified by reference to the provisions of the financing order.

In the financing order, the PUCT guarantees that it will act pursuant to the irrevocable financing order as expressly authorized by the Restructuring Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues relating to the transition bonds are sufficient to pay on a timely basis scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds and other costs, including fees and expenses, in connection with the transition bonds. The financing order, pursuant to the provisions of the Restructuring Act, is irrevocable and is not subject to reduction, impairment or adjustment by further action of the PUCT, except as contemplated by the periodic true-up adjustments. The financing order also provides that the statutory true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the PUCT set forth in the financing order that relate to the transition bonds are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the transition bonds, and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the PUCT.

Collection of Transition Charges. The financing order authorizes CenterPoint Houston to collect transition charges from the retail electric providers serving retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory in an amount expected to be sufficient to permit the timely recovery of its aggregate qualified costs which include principal and interest and certain ongoing fees and expenses associated with the transition bonds. There is no “cap” on the level of transition charges that may be imposed on consumers of electricity in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory to meet scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds. However, we may not charge transition charges for the transition bonds for electricity delivered after the fifteenth anniversary of the date of issuance of the transition bonds.

Issuance Advice Letter. No later than the end of the first business day following the determination of the final terms of the transition bonds and prior to their issuance, CenterPoint Houston is required to file with the PUCT an issuance advice letter, which will:

 

   

demonstrate compliance with the statutory financial tests and terms of the financing order,

 

   

evidence the actual terms on which the transition bonds will be issued,

 

   

show the actual dollar amount of the initial transition charges relating to the transition bonds,

 

   

identify the transition property relating to the transition bonds we will purchase,

 

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identify us,

 

   

certify that, based on information reasonably available, the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds will result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of the financing order, and

 

   

update the benefit analysis to verify that the final amount securitized satisfies the statutory financial tests.

Both the issuance advice letter and the accompanying compliance tariff become effective on the date of issuance of the transition bonds unless the PUCT issues an order prior to noon on the fourth business day after the determination of the final terms of the transition bonds, that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of the Restructuring Act or the financing order. The PUCT’s review of the issuance advice letter will be limited to confirming the arithmetic accuracy of the calculations and to compliance with the Restructuring Act, the financing order and the specific requirements contained in the issuance advice letter.

Tariff. We are required, prior to the issuance of any transition bonds, to complete and file a tariff in the form attached to the financing order. The tariff establishes the initial transition charges. It also implements the procedures for periodic adjustments to the transition charges, the procedures for retail electric providers to remit transition charge payments and the annual procedures allowing retail electric providers to reconcile remittances with actual charge-offs.

Allocation. Under the terms of the financing order, CenterPoint Houston will initially allocate the qualified costs among its transition charge customer classes as follows (each allocation factor percentage has been rounded to four decimal places):

 

Transition Charge Customer Class

   Allocation
Factor
 

Residential

     40.6106

MGS (miscellaneous general service)

     30.2232

LGS (large general service)

     16.7709

LOS-A (large overhead service—A)

     4.3673

LOS-B (large overhead service—B)

     2.5279

Non-Metered Lighting

     0.6205

Standby Electric Service—Distribution

     0.0304

Interruptible Service Supplemental—Distribution

     0.1053

Interruptible Service—30 Minute Notice

     0.7007

Interruptible Service—10 Minute Notice

     1.1652

Interruptible Service—Instantaneous

     0.1266

Interruptible Service Supplemental—Transmission

     0.0560

Standby Electric Service—Transmission

     0.2617

Standby Interruptible Service

     0.1271

SCP (special contract pricing)

     2.3066

Statutory True-Ups. In the financing order, the PUCT guarantees that it will act pursuant to its irrevocable financing order, dated October 27, 2011, as expressly authorized by the Restructuring Act to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to pay on a timely basis scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds. The Restructuring Act mandates and the financing order provides that the transition charges will be reviewed and adjusted at least annually and, if necessary, semi-annually to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to provide timely payment of scheduled payments of principal and interest on the transition bonds. The financing order requires CenterPoint Houston and any successor servicer to make periodic adjustment filings pursuant to the following statutory true-up mechanism and reconciliation procedures.

 

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True-up adjustments will be based upon the cumulative differences between the periodic payment requirement, which is discussed in the paragraph below (including scheduled principal and interest payments on the transition bonds), and the amount of transition charge remittances to the trustee. In order to provide for adequate revenues from the transition charges, the servicer will calculate the adjusted transition charges using its most recent forecast of electric consumption and its most current estimates of ongoing transaction-related expenses. The calculation of the transition charges will reflect the retail electric provider’s allowances for charge-offs and payment lags between the billing and collection of transition charges based upon the servicer’s most recent experience regarding collection of transition charges. The calculation of transition charges will also take into account any amounts due any retail electric providers as a result of the reconciliation of the remittances and collections. There is no “cap” on the level of transition charges that may be imposed on consumers of electricity in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory to meet scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds.

There are two types of true-ups that may occur under the financing order.

 

   

First, pursuant to the Restructuring Act, the servicer is required to make a filing with the PUCT for an adjustment at least annually

 

   

to correct any undercollection or overcollection of transition charges relating to the transition bonds, and

 

   

to provide for the billing of transition charges necessary to generate the collection of amounts sufficient to timely provide all scheduled payments of principal and interest and any other amounts due in connection with the transition bonds (including but not limited to ongoing fees and expenses, amounts required to be deposited in or allocated to any collection account or subaccount relating to the transition bonds, trustee indemnities and any payments due in connection with any expenses incurred by the trustee or the servicer to enforce bondholder rights and all other payments pursuant to the waterfall of payments described under “The Transition Bonds—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” or otherwise in the waterfall of payments set forth in the prospectus supplement) during the period for which such adjusted transition charges are to be in effect.

These amounts are referred to as the “periodic payment requirement.”

 

   

Second, the servicer will be required under the servicing agreement to seek an interim true-up adjustment with respect to the transition bonds once every six months, or quarterly in the fourteenth and fifteenth years:

 

   

if the servicer expects, at the next payment date, more than a 5% variation in absolute value between (a) the actual principal balance of the transition bonds, taking into account amounts on deposit in the excess funds subaccount, and (b) the outstanding principal balance anticipated on the expected amortization schedule,

 

   

as needed to meet any rating agency requirement that the transition bonds be paid in full at the scheduled final payment date, or

 

   

to correct any undercollection or overcollection of transition charges, regardless of cause, in order to assure timely payment of the transition bonds based on rating agency and transition bondholder considerations.

For more discussion of the statutory true-up mechanism, please read “The Servicing Agreement—Adjustment Process for Transition Charges” in this prospectus.

Statutory True-Up Mechanism—Credit Risk. The State of Texas has pledged in the Restructuring Act that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property, or, except as permitted in connection with a true-up adjustment authorized by the statute, reduce, alter or impair the transition charges until the principal and interest, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the transition bonds, have been paid and performed in full.

 

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The financing order provides that the broad-base nature of the true-up mechanism and this pledge by the State of Texas, along with other elements of the transition bonds, will serve to minimize, if not effectively eliminate, for all practical purposes and circumstances, any credit risk associated with the transition bonds (i.e., sufficient funds will be available and paid to discharge all principal when due at final maturity and interest obligations on the transition bonds when due). With respect to the foregoing, interest is due on each payment date and principal is due upon the final maturity date for each tranche. Please consider, however, the risk factors discussed in “Risk Factors” generally, including, among others, “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with Potential Judicial, Legislative or Regulatory Actions,” “—Servicing Risks—Inaccurate consumption forecasting or unanticipated delinquencies or charge-offs might reduce scheduled payments on the transition bonds” and “—Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or the Servicer,” and please read the financing order, Finding of Fact 94, and “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs,” and “Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward—Looking Information” for further information.

Adjustments to Allocation of Transition Charges. In the financing order, the PUCT requires CenterPoint Houston and any successor servicer to request periodic adjustments to the allocation of the transition charges among various classes of customers. The allocation may be adjusted to reflect load losses that a transition charge class or group of transition charge classes may suffer or to reflect certain changes to the allocation methodology that may be ordered by the PUCT. The financing order specifically provides for an additional true-up and adjustment of allocation applicable to industrial customers, whereby the first 10% of load loss within an industrial class is borne by that class, with the excess load loss over 10% allocated to the remaining industrial classes. Adjustments to the allocation of the transition charges will take place at the same time as the annual true-up adjustments described above.

Binding on Successors. The financing order, along with the transition charges authorized in the financing order, is binding on:

 

   

CenterPoint Houston,

 

   

any successor to CenterPoint Houston that provides transmission or distribution service to retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory,

 

   

any other entity that provides transmission or distribution service to retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory,

 

   

each retail electric provider that sells electric energy to retail electric customers located within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory or any such retail electric provider’s successor,

 

   

any other entity responsible for imposing, billing, collecting and remitting transition charges on our behalf, or

 

   

any successor to the PUCT.

RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

Under the Restructuring Act, beginning in January 2002, certain electric utilities, including CenterPoint Houston, were required to cease selling electricity to their retail customers. Since that time, only retail electric providers have been allowed to sell electricity to retail customers formerly served by those utilities. Each retail customer may choose a retail electric provider from among those who have been certified under standards set by the PUCT. As of the date of this prospectus, neither CenterPoint Houston nor its parent CenterPoint Energy directly or indirectly owns or controls or is owned or controlled by any retail electric provider. In the future, either company may directly or indirectly own or control a retail electric provider.

CenterPoint Houston and any successor servicer will bill and collect transition charges from the retail electric providers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. The retail electric providers will in turn bill and

 

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collect the transition charges from retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory. Each retail electric provider will be required to pay the transition charges on or before the 35th day after it receives the bill from the servicer, less an approved allowance for uncollectible amounts, whether or not the retail electric provider has collected all amounts owed to it by its retail electric customers. Please read “—Payment of Transition Charges.” Prior to the date on which the retail electric provider remits the transition charges to the servicer, the transition charges may be commingled with the retail electric provider’s other funds. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers” and “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment— Bankruptcy of a Retail Electric Provider” in this prospectus.

Each retail electric provider will deliver a combined bill to each retail electric customer for the electric power sold by it to the retail electric customer, for the related transmission and distribution service provided by the electric utility, for the transition charge, for transition charges associated with the transition bonds issued in 2001 by Transition Bond Company I, for transition charges associated with the transition bonds issued in 2005 by Transition Bond Company II, for transition charges associated with the transition bonds issued in 2008 by Transition Bond Company III, for system restoration charges associated with the system restoration bonds issued in 2009 by Restoration Bond Company and for other charges approved by the PUCT. The retail electric providers will collect and pay the combined amount and such amount is allocated to the electric utility, to the servicer, to the servicer of the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, to the servicer of the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A issued by Transition Bond Company II, to the servicer of the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds issued by Transition Bond Company III, to the servicer of the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds issued by Restoration Bond Company and to other parties, if any, entitled to receive a portion of such amount. Transition charges will be remitted to the servicer, less an estimated allowance for charge-offs. Please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks—It might be difficult to collect transition charges from retail electric providers” in this prospectus. The retail electric provider will have custody of the transition charges collected from its retail electric customers until remitted to the servicer and may commingle the transition charges with its other funds.

Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements. The financing order will allow a retail electric provider to provide retail electric service within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory and collect transition charges if it either (1) has a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from S&P and Moody’s, respectively, or (2) provides (A) a cash deposit of two months’ maximum expected transition charge collections, (B) an affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit providing for payment of such amount of transition charge collections in the event that the retail electric provider defaults in its payment obligations, or (C) a combination of any of the foregoing. The provider of any affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit must have and maintain long-term, unsecured credit ratings of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from S&P and Moody’s, respectively. A retail electric provider that does not have or maintain the requisite long-term, unsecured credit rating may select, in its sole discretion, which alternate form of deposit, credit support or combination thereof it will utilize.

If the long-term, unsecured credit rating from either S&P or Moody’s of a retail electric provider that did not previously provide the alternate form of deposit, credit support or combination thereof or of any provider of an affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit is suspended, withdrawn or downgraded below “BBB-” or “Baa3” (or the equivalent), the retail electric provider must provide an alternate form of deposit, credit support or combination thereof, in each case from providers with the requisite ratings, within 10 business days following such suspension, withdrawal or downgrade. A retail electric provider failing to make such provision must comply with the provisions set forth below in “—Remedies Upon Default.”

The computation of the size of a required deposit must be agreed upon by the servicer and the retail electric provider and reviewed no more frequently than quarterly to ensure that the deposit accurately reflects two months’ maximum collections. Within 10 business days following such review, (1) the retail electric provider must remit to the trustee the amount of any shortfall in such required deposit or (2) the servicer must instruct the

 

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trustee to remit to the retail electric provider any amount in excess of such required deposit. A retail electric provider failing to so remit any such shortfall must comply with the provisions set forth below in “—Remedies Upon Default.” Retail electric provider cash deposits will be held by the trustee, maintained in a segregated account, and invested in short-term high quality investments, as permitted by the rating agencies rating the transition bonds. Investment earnings on retail electric provider cash deposits will be considered part of such cash deposits so long as they remain on deposit with the trustee. At the instruction of the servicer, cash deposits will be remitted with investment earnings to the retail electric provider at the end of the term of the transition bonds unless otherwise utilized for the payment of the retail electric provider’s obligations for transition charges. Once the deposit is no longer required, the servicer must promptly (but not later than 30 days after such event) instruct the trustee in writing to remit the amount in the segregated account to the retail electric provider.

Billing and Collection Standards. Retail electric providers must comply with the billing, collection and remittance procedures and information access requirements established by the financing order. These standards relate only to the billing and collection of transition charges authorized under the financing order and do not apply to collection of any other nonbypassable charges or other charges. The standards apply to all retail electric providers other than retail electric providers, if any, that have contracted with the transmission and distribution utility to have it bill and collect transition charges from retail electric customers. Retail electric providers may contract with parties other than the transmission and distribution utility to bill and collect transition charges from retail customers, but such retail electric providers will remain subject to these standards. If the PUCT later determines that different standards are to be applied to retail electric providers in particular areas (e.g., payment terms), then those new standards, with appropriate modifications to related provisions, may replace the specific portions of the standards approved in the financing order, but only if each of the rating agencies from which a rating has been obtained by CenterPoint Houston provides written confirmation to the PUCT that such modifications will not cause a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of its ratings on the transition bonds. Upon adoption of any rule addressing any of these retail electric provider standards, the PUCT’s staff will open a proceeding to investigate the need to modify the standards to conform to that rule, with the understanding that such modifications may not be implemented absent written notification to each of the rating agencies from which a rating has been obtained by CenterPoint Houston that such modifications will not cause a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the ratings on the transition bonds.

Payment of Transition Charges. The servicer will bill each retail electric provider for transition charges owed by the retail electric provider’s retail customers. Payments of transition charges are due 35 days following each billing by the servicer to the retail electric provider, without regard to whether or when the retail electric provider receives payment from its retail electric customers. The servicer must accept payment by electronic funds transfer, wire transfer and/or check. Payment will be considered received the date the electronic funds transfer or wire transfer is received by the servicer, or the date the check clears. A 5% penalty is to be charged on amounts received after 35 days; however, a 10 calendar-day grace period will be allowed before the retail electric provider is considered to be in default. A retail electric provider in default must comply with the provisions set forth below in “—Remedies Upon Default.” The 5% penalty will be a one-time assessment measured against the current amount overdue from the retail electric provider to the servicer. The “current amount” consists of the total unpaid transition charges existing on the 36th day after the billing by the servicer. Any and all penalty payments that are collected will be transferred to the trustee to be applied against transition charge obligations. If there is a shortfall in a retail electric provider’s payment of an amount billed, including transition charges for the transition bonds, the amount paid shall first be allocated ratably among the transition charges relating to the transition bonds and other fees and charges (including transition charges and system restoration charges relating to other transition bonds and system restoration bonds, delivery charges and nuclear decommissioning charges) other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the payment shall be attributed to late fees. A retail electric provider will not be obligated to pay the overdue transition charges of another retail electric provider. If a retail electric provider agrees to assume the responsibility for the payment of overdue transition charges as a condition of receiving the customers of another retail electric provider that has decided to terminate service to those customers for any reason, the new retail electric provider will not be assessed the 5% penalty upon such transition charges; however, the prior retail electric provider will not be relieved of the previously assessed penalties.

 

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Remedies Upon Default. After the 10 calendar-day grace period (the 46th day after the billing date) referred to above under the heading “—Payment of Transition Charges,” the servicer will have the option to seek recourse against any cash deposit, affiliate guarantee, surety bond, letter of credit or combination thereof provided by the retail electric provider, if any, and will avail itself of such legal remedies as may be appropriate to collect any remaining unpaid transition charges and associated penalties due the servicer after the application of the retail electric provider’s deposit or alternate form of credit support. In addition, a retail electric provider that is in default with respect to the requirements set forth above in “—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements” and “—Payment of Transition Charges” must select and implement one of the following options:

 

   

allow its billing and collection responsibilities to be immediately assumed by another retail electric provider of the retail electric customer’s choosing or by the applicable provider of last resort,

 

   

arrange that all amounts owed by retail electric customers for services rendered be timely billed and immediately paid directly into a lock-box controlled by the servicer with such amounts to be applied first to pay transition charges before remaining amounts are released to the retail electric provider and with all costs associated with the lock-box to be borne solely by the retail electric provider, or

 

   

immediately implement other mutually suitable and agreeable arrangements with the servicer consistent with the terms of the servicing agreement and rating agency requirements to avoid a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the ratings of the transition bonds.

Historically, the retail electric providers that have been in default with respect to the requirements noted above have selected the third option.

If a retail electric provider that is in default fails to immediately select and implement one of the foregoing options or, after so selecting one of the foregoing options, fails to adequately meet its responsibilities thereunder, then the servicer is required to immediately implement the first option listed above. Upon re-establishment of compliance with the requirements set forth above in “—Rating, Deposit, and Related Requirements” and “—Payment of Transition Charges” and the payment of all past-due amounts and associated penalties, the retail electric provider will no longer be required to comply with this paragraph.

Billing by Providers of Last Resort. The provider of last resort appointed by the PUCT must meet the minimum credit rating or deposit/ credit support requirements described above in “—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements” in addition to any other standards that may be adopted by the PUCT. If the provider of last resort defaults or is not eligible to provide such services, responsibility for billing and collection of transition charges will immediately be transferred to and assumed by the servicer until a new provider of last resort can be named by the PUCT or the customer requests the services of another retail electric provider. Retail electric customers may never be re-billed by the successor retail electric provider (although future transition charges will reflect retail electric provider and other system-wide charge-offs).

Disputes. In the event that a retail electric provider disputes any amount of billed transition charges, the retail electric provider must pay the disputed amount under protest according to the timelines detailed above in “—Payment of Transition Charges.” The retail electric provider and the servicer must first attempt to informally resolve the dispute, but if they fail to do so within 30 days, either party may file a complaint with the PUCT. If the retail electric provider is successful in the dispute process (informal or formal), the retail electric provider will be entitled to interest on the disputed amount paid to the servicer at the PUCT-approved interest rate. Disputes about the date of receipt of transition charge payments and related penalties or the size of a required retail electric provider deposit will be handled in a like manner. Any interest paid by the servicer on disputed amounts may not be recovered through transition charges if it is determined that the servicer’s claim to the funds is clearly unfounded. No interest will be paid by the servicer if it is determined that the servicer has received inaccurate metering data from another entity providing competitive metering services.

Metering Data. If the servicer is providing metering services, metering data will be provided to the retail electric provider at the same time the servicer bills the retail electric provider. If the servicer is not providing

 

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metering services, the entity providing the metering services will be responsible for complying with PUCT rules and ensuring that the servicer and the retail electric provider receive timely and accurate metering data in order for the servicer to meet its obligations under the servicing agreement and the financing order with respect to billing and true-ups.

Charge-Off Allowance. The retail electric provider will be allowed to hold back an allowance for charge-offs in its payments to the servicer. Such charge-off rate will be recalculated each year in connection with the annual true-up procedure. For the initial year of the transition bonds, the retail electric provider will remit payments based on the same charge-off percentage then being used by the retail electric provider to remit payments to the servicer in connection with the then most recently established transition charges related to (i) the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, (ii) the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company II or (iii) the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company III. On an annual basis in connection with the true-up process, the retail electric provider and the servicer will be responsible for reconciling the amounts held back with amounts actually written off as uncollectible in accordance with the terms agreed to by the retail electric provider and the servicer, provided that:

 

   

the retail electric provider’s right to reconciliation for charge-offs will be limited to retail electric customers whose service has been permanently terminated and whose entire accounts (i.e., all amounts due the retail electric provider for its own account as well as the portion representing transition charges) have been written off,

 

   

the retail electric provider’s recourse will be limited to a credit against future transition charge payments unless the retail electric provider and the servicer agree to alternative arrangements, but in no event will the retail electric provider have recourse to the trustee, us or our funds for such payments, and

 

   

the retail electric provider is required to provide information on a timely basis to the servicer so that the servicer can include the retail electric provider’s default experience and any subsequent credits into its calculation of the adjusted transition charge rates for the next transition charge billing period and the retail electric provider’s rights to credit will not take effect until after such adjusted transition charges have been implemented.

Service Termination. In the event that the servicer is billing retail electric customers for transition charges, the servicer will have the right to terminate transmission and distribution service to the retail electric customer for non-payment by the retail electric customer pursuant to applicable PUCT rules. Under current rules of the PUCT adopted in April 2004 and effective June 2004, any non-paying residential or small non-residential customers are subject to disconnection by any retail electric provider. Non-paying large non-residential customers can be disconnected by any retail electric provider if the customer’s contract does not preclude disconnection.

THE SELLER, INITIAL SERVICER AND SPONSOR OF THE TRANSITION PROPERTY

About CenterPoint Houston

Background Information. CenterPoint Houston engages in the electric transmission and distribution business in a 5,000-square mile area of the Texas Gulf Coast that includes Houston. The Company is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Energy, a public utility holding company created on August 31, 2002 as part of a corporate restructuring of Reliant Energy, Incorporated that implemented certain requirements of the Restructuring Act. The transmission and distribution function that CenterPoint Houston performs remains subject to traditional utility rate regulation. CenterPoint Houston recovers the cost of its services through an energy delivery charge approved by the PUCT.

CenterPoint Houston’s principal executive offices are located at 1111 Louisiana, Houston, Texas 77002 (telephone number: (713) 207-3000).

 

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Where to Find Information About CenterPoint Houston. CenterPoint Houston files periodic reports with the SEC as required by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Reports filed with the SEC are available for inspection without charge at the public reference room maintained by the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of periodic reports and exhibits thereto may be obtained at the above location at prescribed rates. Information as to the operation of the public reference facilities is available by calling the SEC at 1 800-SEC-0330. Information filed with the SEC can also be inspected at the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. Except as provided in the prospectus supplement, no other information contained on that website constitutes part of this prospectus or any prospectus supplement related to the transition bonds.

Servicing Experience. Since October 2001, CenterPoint Houston has acted as servicer for the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, in the original aggregate principal amount of $748,897,000, since December 2005 for the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A issued by Transition Bond Company II, in the original aggregate principal amount of $1,851,000,000, since February 2008 for the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds issued by Transition Bond Company III, in the original aggregate principal amount of $488,472,000, and since November 2009 for the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds issued by Restoration Bond Company, in the original aggregate principal amount of $664,859,000. Since the date of issuance of the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds, CenterPoint Houston has filed on a timely basis all true-up filings required for the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds and Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company have satisfied on a timely basis all interest payments on the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds and have made all principal payments on the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds in accordance with their expected amortization schedules. CenterPoint Houston, as servicer of the transition charges of Transition Bond Company I, experienced some difficulties in 2002 in implementing and maintaining the systems and procedures required to perform the duties required of it by the servicing agreement relating to Transition Bond Company I. Such difficulties have since been resolved, but other difficulties may arise in the future. Please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks—Changes to billing and collection practices might reduce the value of your investment in the transition bonds.”

CenterPoint Houston services the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds in accordance with servicing standards that are substantially similar to those set forth in CenterPoint Houston’s servicing agreement with us. Please read “Relationship to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds,” “Relationship to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A,” “Relationship to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds” and “Relationship to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds.”

Municipalization. Texas law may authorize certain local municipalities to seek to acquire portions of CenterPoint Houston’s electric distribution facilities through the power of eminent domain for use as part of municipally-owned utility systems. Although the power of eminent domain has not been used by municipalities in Texas in recent times to acquire electric distribution systems, there can be no assurance that one or more municipalities will not seek to acquire some or all of CenterPoint Houston’s electric distribution facilities while transition bonds remain outstanding. The Restructuring Act specifies that transition charges approved by a PUCT financing order shall be collected by an electric utility as well as its “successors.” In the servicing agreement, CenterPoint Houston has covenanted to assert in an appropriate forum that any municipality that acquires any portion of CenterPoint Houston’s electric distribution facilities must be treated as a successor to CenterPoint Houston under the Restructuring Act and the financing order and that retail customers in such municipalities remain responsible for payment of transition charges. However, the involved municipality might assert that it should not be treated as a successor to CenterPoint Houston for these purposes and that its distribution customers

 

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are not responsible for payment of transition charges. In any such cases, there can be no assurance that the transition charges will be collected from customers of municipally-owned utilities who were formerly customers of CenterPoint Houston.

Service Territory. CenterPoint Houston provides electric transmission and distribution service to over 2 million metered customers in its service territory, which has a population of over 5 million people. With the exception of Texas City, CenterPoint Houston serves nearly all of the Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown metropolitan area. Effective January 2002, electric utilities, including CenterPoint Houston, were required to cease selling their electricity to their retail electric customers. Since that time, only retail electric providers have been allowed to sell electricity to retail customers formerly served by those utilities. The retail electric providers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory are CenterPoint Houston’s primary customers.

Area Economic Profile. Although the city’s economy has experienced diversification in recent years, Houston’s economy is still primarily centered around its key roles in international energy sectors. These roles include (1) an operations center for global exploration and drilling activities of major oil firms, (2) one of the world’s largest concentrations of petrochemical and refining facilities, (3) home office and base of operations for several of the world’s largest industrial and petrochemical construction firms and (4) a major distribution and processing center for the natural gas industry. Other important sectors of the Houston economy include the Port of Houston and airports, the Johnson Space Center and the Texas Medical Center. Together, Houston’s energy and nonenergy sectors provide the city with a strong technical and engineering employment base.

Forecasted Growth in Number of Customers and Electricity Consumption. For the five years ending December 31, 2016, CenterPoint Houston estimates that the number of electric customers will grow at an annual rate of approximately 2% and energy sales (in KWh) will grow at an annual rate of approximately 1%. During the ten years ended December 31, 2010, the number of residential customers increased at a compound annual growth rate of 2.2% and the combined number of commercial and industrial customers increased at a compound annual growth rate of 1.9%. During the same ten-year period, weather-adjusted energy sales to residential customers increased at a compound annual growth rate of 1.3% and weather-adjusted energy sales to commercial and industrial customers were flat.

Electric Transmission. On behalf of retail electric providers, CenterPoint Houston delivers electricity from power plants to substations, from one substation to another and to retail electric customers taking power above 69 kilovolts (kV) in locations throughout the control area managed by ERCOT. CenterPoint Houston provides transmission services under tariffs approved by the PUCT.

Electric Distribution. CenterPoint Houston delivers electricity for retail electric providers in its certificated service territory by carrying lower-voltage power from the substation to the retail electric customer. CenterPoint Houston’s distribution network receives electricity from the transmission grid through power distribution substations and distributes electricity to end users through distribution feeders. Its operations include construction and maintenance of electric transmission and distribution facilities, metering services, outage response services and call center operations. CenterPoint Houston provides distribution services under tariffs approved by the PUCT. PUCT rules and market protocols govern the commercial retail operations of distribution companies and other market participants.

ERCOT Market Framework. CenterPoint Houston is a member of ERCOT. ERCOT serves as the regional reliability coordinating council for member electric power systems in Texas. ERCOT membership is open to consumer groups, investor and municipally owned electric utilities, rural electric cooperatives, independent generators, power marketers and retail electric providers. The ERCOT market includes much of the State of Texas, other than a portion of the panhandle, a portion of the eastern part of the state bordering on Louisiana and the area in and around El Paso. The ERCOT market represents approximately 85% of the demand for power in Texas and is one of the nation’s major power markets. The ERCOT market includes an aggregate net generating capacity of approximately 71,800 megawatts (MW). There are only limited direct current interconnections between the ERCOT market and other power markets in the United States.

 

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The ERCOT market operates under the reliability standards set by the North American Electric Reliability Council. The PUCT has primary jurisdiction over the ERCOT market to ensure the adequacy and reliability of electricity supply across the state’s main interconnected power transmission grid. The ERCOT independent system operator (ERCOT ISO) is responsible for maintaining reliable operations of the bulk electric power supply system in the ERCOT market. Its responsibilities include ensuring that electricity production and delivery are accurately accounted for among the generation resources and wholesale buyers and sellers. Unlike certain other regional power markets, the ERCOT market is not a centrally dispatched power pool, and the ERCOT ISO does not procure energy on behalf of its members other than to maintain the reliable operations of the transmission system. Members who sell and purchase power are responsible for contracting sales and purchases of power bilaterally. The ERCOT ISO also serves as agent for procuring ancillary services for those members who elect not to provide their own ancillary services.

CenterPoint Houston’s electric transmission business supports the operation of the ERCOT ISO and all ERCOT members. The transmission business has planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance responsibility for the portion of the transmission grid and for the load-serving substations it owns, primarily within its certificated area. The transmission business is participating with the ERCOT ISO and other ERCOT utilities to plan, design, obtain regulatory approval for and construct new transmission lines necessary to increase bulk power transfer capability and to remove existing constraints on the ERCOT transmission grid.

Customer Classes

General. CenterPoint Houston will recover transition charges from the following customer classes:

 

   

residential,

 

   

commercial,

 

   

industrial, and

 

   

other, which includes government and municipal street lighting.

Residential customers are those in individually metered single-family or multi-family homes, apartments or mobile homes. Master-metered apartments are included in the commercial class. Commercial customers typically have a maximum usage level less than 600 kVA and include such customers as offices, retail stores, schools and other businesses, as well as non-metered commercial lighting. Industrial customers, which generally use more than 600 kVA on a sustained basis, range from large office buildings and small industrial and manufacturing concerns served at distribution voltage to large process plants and facilities served at transmission voltages. During the twelve months ended September 30, 2011, approximately 35% of CenterPoint Houston’s total deliveries were to industrial customers, approximately 29% were to commercial customers and approximately 36% were to residential and other customers.

Customer classes may include a number of rate schedules. Rate schedules and customer classes are created by CenterPoint Houston and approved by the PUCT and are subject to change. The rate classes from which transition charges will be billed and collected have been established as part of the financing order. These rate classes are not subject to change and will remain in effect for the duration of the securitization financing.

Statistics Regarding Retail Electric Customers in CenterPoint Houston’s Service Territory. CenterPoint Houston will bill transition charges according to rate schedules for each customer class. For the transition charges assessed to individual rate schedules as of the issuance date and any adjustment thereto, in each case giving effect to the issuance of transition bonds on that date, please read the prospectus supplement.

CenterPoint Houston has changed its method of accounting for some customers as a result of the implementation of the Restructuring Act. Before January 1, 2002, some points of delivery were combined into a single point of delivery and accounted for as a single customer. CenterPoint Houston is now required to account for those points separately.

 

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Actual usage fluctuations are highly dependent on weather conditions. On a weather adjusted basis, the compound annual growth rate for actual usage for the ten-year period ended December 31, 2010 was 1% for the residential customer class and there was no growth in the combined commercial and small industrial classes. We cannot assure you that future usage rates will be similar to historical experience. In particular, we cannot assure you that total retail electric customers, the composition of total retail electric customers by customer class, usage levels or revenues for each customer class will remain at or near the levels reflected in the following table. Please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks” in this prospectus.

Over the past ten years, there has been growth in residential retail electric usage as well as in usage by the combined commercial and small industrial classes, in each case on a weather adjusted basis. However, trends are less discernible and less meaningful within the combined commercial and industrial classes since customer counts within specific rate classes can change as a result of reclassification within these classes due to voltage and usage level determinants. The following tables set forth customer usage for each year shown and the number of metered retail electric customers at the end of each of those years.

 

Retail Electric Usage (As Measured by Billed MWh Sales) by Customer Class and Percentage Composition  
    Twelve Months Ended December 31,  
Customer Class   2006     2007     2008     2009     2010  

Residential

    24,153,871        31.8     23,981,086        31.5     23,940,317        32.1     25,100,484        33.5     26,443,464        34.4

Commercial

    20,318,294        26.8     20,954,414        27.5     21,001,782        28.1     21,912,356        29.2     22,387,323        29.1

Industrial

    31,233,556        41.2     31,052,004        40.8     29,567,177        39.6     27,792,340        37.1     27,889,930        36.3

Other

    159,598        0.2     161,136        0.2     161,348        0.2     164,970        0.2     165,058        0.2
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Retail

    75,865,319        100.0     76,148,640        100.0     74,670,624        100.0     74,970,150        100.0     76,885,775        100.0
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

Service Territory Number of Metered Retail Electric Customers and Percentage Composition  
    December 31,  
Customer Class   2006     2007     2008     2009     2010  

Residential

    1,743,963        88.0     1,793,600        88.2     1,821,267        88.2     1,849,019        88.3     1,874,508        88.3

Commercial

    234,925        11.9     238,413        11.7     241,526        11.7     243,125        11.6     245,587        11.6

Industrial

    2,072        0.1     2,061        0.1     2,061        0.1     2,066        0.1     2,040        0.1
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Retail

    1,980,960        100.0     2,034,074        100.0     2,064,854        100.0     2,094,210        100.0     2,122,135        100.0
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

The transmission and distribution revenue data for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2009 and 2010 and for the nine months ended September 30, 2011 represents CenterPoint Houston’s revenues for transmission and distribution charges billed to retail electric providers.

 

Transmission and Distribution Revenue by Customer Class and Percentage Composition (Dollars in Thousands)  
     Twelve Months Ended December 31,     Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2011
 
Customer Class    2008     2009     2010    

Residential

   $ 659,882         49.5   $ 698,895         50.4   $ 737,853         51.2   $ 618,290         53.0

Commercial

     440,819         33.0     458,974         33.1     473,107         32.9     372,016         31.9

Industrial

     206,348         15.5     200,047         14.4     201,476         14.0     154,668         13.3

Other

     26,665         2.0     27,618         2.0     27,577         1.9     20,965         1.8
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total Retail

   $ 1,333,714         100.0   $ 1,385,534         100.0   $ 1,440,013         100.0   $ 1,165,939         100.0
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

The portion of the transition charges that is paid by any one customer is expected to be less than 1.0% of total transition charges.

Relationship with Retail Electric Providers. In accordance with the Restructuring Act, in January 2002, CenterPoint Houston ceased selling electricity to its retail customers. Those retail customers became customers of the various retail electric providers which were providing service in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory.

 

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Those retail electric providers became CenterPoint Houston’s primary customers in its service territory. As of September 30, 2011, CenterPoint Houston did business with approximately 85 retail electric providers. A significant portion of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers are from affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings. As of September 30, 2011, affiliates of NRG and Energy Future Holdings accounted for approximately 41% and 12%, respectively, of CenterPoint Houston’s billed receivables from retail electric providers. Since January 2002, other than the bankruptcies described below and minor delays and payment discrepancies, the retail electric providers providing service in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, including NRG and Energy Future Holdings, generally have made timely payments for the electricity and other services provided by CenterPoint Houston and have generally been cooperative in coordinating billing and payment systems with CenterPoint Houston’s and the State of Texas’ systems in the implementation of the Restructuring Act.

Three retail electric providers with which CenterPoint Houston has done business filed for bankruptcy in June 2002, March 2003 and December 2005, respectively. CenterPoint Houston, as servicer of the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, recovered from two of these retail electric providers the full amount of the transition charges relating to those transition bonds from a cash deposit provided by those retail electric providers. CenterPoint Houston recovered all but approximately $90,000 of the pre-petition balance of transition charges relating to the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I from payments and a cash deposit provided by the other retail electric provider. For additional information regarding retail electric providers’ obligation to make cash deposits in order to provide retail electric service and collect transition charges within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, please read “Retail Electric Providers—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements.” For discussions of potential difficulties in collecting transition charges from retail electric providers and risks associated with the bankruptcy of a retail electric provider, please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks—It might be difficult to collect transition charges from retail electric providers” and “—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers,” respectively.

In addition, in thirteen other instances, retail electric providers defaulted on their payments, but did not declare bankruptcy. In each instance, the retail electric provider’s transition charge collateral was applied to the amounts owed. Amounts for nine of these retail electric providers were fully recovered, while approximately $1,400 to $43,000 remains uncovered from each of the other four retail electric providers. Non-recovery from retail electric providers was generally due to inadequate collateral resulting from customer growth or increased kilowatt-hour demand experienced by the retail electric provider immediately prior to the payment default. A retail electric provider’s collateral is reviewed as often as each quarter to ensure that the collateral accurately reflects two months’ maximum collections. Please read “Retail Electric Providers—Rating, Deposit and Related Requirements” for more information.

How CenterPoint Houston Forecasts Electricity Consumption for Establishment of Transition Charges

The transition charges must result in collections sufficient to make timely principal and interest payments on the transition bonds, to replenish any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount and to pay the trustee’s fee, the servicing fee and other qualified costs. CenterPoint Houston allocates the amount required to be collected among the customer classes and then divides the total dollar requirement for each customer class by the forecasted consumption for such customer class to determine the transition charge for a particular customer class. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property” in this prospectus.

Forecasting Methodology. Regression models are used to forecast consumption for most rate classes, but trends are used to forecast consumption for the lighting rate class and information obtained in a survey of CenterPoint Houston’s largest industrial customers is used to forecast consumption for transmission voltage rate classes.

 

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Sales Forecast Variances. Actual deliveries can deviate from forecast deliveries for many reasons, including the general economic climate in the service territory, the impact of weather on air-conditioning and heating usage, levels of business activity, the availability of more energy efficient appliances, new energy conservation technologies and the customers’ ability to acquire these new products. CenterPoint Houston’s ability to predict energy consumption accurately may affect the timing of collections of transition charges.

The table below compares actual usage in MWh for a particular year to the forecast for such year which is part of the most recent five-year corporate planning forecast, usually prepared during the preceding year. For example, the annual 2010 variance is based on a forecast prepared in 2009. The variances for the residential customer class ranged from -6.2% to 6.9%. The variances for the commercial customer class ranged from -2.1% to 3.0% and for the industrial class from -12.1% to 3.9%. Variances for the other customer class ranged from -1.3% to 0.7%. We cannot assure you that the future variance between actual and expected consumption in the aggregate or by customer class will be similar to the historical experience set forth below. In the following table, “variance” represents percentage deviation from the forecast amount of electricity usage.

Forecast Variance For the Amount of Electricity Consumed

 

     2006     2007     2008     2009     2010  

Residential

          

Forecast (MWh)

     24,110,499        24,912,955        25,512,760        24,921,711        24,739,445   

Actual (MWh)

     24,153,871        23,981,086        23,940,317        25,100,484        26,443,464   

Variance

     0.2     -3.7     -6.2     0.7     6.9

Commercial

          

Forecast (MWh)

     19,906,064        20,554,376        21,444,253        22,174,098        21,743,253   

Actual (MWh)

     20,318,294        20,954,414        21,001,782        21,912,356        22,387,323   

Variance

     2.1     1.9     -2.1     -1.2     3.0

Industrial

          

Forecast (MWh)

     30,070,461        30,082,490        31,225,631        31,633,979        28,940,379   

Actual (MWh)

     31,233,556        31,052,004        29,567,177        27,792,340        27,889,930   

Variance

     3.9     3.2     -5.3     -12.1     -3.6

Other

          

Forecast (MWh)

     161,586        161,223        163,424        163,792        165,570   

Actual (MWh)

     159,598        161,136        161,348        164,970        165,058   

Variance

     -1.2     -0.1     -1.3     0.7        -0.3

Total

          

Forecast (MWh)

     74,248,610        75,711,044        78,348,068        78,893,580        75,588,647   

Actual (MWh)

     75,865,319        76,148,640        74,670,624        74,970,150        76,885,775   

Variance

     2.2     0.6     -4.7     -5.0     -1.7

The table below compares the actual number of customers at the end of a particular period to the related forecast of the number of customers for such date prepared during the previous year. Variance, expressed as a percentage, represents the difference between forecast and actual numbers of customers. A positive variance means there were more customers than forecast. A negative variance means there were fewer customers than forecast. The variances for the residential customer class ranged from -1.6% to 0.3%. The variances for the commercial customer class ranged from -2.6% to 0.2%. The variances for the industrial customer class ranged from -6.8% to -3.4%. We cannot assure you that the future variance between actual and expected numbers of customers in the aggregate or by customer class will be similar to the historical experience set forth below. Any updated information relating to this table will be set forth in the prospectus supplement.

 

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Forecast Variance For the Number of Metered Customers at Period End

 

     2006     2007     2008     2009     2010  

Residential

          

Forecast

     1,739,541        1,792,158        1,834,766        1,880,027        1,883,493   

Actual

     1,743,963        1,793,600        1,821,267        1,849,019        1,874,508   

Variance

     0.3     0.1     -0.7     -1.6     -0.5

Commercial

          

Forecast

     234,539        241,306        243,672        249,740        249,948   

Actual

     234,925        238,413        241,526        243,125        245,587   

Variance

     0.2     -1.2     -0.9     -2.6     -1.7

Industrial

          

Forecast

     2,146        2,211        2,152        2,147        2,160   

Actual

     2,072        2,061        2,061        2,066        2,040   

Variance

     -3.4     -6.8     -4.2     -3.8     -5.6

Total

          

Forecast

     1,976,226        2,035,675        2,080,590        2,131,914        2,135,601   

Actual

     1,980,960        2,034,074        2,064,854        2,094,210        2,122,135   

Variance

     0.2     -0.1     -0.8     -1.8     -0.6

The Billing Process

Retail electric providers issue a single bill to retail electric customers purchasing electricity from a retail electric provider. This single bill includes all charges related to purchasing electricity from the retail electric provider, transmission and distribution services from CenterPoint Houston, the applicable transition charges and any other charges authorized by the PUCT.

Under the servicing agreement, any changes CenterPoint Houston institutes to customary billing and collection practices will apply to the servicing of the transition property so long as CenterPoint Houston is the servicer. CenterPoint Houston expects that any such changes would be designed to enhance its ability to make timely recovery of amounts billed.

The Collection Process

Retail electric customers will pay the transition charges to retail electric providers who supply them with electric power as part of their single bill for electric service. The retail electric providers will be obligated to remit to the servicer payments of the transition charges as described under “Retail Electric Providers—Payment of Transition Charges.” The servicer will have rights only under very limited circumstances to collect transition charges directly from retail electric customers. The servicer will not pay any shortfalls resulting from the failure of any retail electric provider to forward transition charge collections. If a retail electric provider defaults in the payment of transition charges, the retail electric provider must implement one of the courses of action described under “Retail Electric Providers—Remedies Upon Default.”

Write-Off Experience. The table below sets forth net write-off experience with respect to payments owed to the retail electric providers CenterPoint Houston serves. The information in the table is derived solely from data provided to the servicer by retail electric providers. We cannot assure you that this historical data will be indicative of future experiences. In the table below, columns labeled “TC1” reflect write-off experience with respect to payments of transition charges relating to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds, columns labeled “TC2” reflect write-off experience with respect to payments of transition charges relating to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, columns labeled “TC3” reflect write-off experience with respect to payments of transition charges relating to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and columns labeled “SRC” reflect write-off experience with respect to payments of restoration charges relating to the Senior Secured System

 

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Restoration Bonds. The statutory true-up mechanism mitigates the effect of any write-offs on the scheduled payment of the transition bonds. Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups.”

 

    Net write-off for 12 months ended May 31,  
    2006     2007     2008     2009     2010     2011  
    TC1     TC2     TC1     TC2     TC1     TC2     TC3     TC1     TC2     TC3     TC1     TC2     TC3     TC1     SRC  

Residential customers

    1.56     1.39     2.38     2.34     1.99     1.98     1.72     2.41     2.37     2.40     2.22     2.26     2.34     4.48     2.39

Non-residential customers

    0.26     0.20     0.40     0.34     0.33     0.27     0.18     0.41     0.27     0.24     0.43     0.48     0.32     0.40     0.49

Delinquencies

The following table sets forth information relating to the delinquency experience of CenterPoint Houston for retail electric providers on December 31 of each of the five preceding years:

Customer Delinquency Data(1)

 

     2006     2007     2008     2009     2010  

Percent of Billed Revenue Not Collected Within:

          

36-65 days

     0.01     0.03     0.03     0.07     0.06

66-95 days

     0.04     0.02     0.00     0.00     0.01

96 days or more

     0.03     0.00     0.02     0.00     0.00
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total

     0.08     0.05     0.05     0.07     0.07
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

(1) Payments are not delinquent until the 36th day after billing by the servicers. Please read “Retail Electric ProvidersPayment of Transition Charges” and “—Remedies Upon Default” in this prospectus.

CenterPoint Houston does not believe that the delinquency experience with respect to transition charge collections will differ substantially from the approximate rates indicated above.

Days Sales Outstanding

The following table sets forth information relating to CenterPoint Houston’s days sales outstanding for all retail electric providers in its service territory as of December 31 for each of the past five years. Days sales outstanding is a measure of the average number of days that CenterPoint Houston takes to collect its revenue. The average number of days for the collection of the transition charges is expected to be similar to CenterPoint Houston’s revenue collection experience. The days sales outstanding numbers in the following table were generally calculated using the following formula: total amount billed as of December 31 divided by the total revenues for the related calendar year times the number of days in the related calendar year.

Days Sales Outstanding

 

December 31,

  

Days

Sales Outstanding

2006

   33

2007

   35

2008

   33

2009

   31

2010

   31

 

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CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC, THE ISSUING ENTITY

General

We are a special purpose limited liability company formed under the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act pursuant to a limited liability company agreement executed by our sole member or owner, CenterPoint Houston, and the filing of a certificate of formation with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. Our limited liability company agreement will be amended and restated in its entirety prior to the date we enter into the sale agreement relating to the transition bonds with CenterPoint Houston. We and CenterPoint Houston have filed the form of our limited liability company agreement and our amended and restated limited liability company agreement with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part. We have summarized selected provisions of our limited liability company agreement below. Our limited liability company agreement restricts us from engaging in activities other than those described in this section. We do not have any employees, but we will pay our member for administrative services in accordance with our limited liability company agreement. On the date of issuance of the transition bonds, our capital will be equal to 0.5% of the principal amount of the transition bonds issued, or such other amount as specified in the prospectus supplement. Our contributed capital after giving effect to the issuance of any transition bonds will be set forth in the prospectus supplement.

As of the date of this prospectus, we have not carried on any business activities and have no operating history. Our fiscal year is the calendar year. We are not an agency or instrumentality of the State of Texas. Immediately following our issuance of the transition bonds, our assets will include:

 

   

the transition property,

 

   

our rights under the sale agreement, under the administration agreement and under the bill of sale delivered by CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement,

 

   

our rights under the servicing agreement and any subservicing, agency, administration, intercreditor or collection agreements executed in connection with such servicing agreement,

 

   

the collection account and all subaccounts of such collection account,

 

   

our rights in all deposits, guarantees, surety bonds, letters of credit and other forms of credit support provided by or on behalf of retail electric providers pursuant to the financing order or a tariff,

 

   

all present and future claims, demands, causes and choses in action in respect of any or all of the foregoing, and

 

   

all payments on or under and all proceeds in respect of any or all of the foregoing.

The indenture provides that the transition property, as well as our other assets, other than any cash released to us by the trustee semi-annually from earnings on the capital subaccount, will be pledged by us to the trustee to secure our obligations in respect of the transition bonds. Pursuant to the indenture, the collected transition charges remitted to the trustee by the servicer must be used to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds and our other obligations specified in the indenture.

Our Purpose

We were created for the specific purposes of:

 

   

purchasing, owning and servicing transition property and other transition bond collateral,

 

   

registering, issuing and selling the transition bonds,

 

   

pledging our interest in transition property and other transition bond collateral to the trustee pursuant to the terms of the indenture in order to secure the transition bonds,

 

   

making payments on the transition bonds,

 

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distributing amounts released to us, and

 

   

performing other activities that are necessary, suitable or convenient to accomplish the foregoing or that are incidental thereto.

Our limited liability company agreement does not permit us to engage in any activities not directly related to these purposes, including issuing securities (other than the transition bonds), borrowing money or making loans to other persons. We may not engage in any business or activity outside the list of permitted activities set forth in our limited liability company agreement without the prior unanimous consent of the managers, including the independent manager(s). Our amended and restated limited liability company agreement and the indenture will prohibit us from issuing any transition bonds other than the transition bonds that we will offer pursuant to the prospectus supplement.

Our Relationship With CenterPoint Houston

On the issue date for the transition bonds, CenterPoint Houston will sell the transition property to us pursuant to the sale agreement between us and CenterPoint Houston. Pursuant to the servicing agreement between us and CenterPoint Houston, CenterPoint Houston will serve as the initial servicer of the transition property. We will pay CenterPoint Houston fixed fees for performing these services. Pursuant to an administration agreement between us and CenterPoint Houston, CenterPoint Houston will provide administrative services to us.

Our Relationship With the PUCT

Pursuant to the financing order,

 

   

the PUCT or its designated representative has a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint Houston with respect to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds and all matters related to the structuring, marketing and pricing of the transition bonds will be determined through a joint decision of CenterPoint Houston and the PUCT or its designated representative,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston is directed to take all necessary steps to ensure that the PUCT or its designated representative is provided sufficient and timely information to allow the PUCT or its designated representative to fully participate in, and exercise its decision making power over, the proposed securitization, and

 

   

the servicer will file periodic adjustments to transition charges with the PUCT on our behalf.

We have agreed that certain reports concerning transition charge collections will be provided to the PUCT.

Our Managers and Executive Officers

Pursuant to our limited liability company agreement, our affairs will be managed by managers, whom we refer to in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement as our “managers.” CenterPoint Houston will appoint our managers from time to time or, in the event CenterPoint Houston transfers its interest in us, the new owner or owners will appoint our managers. Following the issuance of the transition bonds, we will have at least one independent manager at all times who, among other things, is not and has not been for at least five years prior to the date of his or her appointment:

 

   

a direct or indirect legal or beneficial owner of us, CenterPoint Houston, any of our affiliates or any of CenterPoint Houston’s affiliates, or of any major creditor of any of the foregoing,

 

   

a stockholder, member, supplier, customer, employee, officer, director, partner or any person that has received any benefit in any form whatsoever from (other than in such manager’s capacity as a ratepayer or customer of CenterPoint Houston in the ordinary course of business), or any person that has

 

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provided any service in any form whatsoever to, or any major creditor of us, CenterPoint Houston or any of its affiliates (except to the limited extent set forth in the succeeding sentence), or

 

   

any member of the immediate family of a person described above;

provided, that the indirect or beneficial ownership of stock of CenterPoint Houston or its affiliates through a mutual fund or similar diversified investment vehicle with respect to which the owner does not have discretion or control over the investments held by such diversified investment vehicle shall not preclude such owner from being an independent manager.

The persons who serve as independent managers of Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company may also serve as an independent manager for us. The remaining managers will be employees or officers of CenterPoint Houston. The managers will devote the time necessary to conduct our affairs. As of the date of this prospectus, Marc Kilbride, who is 59 years of age, is our sole manager, Vice President and Treasurer. He has served as Vice President and Treasurer of CenterPoint Houston since June 2002 and Treasurer since 1997. We expect that CenterPoint Houston will appoint two of its employees or officers to serve as managers with Mr. Kilbride and the independent manager(s) in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds. Gary Whitlock, who is 62 years of age, is our President. He has served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of CenterPoint Energy since September 2002. Walter Fitzgerald, who is 54 years of age, is our Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer. He has served as Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer of CenterPoint Energy since 2007 and Vice President and Controller since 2001.

Our executive officers are employees of CenterPoint Energy. They do not receive any compensation from us for their services as our executive officers, and they do not receive any additional or separate compensation from CenterPoint Energy in respect of the services that they perform on our behalf.

None of our managers or executive officers has been involved in any legal proceedings which are specified in Item 401(f) of the SEC’s regulation S-K.

Manager Fees and Limitation on Liabilities

As of the date of this prospectus, we have not paid any compensation to any manager since the date we were formed. We will not compensate our managers, other than our independent manager(s), for their services performed on our behalf. The independent manager(s) will be paid a manager’s fee from our assets and will be reimbursed for reasonable expenses including, without limitation, the reasonable compensation, expenses and disbursements of any agents, representatives, experts and counsel the independent manager(s) may employ in connection with the performance of their respective duties under our limited liability company agreement.

Our limited liability company agreement provides that to the extent permitted by law, our managers will not be personally liable for any of our debts, obligations or liabilities. Our limited liability company agreement further provides that, except as described below, to the fullest extent permitted by law, we will indemnify our managers against judgments, penalties (including excise and similar taxes and punitive damages), fines, settlements and reasonable expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) actually incurred by such manager in connection with such proceeding except that such manager shall not be entitled to indemnification for any judgment, penalty, fine, settlement or expense directly caused by such manager’s fraud, gross negligence or willful misconduct.

We Are a Separate and Distinct Legal Entity from CenterPoint Houston

Under our limited liability company agreement, we may not file a voluntary petition for relief under the bankruptcy code without a unanimous vote of our managers (including our independent manager(s)). CenterPoint

 

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Houston has agreed that it will not cause us to file a voluntary petition for relief under the bankruptcy code prior to the date which is one year and one day after the termination of the indenture and the payment in full of the transition bonds and any other amounts owed under the indenture. Our limited liability company agreement, except for financial reporting purposes and for federal and state income tax purposes, requires us to:

 

   

take all reasonable steps to continue our identity as a separate legal entity,

 

   

make it apparent to third persons that we are an entity with assets and liabilities distinct from those of CenterPoint Houston, other affiliates of CenterPoint Houston, our managers or any other person, and

 

   

make it apparent to third persons that we are not a division of CenterPoint Houston or any of its affiliates or any other person.

Our principal place of business is 1111 Louisiana, Suite 4664B, Houston, Texas 77002, and our telephone number at such address is (713) 207-5776.

Administration Agreement

CenterPoint Houston will, pursuant to an administration agreement between CenterPoint Houston and us, provide administrative services to us, including services relating to the preparation of financial statements, required filings with the SEC, any tax returns we might be required to file under applicable law, qualifications to do business, and minutes of our managers’ meetings. We will pay CenterPoint Houston a fixed fee of $100,000 per annum, payable in installments of $50,000 on each payment date for performing these services, plus we will reimburse CenterPoint Houston for all costs and expenses for services performed by unaffiliated third parties and actually incurred by CenterPoint Houston in performing such services described above.

 

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USE OF PROCEEDS

We will use the proceeds of the issuance of the transition bonds to pay the expenses of the issuance and sale of the transition bonds and to purchase the transition property from CenterPoint Houston. We may not use such proceeds for general corporate purposes.

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SERIES 2001-1 TRANSITION BONDS

In October 2001, Transition Bond Company I, a special purpose, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued $749 million of Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. These bonds were issued to securitize CenterPoint Houston’s generation-related regulatory assets recoverable through irrevocable nonbypassable transition charges provided for in the Restructuring Act and a financing order issued by the PUCT on May 31, 2000.

Although CenterPoint Houston is the servicer with respect to the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds and will be the initial servicer with respect to the transition bonds, as more fully described under “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property,” we are a separate legal entity from Transition Bond Company I, and the transition bonds described herein will be payable from collateral that is separate from that securing the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. Transition Bond Company I will have no obligations under our transition bonds, and we will have no obligations under the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs,” “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Transition Bonds—The Security for the Transition Bonds.”

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS, SERIES A

In December 2005, Transition Bond Company II, a special purpose, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued $1.851 billion of Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. These bonds were issued to securitize CenterPoint Houston’s stranded costs recoverable through irrevocable nonbypassable transition charges provided for in the Restructuring Act and a financing order issued by the PUCT on March 16, 2005.

Although CenterPoint Houston is the servicer with respect to the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A and will be the initial servicer with respect to the transition bonds, as more fully described under “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property,” we are a separate legal entity from Transition Bond Company II, and the transition bonds described herein will be payable from collateral that is separate from that securing the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. Transition Bond Company II will have no obligations under our transition bonds, and we will have no obligations under the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs,” “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Transition Bonds—The Security for the Transition Bonds.”

RELATIONSHIP TO THE 2008 SENIOR SECURED TRANSITION BONDS

In February 2008, Transition Bond Company III, a special purpose, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued approximately $488.5 million of 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds. These bonds were issued to securitize CenterPoint Houston’s remaining principal amount to be collected through CenterPoint Houston’s then effective competition transition charge through irrevocable nonbypassable transition charges provided for in the Restructuring Act and a financing order issued by the PUCT on September 18, 2007.

 

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Although CenterPoint Houston is the servicer with respect to the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds and will be the initial servicer with respect to the transition bonds, as more fully described under “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property,” we are a separate legal entity from Transition Bond Company III, and the transition bonds described herein will be payable from collateral that is separate from that securing the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds. Transition Bond Company III will have no obligations under our transition bonds, and we will have no obligations under the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs,” “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Transition Bonds—The Security for the Transition Bonds.”

RELATIONSHIP TO THE SENIOR SECURED SYSTEM RESTORATION BONDS

In November 2009, Restoration Bond Company, a special purpose, wholly owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Houston, issued approximately $664.9 million of Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. These bonds were issued to securitize CenterPoint Houston’s system restoration costs related to storm losses to its distribution operations through irrevocable nonbypassable system restoration charges provided for in the Public Utility Regulatory Act and a financing order issued by the PUCT on August 26, 2009. The Public Utility Regulatory Act provides for the securitization of storm losses under provisions similar to those under which the transition bonds are being issued.

Although CenterPoint Houston is the servicer with respect to the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds and will be the initial servicer with respect to the transition bonds, as more fully described under “The Seller, Initial Servicer and Sponsor of the Transition Property,” we are a separate legal entity from Restoration Bond Company, and the transition bonds described herein will be payable from collateral that is separate from that securing the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. Restoration Bond Company will have no obligations under our bonds, and we will have no obligations under the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds. Please read “The Restructuring Act—CenterPoint Houston and Other Utilities May Securitize Qualified Costs,” “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” and “The Transition Bonds—The Security for the Transition Bonds.”

THE TRANSITION BONDS

We will issue the transition bonds pursuant to the terms of an indenture between us and the trustee specified in the prospectus supplement. We have filed the form of the indenture with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part. The particular terms of the transition bonds will be provided in the indenture and the supplemental indenture. We have summarized selected provisions of the indenture and the transition bonds below. This summary does not purport to be complete and is subject to and qualified by reference to the provisions of the indenture. We will describe the particular terms of the transition bonds in the prospectus supplement. You should carefully read the summary below, the prospectus supplement and the terms and provisions of the indenture that may be important to you before investing in the transition bonds. Please read “Where You Can Find More Information” in this prospectus.

General Terms of the Transition Bonds

We will issue the transition bonds under the indenture to finance the purchase by us of the transition property. The aggregate principal amount of the transition bonds that may be authenticated and delivered under the indenture and the financing order issued by the PUCT on October 27, 2011 is $1.695 billion. The transition bonds may include one or more tranches which differ, among other things, as to interest rate and amortization of principal. The terms of the transition bonds will be identical, unless we issue more than one tranche, in which case the terms of all transition bonds of the same tranche will be identical. The particular terms of the transition bonds and, if applicable, tranches thereof, will be set forth in the supplemental indenture. Please read “Risk Factors—Other Risks Associated with an Investment in the Transition Bonds” in this prospectus.

 

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The prospectus supplement will describe the following terms of the transition bonds and, if applicable, the tranches of the transition bonds:

 

   

the number of tranches, if any,

 

   

the aggregate initial principal amount of the transition bonds and, if applicable, the tranches of the transition bonds,

 

   

the transition charges,

 

   

the annual rate at which interest accrues or the method or methods of determining such annual rate,

 

   

the payment dates,

 

   

the scheduled final payment date and the final maturity date of the transition bonds and, if applicable, the tranches of the transition bonds,

 

   

the issuance date of the transition bonds,

 

   

the collateral for the transition bonds,

 

   

the authorized denominations,

 

   

the expected amortization schedule for principal of the transition bonds and, if applicable, the tranches of the transition bonds,

 

   

any other material terms of the tranches that are not inconsistent with the provisions of the indenture and that will not result in any rating agency’s suspending, reducing or withdrawing its rating of any outstanding tranche of transition bonds, and

 

   

the identity of the trustee.

The transition bonds are not a debt, liability or other obligation of the State of Texas or of any political subdivision, agency or instrumentality of the State and do not represent an interest in or legal obligation of CenterPoint Energy, CenterPoint Houston or any of their affiliates, other than us. None of CenterPoint Energy, CenterPoint Houston or any of their affiliates will guarantee or insure the transition bonds. A financing order authorizing the issuance of transition bonds does not constitute a pledge of the full faith and credit of the State of Texas or of any of its political subdivisions. The issuance of the transition bonds under the Restructuring Act will not directly, indirectly or contingently obligate the State of Texas or any of its political subdivisions to levy or to pledge any form of taxation for the transition bonds or to make any appropriation for their payment.

Payments of Interest and Principal on the Transition Bonds

Interest will accrue on the principal balance of the transition bonds at the interest rate specified in or determined in the manner specified in the prospectus supplement. Interest will be payable to the transition bondholders on each payment date, commencing on the payment date specified in the prospectus supplement. Interest payments will be made from collections of the transition charges, including amounts available in the excess funds subaccount and, if necessary, the amounts available in the capital subaccount. In the event of default by a retail electric provider, the amounts in the retail electric provider security deposit account or available from other credit support (up to an amount of the lesser of the payment default of that retail electric provider or the amount of that retail electric provider’s deposit or other credit support amount) will be used to make payments in respect of the transition bonds.

On any payment date, we generally will pay principal of transition bonds only until the outstanding principal balance has been reduced to the principal balance specified for that payment date in the expected amortization schedule, but only to the extent funds are available as described in this prospectus. Accordingly, principal of the transition bonds may be paid later, but generally not sooner, than reflected in the expected sinking fund schedule, except in the case of an acceleration. Please read “Risk Factors—Other Risks Associated With an Investment in the Transition Bonds” and “Weighted Average Life and Yield Considerations for the Transition Bonds” in this prospectus.

 

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The trustee will retain in the excess funds subaccount for payment on later payment dates any collections of transition charges in excess of amounts payable as:

 

   

fees and expenses of the servicer (including the servicing fee), the independent manager(s) and the trustee,

 

   

payments of interest and principal on the transition bonds,

 

   

allocations to the capital subaccount, and

 

   

investment earnings on amounts in the capital subaccount released to us.

If the trustee receives insufficient collections of transition charges for the transition bonds for any payment date, and amounts in the collection account (and the applicable subaccounts of that collection account) are not sufficient to make up the shortfall, principal of the transition bonds may be paid later than expected, as described in this prospectus. The failure to make a scheduled payment of principal on the transition bonds because there are not sufficient funds in the collection account does not constitute a default or an event of default under the indenture, except for the failure to make the scheduled payment of principal due upon the final maturity of the transition bonds.

The trustee will distribute on each payment date to the transition bondholders to the extent of available funds in the collection account all payments of principal and interest then due on such transition bonds (other than special payments as defined in the indenture) in accordance with a report prepared by the servicer. The trustee will make each such payment to the transition bondholders, other than the final payment, on the applicable record date. If the transition bonds are ever issued in definitive certificated form, however, the final payment with respect to the transition bonds will be made only upon presentation and surrender of such transition bond at the office or agency of the trustee specified in the notice given by the trustee with respect to such final payment. The trustee will mail notice of the final payment to the transition bondholders no later than five days prior to the expected final payment date, specifying the date set for the final payment and the amount of the payment.

The transition bonds will originally be issued in book-entry form, and we do not expect that the transition bonds will be issued in definitive certificated form. At the time, if any, we issue the transition bonds in the form of definitive transition bonds and not to The Depository Trust Company (“DTC”) or its nominee, the trustee will make payments with respect to the transition bonds as described below under “—Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds.” Upon application by a holder of bonds in the principal amount of $10,000,000 or more to the trustee not later than the applicable record date, the trustee will make payments by wire transfer to an account maintained by the payee.

On each payment date, the amount to be paid as principal on the transition bonds will equal the sum without duplication, of:

 

   

the principal amount scheduled to be paid on that payment date,

 

   

the unpaid principal amount due on the final maturity date, if such payment date is the final maturity date,

 

   

the unpaid principal amount upon acceleration following an event of default, and

 

   

any unpaid and previously scheduled payments of principal and overdue payments of principal.

The failure to pay accrued interest on the transition bonds on any payment date (even if the failure is caused by a shortfall in transition charges received) will result in an event of default for the transition bonds unless such failure is cured within five business days. If interest is not paid within that five-day period, we will pay such defaulted interest (plus interest on such defaulted interest at the applicable interest rate to the extent lawful) to the persons who are transition bondholders on a special record date (as defined in the indenture). The special record

 

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date will be at least fifteen business days prior to the date on which the trustee is to make a special payment (a special payment date). We will fix any special record date and special payment date and, at least 10 days before such special record date, we will mail to each affected transition bondholder a notice that states the special record date, the special payment date and the amount of defaulted interest (plus interest on such defaulted interest) to be paid. Please read “—What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds” below.

The entire unpaid principal amount of the transition bonds will be due and payable:

 

   

on the final maturity date,

 

   

if an event of default under the indenture occurs and is continuing and the trustee or the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds have declared the transition bonds to be immediately due and payable.

However, the nature of our business will result in payment of principal upon an acceleration of the transition bonds being made as funds become available. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property—Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect” and “—You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited.”

If any special payment date or other date specified herein for distribution of any payments to transition bondholders is not a business day, payments scheduled to be made on such special payment date or other date may be made on the next succeeding business day, and no interest will accrue upon such payment during the intervening period. “Business day” means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday or a day on which banking institutions in New York, New York, or Houston, Texas, are required or authorized by law or executive order to remain closed.

Neither we nor CenterPoint Houston makes any representation or warranty that any amounts actually collected arising from transition charges will in fact be sufficient to meet payment obligations on the transition bonds or that assumptions made in calculating transition charges will in fact be realized.

Credit Enhancement for the Transition Bonds

Credit enhancement with respect to the transition bonds will be provided by adjustments to the transition charges, amounts on deposit in the capital subaccount and cash deposits and other credit support provided in respect of transition charges by retail electric providers who do not meet specified credit rating requirements.

Transition Bonds Will Be Issued in Book-Entry Form

The transition bonds will be available to investors only in the form of book-entry transition bonds. You may hold your transition bonds through DTC in the U.S., Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg, S.A., referred to as Clearstream, or Euroclear in Europe or in any other manner we describe in the prospectus supplement. You may hold your transition bonds directly with one of these systems if you are a participant in the system or indirectly through organizations that are participants.

The Role of DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear. Cede & Co., as nominee for DTC, will hold the global bond or bonds representing the transition bonds. Clearstream and Euroclear will hold omnibus positions on behalf of the Clearstream customers and Euroclear participants, respectively, through customers’ securities accounts in Clearstream’s and Euroclear’s names on the books of their respective depositaries. These depositaries will, in turn, hold these positions in customers’ securities accounts in the depositaries’ names on the books of DTC.

 

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The Function of DTC. DTC, the world’s largest securities depository, is a limited-purpose trust company organized under the New York Banking Law, a “banking organization” within the meaning of the New York Banking Law, a member of the Federal Reserve System, a “clearing corporation” within the meaning of the New York Uniform Commercial Code, and a “clearing agency” registered pursuant to the provisions of Section 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. DTC holds and provides asset servicing for over 3.5 million issues of U.S. and non-U.S. equity issues, corporate and municipal debt issues, and money market instruments (from over 100 countries) that DTC’s participants (“Direct Participants”) deposit with DTC. DTC also facilitates the post-trade settlement among Direct Participants of sales and other securities transactions in deposited securities, through electronic computerized book-entry transfers and pledges between Direct Participants’ accounts. This eliminates the need for physical movement of securities certificates. Direct Participants include both U.S. and non-U.S. securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies, clearing corporations and certain other organizations. DTC is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (“DTCC”). DTCC is the holding company for DTC, National Securities Clearing Corporation and Fixed Income Clearing Corporation, all of which are registered clearing agencies. DTCC is owned by the users of its regulated subsidiaries. Access to the DTC system is also available to others such as both U.S. and non-U.S. securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies and clearing corporations that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with a Direct Participant, either directly or indirectly (“Indirect Participants”). The DTC Rules applicable to its Participants are on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission. More information about DTC can be found at www.dtcc.com and www.dtc.org.

The Function of Clearstream. Clearstream is incorporated under the laws of Luxembourg. Clearstream holds securities for its customers and facilitates the clearance and settlement of securities transactions between Clearstream customers through electronic book-entry changes in accounts of Clearstream customers, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of securities. Transactions may be settled by Clearstream in any of various currencies, including United States dollars. Clearstream provides to its customers, among other things, services for safekeeping, administration, clearance and settlement of internationally traded securities and securities lending and borrowing. Clearstream also deals with domestic securities markets in various countries through established depositary and custodial relationships. Clearstream is registered as a bank in Luxembourg and therefore is subject to regulation by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, which supervises Luxembourg banks. Clearstream’s customers are world-wide financial institutions including underwriters, securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies and clearing corporations, among others, and may include the underwriters of the transition bonds. Clearstream’s United States customers are limited to securities brokers and dealers and banks. Clearstream has customers located in various countries. Indirect access to Clearstream is also available to other institutions that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with an account holder of Clearstream. Clearstream has established an electronic bridge with Euroclear Bank S.A./N.V. as the operator of the Euroclear System in Brussels to facilitate settlement of trades between Clearstream and Euroclear.

The Function of Euroclear. Euroclear was created in 1968 to hold securities for Euroclear participants and to clear and settle transactions between Euroclear participants through simultaneous electronic book-entry delivery against payment, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of securities and any risk from lack of simultaneous transfers of securities and cash. Such transactions may be settled in any of various currencies, including United States dollars. The Euroclear System includes various other services, including securities lending and borrowing and interfaces with domestic markets in several countries generally similar to the arrangements for cross-market transfers with DTC described below. The Euroclear System is operated by Euroclear Bank S.A./N.V. as the Euroclear operator. All operations are conducted by the Euroclear operator, and all Euroclear securities clearance accounts and Euroclear cash accounts are accounts with the Euroclear operator. Euroclear participants include central banks and other banks, securities brokers and dealers and other professional financial intermediaries and may include the underwriters of the transition bonds. Indirect access to the Euroclear System is also available to other firms that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with a Euroclear participant, either directly or indirectly.

 

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Terms and Conditions of Euroclear. Securities clearance accounts and cash accounts with the Euroclear operator are governed by the Terms and Conditions Governing Use of Euroclear and the related Operating Procedures of the Euroclear System. These terms and conditions govern transfers of securities and cash within the Euroclear System, withdrawals of securities and cash from the Euroclear System and receipts of payments with respect to securities in the Euroclear System. All securities in Euroclear are held on a fungible basis without attribution of specific securities to specific securities clearance accounts. The Euroclear operator acts under these rules and laws only on behalf of Euroclear participants and has no record of or relationship with persons holding through Euroclear participants.

The Rules for Transfers Among DTC, Clearstream or Euroclear Participants. Transfers between DTC participants will occur in accordance with DTC rules. Transfers between Clearstream customers or Euroclear participants will occur in the ordinary way in accordance with their respective rules and operating procedures.

Cross-market transfers between persons holding directly or indirectly through DTC, on the one hand, and directly or indirectly through Clearstream customers or Euroclear participants, on the other, will be effected through DTC in accordance with DTC rules on behalf of the relevant European international clearing system by its depositary; however, those cross-market transactions will require delivery of instructions to the relevant European international clearing system by the counterparty in that system in accordance with its rules and procedures and within its established deadlines, which will be based on European time. The relevant European international clearing system will, if the transaction meets its settlement requirements, deliver instructions to its depositary to take action to effect final settlement on its behalf by delivering or receiving transition bonds in DTC and making or receiving payment in accordance with normal procedures for same-day funds settlement applicable to DTC. Clearstream customers and Euroclear participants may not deliver instructions directly to Clearstream’s and Euroclear’s depositaries.

Because of time-zone differences, credits of securities in Clearstream or Euroclear as a result of a transaction with a participant will be made during the subsequent securities settlement processing, dated the business day following the DTC settlement date, and those credits or any transactions in those securities settled during that processing will be reported to the relevant Clearstream customer or Euroclear participant on that business day. Cash received in Clearstream or Euroclear as a result of sales of securities by or through a Clearstream customer or a Euroclear participant to a DTC participant will be received with value on the DTC settlement date but will be available in the relevant Clearstream or Euroclear cash account only as of the business day following settlement in DTC.

DTC Will Be the Holder of the Transition Bonds. Transition bondholders that are not participants or indirect participants but desire to purchase, sell or otherwise transfer ownership of, or other interest in, transition bonds may do so only through participants and indirect participants. In addition, transition bondholders will receive all distributions of principal of and interest on the transition bonds from the trustee through the participants, who in turn will receive them from DTC. Under a book-entry format, transition bondholders may experience some delay in their receipt of payments because payments will be forwarded by the trustee to Cede & Co., as nominee for DTC. DTC will forward those payments to its participants, who thereafter will forward them to indirect participants or transition bondholders. It is anticipated that the only “bondholder” will be Cede & Co., as nominee of DTC. The trustee will not recognize transition bondholders as bondholders, as that term is used in the indenture, and transition bondholders will be permitted to exercise the rights of bondholders only indirectly through the participants, who in turn will exercise the rights of transition bondholders through DTC.

Under the rules, regulations and procedures creating and affecting DTC and its operations, DTC is required to make book-entry transfers among participants on whose behalf it acts with respect to the transition bonds and is required to receive and transmit distributions of principal and interest on the transition bonds. Participants and indirect participants with whom transition bondholders have accounts with respect to the transition bonds similarly are required to make book-entry transfers and receive and transmit those payments on behalf of their respective transition bondholders. Accordingly, although transition bondholders will not possess transition bonds, transition bondholders will receive payments and will be able to transfer their interests.

 

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Because DTC can act only on behalf of participants, who in turn act on behalf of indirect participants and certain banks, the ability of a transition bondholder to pledge transition bonds to persons or entities that do not participate in the DTC system, or otherwise take actions in respect of those transition bonds, may be limited due to the lack of a physical certificate for those transition bonds.

DTC has advised us that it will take any action permitted to be taken by a transition bondholder under the indenture only at the direction of one or more participants to whose account with DTC the transition bonds are credited. Additionally, DTC has advised us that it will take those actions with respect to specified percentages of the collateral amount only at the direction of and on behalf of participants whose holdings include interests that satisfy those specified percentages. DTC may take conflicting actions with respect to other interests to the extent that those actions are taken on behalf of participants whose holdings include those interests.

How Transition Bond Payments Will Be Credited by Clearstream and Euroclear. Distributions with respect to transition bonds held through Clearstream or Euroclear will be credited to the cash accounts of Clearstream customers or Euroclear participants in accordance with the relevant system’s rules and procedures, to the extent received by its depositary. Those distributions will be subject to tax reporting in accordance with relevant United States tax laws and regulations. Please read “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders” in this prospectus. Clearstream or the Euroclear operator, as the case may be, will take any other action permitted to be taken by a transition bondholder under the indenture on behalf of a Clearstream customer or Euroclear participant only in accordance with its relevant rules and procedures and subject to its depositary’s ability to effect those actions on its behalf through DTC.

Although DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear have agreed to the foregoing procedures in order to facilitate transfers of the transition bonds among participants of DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear, they are under no obligation to perform or continue to perform those procedures, and those procedures may be discontinued at any time.

The information in this section concerning DTC, Euroclear and Clearstream and their book-entry systems has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable. We and the trustee will not be responsible for DTC’s, Euroclear’s or Clearstream’s performance of their obligations under their rules and procedures, or for the performance by direct or indirect participants of their obligations under the rules and procedures of the clearance systems.

Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds

The Circumstances That Will Result in the Issuance of Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds. Unless we specify otherwise in the prospectus supplement, the transition bonds will be issued in fully registered, certificated form to beneficial owners of transition bonds or other intermediaries, rather than to DTC or its nominee, only if:

 

   

DTC or we advise the trustee in writing that DTC is no longer willing or able to discharge properly its responsibilities as nominee and depository with respect to the book-entry certificates for the transition bonds and we are unable to locate a qualified successor,

 

   

we advise the trustee in writing that we elect to discontinue use of book-entry-only transfers through DTC and deliver certificated transition bonds to DTC, or

 

   

after the occurrence of an event of default under the indenture, transition bondholders representing at least a majority of the outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds advise us, the trustee and DTC through the financial intermediaries and the DTC participants in writing that the continuation of a book-entry system through DTC, or a successor to DTC, is no longer in the transition bondholders’ best interest.

 

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Upon issuance of definitive bonds, the transition bonds evidenced by such definitive bonds will be transferable directly (and not exclusively on a book-entry basis) and registered holders will deal directly with the trustee with respect to transfers, notices and payments.

The Delivery of Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds. Upon the occurrence of any event described in the immediately preceding paragraph (unless otherwise specified), the trustee will be required to notify all affected beneficial owners of transition bonds of the occurrence of the event and the availability through DTC of definitive certificated transition bonds. Upon surrender by DTC of the global bond or bonds in the possession of DTC that had represented the transition bonds and receipt of instructions for re-registration, the trustee will authenticate and deliver definitive certificated transition bonds to the beneficial owners, and the trustee will recognize the holders of the definitive certificated transition bonds as bondholders under the indenture.

The Payment Mechanism for Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds. Payments of principal of, and interest on, definitive certificated transition bonds will be made by the trustee, as paying agent, in accordance with the procedures set forth in the indenture. These payments will be made directly to holders of definitive certificated transition bonds in whose names the definitive certificated transition bonds were registered at the close of business on the related record date specified in the prospectus supplement. These payments will be made by check mailed to the address of the holder as it appears on the register maintained by the trustee or, in certain cases, by wire transfer.

The Transfer or Exchange of Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds. Definitive certificated transition bonds will be transferable and exchangeable at the offices of the transfer agent and registrar, which will initially be the trustee. No service charge will be imposed for any registration of transfer or exchange, but we and the transfer agent and registrar may require payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge imposed in connection with the transfer or exchange.

Final Payments on Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds. The final payment on any transition bond, however—whether a definitive certificated transition bond or a transition bond registered in the name of Cede & Co.—will be made only upon presentation and surrender of the transition bond at the office or agency specified in the notice of final payment to transition bondholders. The trustee will be required to mail that notice to registered bondholders no later than five days prior to the expected final payment date.

Registration and Transfer of the Transition Bonds

We may issue one or more tranches of transition bonds in definitive form, which will be transferable and exchangeable as described above under “—Definitive Certificated Transition Bonds.” There will be no service charge for any registration or transfer of the transition bonds, but the trustee may require the owner to pay a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge.

We will issue the transition bonds in the minimum initial denominations set forth in the prospectus supplement and, except as otherwise provided in the prospectus supplement, in integral multiples thereof.

The trustee will make payments of interest and principal on each payment date to the transition bondholders in whose names the transition bonds were registered on the applicable record date.

The Security for the Transition Bonds

To secure the payment of principal and interest on, and any other amounts owing in respect of, the transition bonds pursuant to the indenture, we will grant to the trustee for the benefit of the transition bondholders a security interest in all of our right, title and interest, whether now owned or later acquired, in and to the following collateral, which collectively constitutes the trust estate under the indenture:

 

   

the transition property,

 

   

our rights under the sale agreement,

 

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the bill of sale delivered by CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement,

 

   

our rights under the servicing agreement and any subservicing, agency, intercreditor or collection agreements executed in connection with the servicing agreement,

 

   

our rights under the administration agreement,

 

   

our rights in the collection account and all subaccounts of the collection account, including the general subaccount, the capital subaccount and the excess funds subaccount and all cash, securities, instruments, investment property or other assets credited to or deposited in the collection account or any subaccount of the collection account from time to time or purchased with funds from the collection account, and all financial assets and securities entitlements carried therein or credited thereto,

 

   

our rights in all deposits, guarantees, surety bonds, letters of credit and other forms of credit support provided by or on behalf of retail electric providers pursuant to the financing order or a tariff,

 

   

all of our other property related to the transition bonds, other than any cash released to us by the trustee semi-annually from earnings on the capital subaccount,

 

   

all present and future claims, demands, causes and choses in action in respect of any or all of the foregoing, and

 

   

all payments on or under and all proceeds in respect of any or all of the foregoing, including all proceeds of the conversion, voluntary or involuntary, into cash or other liquid property of any or all of the foregoing, all cash proceeds, accounts, accounts receivable, general intangibles, notes, drafts, acceptances, chattel paper, checks, deposit accounts, insurance proceeds, condemnation awards, payment intangibles, letter-of-credit rights, investment property, commercial tort claims, documents, rights to payment of any and every kind, and other forms of obligations and receivables, instruments and other property which at any time constitute all or part of or are included in the proceeds of any of the foregoing.

The security interest does not extend to:

 

   

amounts (including net investment earnings) on deposit in a retail electric provider security deposit subaccount that have been released to the servicer or a retail electric provider,

 

   

amounts representing investment earnings on the capital subaccount released to us,

 

   

amounts deposited in the capital subaccount that have been released to us or as we direct following retirement of the transition bonds,

 

   

amounts deposited with us on the issuance date for payment of costs of issuance with respect to the transition bonds (together with any interest earnings thereon), and

 

   

amounts in the segregated trust account held for the benefit of the trustee to pay certain expenses of the trustee.

Section 39.309(b) of the Restructuring Act provides that a valid and enforceable security interest in transition property will attach and be perfected by the means set forth in Section 39.309. Specifically, Section 39.309(b) provides that a valid and enforceable lien and security interest in transition property may be created only by a financing order and the execution and delivery of a security agreement in connection with issuance of financing instruments such as the transition bonds. The lien and security interest attach automatically at the time when value is received for the instruments. Upon perfection by filing notice with the Secretary of State of Texas under Section 39.309(d) of the Restructuring Act, the lien and security interest will be a continuously perfected lien and security interest in the transition property and all proceeds of the property, whether accrued or not, and will have priority in the order of filing and take precedence over any subsequent judicial or other lien creditor.

 

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The Collection Account for the Transition Bonds

Under the indenture, we will establish a collection account with the trustee or at another eligible institution for the transition bonds. The collection account will be under the sole dominion and exclusive control of the trustee. Funds received from collections of the applicable transition charges will be deposited into the collection account. The collection account for the transition bonds will be divided into the following subaccounts, which need not be separate bank accounts:

 

   

the general subaccount,

 

   

the capital subaccount, and

 

   

the excess funds subaccount.

All amounts in the collection account for the transition bonds not allocated to any other subaccount by the servicer will be allocated to the general subaccount. Unless the context indicates otherwise, references in this prospectus and the prospectus supplement to the collection account for the transition bonds include all of the subaccounts contained therein. All monies deposited from time to time in the collection account, all deposits therein pursuant to the indenture, and all investments made in eligible investments with these monies will be held by the trustee in the collection account as part of the collateral. The following institutions are eligible institutions for the establishment of the collection account:

 

   

the corporate trust department of the trustee so long as any of the securities of the trustee are rated investment grade by each rating agency specified in the indenture, or

 

   

the trust department of a depository institution organized under the laws of the United States of America or any state or domestic branch of a foreign bank, which:

 

   

has deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and has either:

 

   

with respect to specified investments having a maturity of greater than one month, a long-term unsecured debt rating of “AA-” by S&P and “A2” by Moody’s and, if rated by Fitch, the equivalent of the lower of those two ratings by Fitch, or

 

   

with respect to specified investments having a maturity of one month or less a certificate of deposit rating of “A-1+” by S&P and “P-1” by Moody’s and, if rated by Fitch, the equivalent of the lower of those two ratings by Fitch, or any other long-term, short-term or certificate of deposit rating acceptable to the rating agencies.

All deposits to and withdrawals from the collection account, all allocations to the subaccounts of the collection account and any amounts to be paid to the servicer and to bondholders shall be made by the trustee in accordance with written instructions provided by the servicer pursuant to the servicing agreement, which is discussed in “The Servicing Agreement” below.

Appropriate Investments for Funds in the Collection Account. So long as no default or event of default has occurred and is continuing, all or a portion of the funds in the collection account for the transition bonds must be invested by the trustee in accordance with the written direction of the servicer in any of the following, each of which is referred to as an eligible investment:

 

  1. direct obligations of, and obligations fully guaranteed as to timely payment by, the United States of America,

 

  2.

demand deposits, time deposits or certificates of deposit of any depository institution or trust company incorporated under the laws of the United States of America or any state thereof, or any domestic branch of a foreign bank, and subject to supervision and examination by federal or state banking or depository institution authorities; provided, however, that at the time of the investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, the commercial paper or other short-term unsecured debt obligations,

 

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  other than any obligations thereof where the rating is based on the credit of a person other than such depository institution or trust company, shall have either (A) a long-term unsecured debt rating from Moody’s and S&P of at least “Aa3” and “AA”, respectively, or (B) a certificate of deposit rating by Moody’s and S&P of at least “P-1” and “A-1+”, respectively,

 

  3. commercial paper or other short-term obligations of any corporation (other than CenterPoint Houston or any of its affiliates), whose ratings, at the time of the investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, from Moody’s and S&P of at least “P-1” and “A-1+”, respectively,

 

  4. investments in money market funds having a rating from Moody’s and S&P of “Aaa” and “AAA”, respectively, including funds for which the trustee or any of its affiliates act as investment manager or advisor,

 

  5. bankers’ acceptances issued by any depository institution or trust company referred to in clause 2 above,

 

  6. repurchase obligations with respect to any security that is a direct obligation of, or fully guaranteed by, the United States of America or any agency or instrumentality thereof the obligations of which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States of America, in either case entered into with a depository institution or trust company, acting as principal, described in clause 2 above,

 

  7. repurchase obligations with respect to any security or whole loan entered into with:

 

  a. a depository institution or trust company, acting as principal, described in clause 2 above,

 

  b. a broker/ dealer, acting as principal, registered as a broker or dealer under Section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 the unsecured short-term debt obligations of which are rated at least “P-1” by Moody’s and at least “A-1+” by S&P at the time of entering into this repurchase obligation, or

 

  c. an unrated broker/ dealer, acting as principal, that is a wholly owned subsidiary of a nonbank or bank holding company the unsecured short-term debt obligations of which are rated at least “P-1” by Moody’s and at least “A-1+” by S&P at the time of purchase, or

 

  8. any other investment permitted by each of the rating agencies;

provided, however, that:

 

  a. any book-entry security, instrument or security having a maturity of one month or less that would be an eligible investment but for its failure, or the failure of the obligor thereon, to have the rating specified above shall be an eligible investment if such book-entry security, instrument or security, or the obligor thereon, has an unsecured short-term debt rating of at least “P-1” by Moody’s, and at least “A-1+” by S&P, and

 

  b. any book-entry security, instrument or security having a maturity of greater than one month that would be an eligible investment but for its failure, or the failure of the obligor thereon, to have the rating specified above shall be an eligible investment if such book-entry security, instrument or security, or the obligor thereon, has an unsecured long-term debt rating of at least “AA-” by S&P or “Aa3” by Moody’s and an unsecured short-term debt rating of at least “P-1” by Moody’s or the equivalent thereof by S&P,

provided that unless otherwise permitted by the applicable rating agencies, upon the failure of any eligible institution to maintain any applicable rating set forth in this definition or the definition of eligible institution, the related investments at that institution shall be reinvested in eligible investments at a successor eligible institution within 10 days.

 

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If Fitch provides a rating for any of the securities, instruments or entities described above, then such security, instrument or entity must have a rating from Fitch specified at a level generally not less than the equivalent of the lower of the ratings thereon from Moody’s and S&P.

These eligible investments may not:

 

   

mature later than the next payment date, or

 

   

be sold, liquidated or otherwise disposed of at a loss prior to the maturity thereof.

No moneys held in the collection account may be invested, and no investment held in the collection account may be sold, unless the security interest granted and perfected in the collection account will continue to be perfected in the investment or the proceeds of the sale in either case without any further action by any person.

Remittances to the Collection Account. On each remittance date, the servicer will remit all collected transition charges, any indemnity amounts and any other proceeds of the trust estate securing the transition bonds to the trustee for deposit in the collection account. Indemnity amount means any amount paid by the servicer or CenterPoint Houston to the trustee, for the trustee or on behalf of the transition bondholders, in respect of indemnification obligations pursuant to the servicing agreement or sale agreement. Please read “The Servicing Agreement” and “The Sale Agreement” in this prospectus. To the extent that the combined amounts remitted by a retail electric provider are insufficient to satisfy amounts owed under any bill, including transition charges relating to the transition bonds, the amount remitted shall first be allocated ratably among the transition charges relating to the transition bonds and other fees and charges (including transition charges and system restoration charges relating to other transition bonds and system restoration bonds, delivery charges and nuclear decommissioning charges) other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the remittance shall be attributed to late fees. If a retail electric provider defaults in the payment of transition charges, it must implement one of the actions described under “Retail Electric Providers—Remedies Upon Default.”

General Subaccount. Collected transition charges and any indemnity amounts remitted to the trustee will be deposited into the general subaccount. On each payment date, the trustee will allocate amounts in the general subaccount among the other subaccounts as described under “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated.” Amounts in the general subaccount will be invested in the eligible investments described above.

Capital Subaccount. Upon the issuance of the transition bonds, CenterPoint Houston will make a capital contribution to us in an amount stated in the prospectus supplement. We will pay this amount to the trustee for deposit into the capital subaccount which will be invested in eligible investments by the trustee in accordance with the written direction of the servicer. The trustee will draw on amounts in the capital subaccount to the extent that, in allocating funds in accordance with clauses 1 through 8 in “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated,” below, amounts on deposit in the general subaccount and, the excess funds subaccount are insufficient to make scheduled payments on the transition bonds and payments of fees and expenses specified in clauses 1 through 8. The trustee will allocate collected transition charges available on any payment date that are not necessary to pay amounts described in clauses 1 through 8 in “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated,” below, to the capital subaccount in an amount sufficient to replenish any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount. If the transition bonds have been retired as of any payment date, the amounts on deposit in the capital subaccount will be released to us, free of the lien of the indenture.

Excess Funds Subaccount. The trustee will allocate collected transition charges available on any payment date that are not necessary to pay clauses 1 through 11 in “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated,” below, to the excess funds subaccount. The trustee will invest amounts in the excess funds subaccount in eligible investments in accordance with the written direction of the servicer. On each payment date, the trustee will draw on the excess funds subaccount in allocating funds in accordance with clauses 1 through 10 in “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated,” below, to the extent that amounts on deposit in the general subaccount are insufficient to make scheduled payments on the transition bonds and payments of fees and expenses specified in clauses 1 through 10.

 

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How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated

Amounts remitted by the servicer to the trustee with respect to the transition bonds, including any indemnity amounts and all investment earnings on amounts in the general subaccount of the collection account will be deposited into the general subaccount. On each payment date, the trustee will allocate or pay all amounts on deposit in the general subaccount of the collection account in the following priority in accordance with instructions provided by the servicer:

 

  1. payment of the trustee’s fees and expenses and any outstanding indemnity amounts owed to the trustee not to exceed a specified amount in any 12-month period, which amount will be fixed in the indenture,

 

  2. payment of the servicing fee, which will be a fixed amount specified in the servicing agreement, plus any unpaid servicing fees from prior payment dates,

 

  3. payment of the fees of our independent manager(s) (which are billed annually), which will be in an amount specified in an agreement between us and our independent manager(s), and a pro rata portion of the administration fee, which will be a fixed amount specified in the administration agreement between us and CenterPoint Houston,

 

  4. payment of all of our other ordinary periodic operating expenses, such as accounting and audit fees, rating agency fees, legal fees and certain reimbursable costs of the administrator under the administration agreement and of the servicer under the servicing agreement,

 

  5. payment of the interest then due on the transition bonds, including any past-due interest,

 

  6. at final maturity or upon acceleration upon an event of default, payment of the principal then required to be paid on the transition bonds,

 

  7. payment of the principal then scheduled to be paid on the transition bonds, including any previously unpaid scheduled principal,

 

  8. payment of any of our remaining unpaid operating expenses and any remaining amounts owed pursuant to the basic documents, including all remaining indemnity amounts owed to the trustee,

 

  9. replenishment of any amounts drawn from the capital subaccount for the transition bonds, including investment earnings in the capital subaccount for the transition bonds to the extent used for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8,

 

  10. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing and that CenterPoint Houston makes a contribution in satisfaction of applicable legal requirements to the capital subaccount in an amount greater than 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds, release to us an amount calculated at CenterPoint Houston’s then authorized rate of return on equity, which is 10% per annum as of the date of this prospectus, on the amount contributed to the capital subaccount in excess of 0.5% of the initial outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds,

 

  11. provided that no event of default has occurred and is continuing, release the investment earnings relating to the 0.5% contribution to the capital subaccount for the transition bonds to us,

 

  12. allocation of the remainder, if any, to the excess funds subaccount, and

 

  13. after the transition bonds have been paid in full and discharged, the balance, together with all amounts in the capital subaccount and the excess funds subaccount for the transition bonds, to us free and clear of the lien of the indenture.

The amount of the servicer’s fee referred to in clause 2 above and the amount of the administration fee referred to in clause 3 will be described in the prospectus supplement for the transition bonds.

 

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Interest means, for any payment date for the transition bonds, the sum, without duplication, of:

 

   

an amount equal to the interest accrued at the applicable interest rate from the prior payment date or, with respect to the first payment date, the amount of interest accrued since the issuance date, of the transition bonds,

 

   

any unpaid interest plus, to the fullest extent permitted by law, any interest accrued on this unpaid interest, and

 

   

if the transition bonds have been declared due and payable, all accrued and unpaid interest thereon.

Principal means, with respect to any payment date of the transition bonds, the sum, without duplication, of:

 

   

the amount of principal due as a result of the occurrence and continuance of an event of default and acceleration of the transition bonds,

 

   

the amount of principal due on the final maturity date,

 

   

any unpaid and previously scheduled payments of principal and overdue payments of principal, and

 

   

the amount of principal scheduled to be paid on such payment date in accordance with the expected sinking fund schedule.

If on any payment date funds in the general subaccount are insufficient to make the allocations or payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 9 of the first paragraph of this subsection with respect to the transition bonds, the trustee will draw from amounts on deposit in the following subaccounts in the following order up to the amount of the shortfall:

 

  1. from the excess funds subaccount for allocations and payments contemplated in clauses 1 through 10, and

 

  2. from the capital subaccount for allocations and payments contemplated by clauses 1 through 8.

If, on any payment date, available collections of the transition charges, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay interest due on all outstanding transition bonds on that payment date, amounts available will be allocated pro rata based on the amount of interest payable. If, on any payment date, remaining collections of the transition charges, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay principal due and payable on all outstanding transition bonds on that payment date, amounts available will be allocated pro rata based on the principal amount then due and payable. If, on any payment date, remaining collections of the transition charges, together with available amounts in the subaccounts, are not sufficient to pay principal scheduled to be paid on all outstanding transition bonds, amounts available will be allocated pro rata based on the principal amounts then scheduled to be paid on the payment date. If the trustee uses amounts on deposit in the capital subaccount to pay those amounts or make those transfers, as the case may be, subsequent adjustments to the transition charges will take into account, among other things, the need to replenish those amounts.

Reports to Holders of the Transition Bonds

On or prior to each payment date, the trustee will deliver a statement prepared by the servicer to each transition bondholder, to the PUCT and to the rating agencies. This statement will include, to the extent applicable, the following information, as well as any other information so specified in the supplemental indenture, as to the transition bonds with respect to that payment date or the period since the previous payment date, as applicable:

 

   

the amount to be paid to transition bondholders in respect of principal,

 

   

the amount to be paid to transition bondholders in respect of interest,

 

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the transition bond balance and the projected transition bond balance as of that payment date,

 

   

the amount on deposit in the capital subaccount as of that payment date,

 

   

the amount, if any, on deposit in the excess funds subaccount as of that payment date,

 

   

the amount to be paid to the trustee on that payment date,

 

   

the amount to be paid to the servicer on that payment date, and

 

   

any other transfers and payments made pursuant to the indenture.

Website

We will, to the extent permitted by and consistent with our obligations under applicable law, cause to be posted on the website associated with CenterPoint Houston (provided in the prospectus supplement):

 

   

the final prospectus for the transition bonds,

 

   

a statement of transition charge remittances made to the trustee as of the most recent interest payment date,

 

   

a statement reporting the balances in the collection account and in each subaccount of the collection account as of the most recent interest payment date,

 

   

a statement showing the balance of outstanding transition bonds that reflects the actual periodic payments made on the transition bonds as of the most recent interest payment date,

 

   

the semi-annual servicer’s certificate delivered for the transition bonds pursuant to the servicing agreement,

 

   

the text (or a link to the website where a reader can find the text) of each true-up filing in respect of the outstanding transition bonds and the results of each true-up filing,

 

   

any credit ratings of the transition bonds and of the servicer assigned by the rating agencies and, if no transition bonds are outstanding, then the ratings on any other senior secured debt securities of the servicer or, if no senior secured debt securities are outstanding, the ratings on any outstanding senior unsecured debt securities of the servicer,

 

   

material legislative or regulatory developments directly relevant to the transition bonds,

 

   

any reports and other information that we are required to file with the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and

 

   

a current organization chart for us and the servicer (unless the servicer is not related to us in which case the servicer will post two separate organization charts), in each case disclosing the parent company and material subsidiaries of the servicer and us.

We and the Trustee May Modify the Indenture

Modifications of the Indenture That Do Not Require Consent of Transition Bondholders. Without the consent of any of the holders of the outstanding transition bonds but with prior notice to the rating agencies and, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, with the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT (other than with respect to the supplemental indenture establishing the specific terms of the transition bonds), we and the trustee may execute a supplemental indenture for any of the following purposes:

 

   

to correct or amplify the description of the collateral, or to better assure, convey and confirm unto the trustee the collateral, or to subject additional property to the lien of the indenture,

 

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to evidence the succession, in compliance with the applicable provisions of the indenture, of another entity to us, and the assumption by any applicable successor of our covenants contained in the indenture and in the transition bonds,

 

   

to add to our covenants, for the benefit of the holders of the transition bonds, or to surrender any right or power therein conferred upon us,

 

   

to convey, transfer, assign, mortgage or pledge any property to the trustee for the benefit of the transition bondholders and the trustee,

 

   

to cure any ambiguity, to correct or supplement any provision of the indenture or in any supplemental indenture which may be inconsistent with any other provision of the indenture or in any supplemental indenture, to make any other provisions with respect to matters or questions arising under the indenture or in any supplemental indenture, to change in any manner or eliminate any provisions of the indenture or to modify in any manner the rights of the transition bondholders under the indenture; provided, however, that:

 

   

this action shall not adversely affect in any material respect the interests of any transition bondholder, and

 

   

the rating agency condition shall have been satisfied with respect thereto,

 

   

to evidence and provide for the acceptance of the appointment under the indenture by a successor trustee with respect to the transition bonds and to add to or change any of the provisions of the indenture as shall be necessary to facilitate the administration of the trust estate under the indenture by more than one trustee, pursuant to the requirements specified in the indenture,

 

   

to qualify the transition bonds for registration with a clearing agency,

 

   

to modify, eliminate or add to the provisions of the indenture to the extent necessary to effect the qualification of the indenture under the Trust Indenture Act or under any similar federal statute hereafter enacted and to add to the indenture any other provisions as may be expressly required by the Trust Indenture Act, or

 

   

to satisfy any rating agency requirements.

Additional Modifications to the Indenture That Do Not Require the Consent of Transition Bondholders. We may also, without the consent of any of the transition bondholders but, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, with the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT, execute one or more other agreements supplemental to the indenture as long as:

 

   

the supplemental agreement does not adversely affect in any material respect the interests of any transition bondholder, and

 

   

the rating agency condition shall have been satisfied with respect thereto.

Modifications to the Indenture That Require the Approval of the Transition Bondholders. We and the trustee also may, with the consent of the holders of not less than a majority of the outstanding amount of the transition bonds to be affected by the supplemental indenture and, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, with the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT, execute a supplemental indenture to add any provisions to, or change in any manner or eliminate any of the provisions of, the indenture or modify in any manner the rights of the transition bondholders under the indenture. However, the supplemental indenture may not, without the consent of the holder of each outstanding transition bond affected thereby:

 

   

change the date of payment of any installment of principal of or interest on any transition bond, or reduce the principal amount thereof or the interest rate thereon,

 

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change the provisions of the indenture and the supplemental indenture relating to the application of collections on, or the proceeds of the sale of, the collateral to payment of principal of or interest on the transition bonds, or change the coin or currency in which any transition bond or any interest thereon is payable,

 

   

impair the right to institute suit for the enforcement of those provisions of the indenture specified therein requiring payment of any such amount due on the transition bonds on or after the respective due dates thereof,

 

   

reduce the percentage of the aggregate amount of the outstanding transition bonds, the consent of the transition bondholders of which is required for any such supplemental indenture, or the consent of the transition bondholders of which is required for any waiver of compliance with the provisions of the indenture or of defaults specified in the indenture and their consequences provided for in the indenture or modify certain aspects of the definition of the term “outstanding,”

 

   

reduce the percentage of the outstanding amount of the transition bonds required to direct the trustee to direct us to sell, liquidate or preserve the collateral,

 

   

modify any provision of the section of the indenture relating to the consent of transition bondholders with respect to supplemental indentures, except to increase any percentage specified therein or to provide that those provisions of the indenture or the basic documents specified in the indenture cannot be modified or waived without the consent of each outstanding transition bondholder affected thereby,

 

   

modify any of the provisions of the indenture in a manner so as to affect the amount of any payment of interest or principal payable on any transition bond on any payment date, or change the redemption dates, expected sinking fund schedules or final maturity dates of any transition bonds,

 

   

decrease the required capital amount,

 

   

modify or alter the provisions of the indenture regarding the voting of the transition bonds held by us, CenterPoint Houston, an affiliate of either of us or any obligor on the transition bonds,

 

   

decrease the percentage of the aggregate principal amount of the transition bonds required to amend the sections of the indenture which specify the applicable percentage of the aggregate principal amount of the transition bonds necessary to amend the indenture or other related agreements specified therein, or

 

   

permit the creation of any lien ranking prior to or on a parity with the lien of the indenture with respect to any of the collateral for the transition bonds or, except as otherwise permitted or contemplated in the indenture, terminate the lien of the indenture on any property at any time subject thereto or deprive the holder of any transition bond of the security provided by the lien of the indenture.

Enforcement of the Sale Agreement, the Administration Agreement, the Intercreditor Agreement and the Servicing Agreement. The indenture provides that we will take all lawful actions to enforce our rights under the sale agreement, the administration agreement, the intercreditor agreement and the servicing agreement. The indenture also provides that we will take all lawful actions to compel or secure the performance and observance by CenterPoint Houston, the administrator and the servicer of their respective obligations to us under or in connection with the sale agreement, the administration agreement, the intercreditor agreement and the servicing agreement. So long as no event of default occurs and is continuing, we may exercise any and all rights, remedies, powers and privileges lawfully available to us under or in connection with the sale agreement, the administration agreement, the intercreditor agreement and the servicing agreement, provided that such action shall not adversely affect the interests of the transition bondholders in any material respect.

If an event of default occurs and is continuing, the trustee may, and, at the written direction of the holders of a majority of the outstanding amount of the transition bonds shall, exercise all of our rights, remedies, powers, privileges and claims against CenterPoint Houston, the administrator and servicer, under or in connection with the sale agreement, administration agreement, intercreditor agreement and servicing agreement, and any right of ours to take this action shall be suspended.

 

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Modifications to the Sale Agreement, the Intercreditor Agreement, the Administration Agreement and the Servicing Agreement. With the prior written consent of the trustee, the sale agreement, the intercreditor agreement, the administration agreement and the servicing agreement may be amended, so long as the rating agency condition is satisfied in connection therewith, at any time and from time to time, without the consent of the transition bondholders but, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, with the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT (other than with respect to an intercreditor agreement). However, any such amendment may not adversely affect the interest of any transition bondholder in any material respect without the consent of the holders of a majority of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds.

Notification of the Rating Agencies, the PUCT, the Trustee and the Transition Bondholders of Any Modification. If we, CenterPoint Houston or the servicer or any other party to the applicable agreement:

 

   

proposes to amend, modify, waive, supplement, terminate or surrender, or agree to any other amendment, modification, waiver, supplement, termination or surrender of, the terms of the sale agreement or the servicing agreement, or

 

   

waives timely performance or observance by CenterPoint Houston or the servicer under the sale agreement, the intercreditor agreement or the servicing agreement,

in each case in a way which would materially and adversely affect the interests of transition bondholders, we must first notify the rating agencies of the proposed action. Upon receiving notification that the rating agency condition has been satisfied, we must notify the trustee, the paying agent, the transition bond registrar and the PUCT in writing and the trustee shall notify the transition bondholders of the proposed action and whether the rating agency condition has been satisfied with respect thereto. The trustee will consent to this proposed amendment, modification, supplement or waiver only with the written consent of the holders of a majority of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds materially and adversely affected thereby and, if such action would increase ongoing qualified costs, the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT (other than with respect to the intercreditor agreement).

What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds

An event of default with respect to the transition bonds is defined in the indenture as being:

 

  1. a default in the payment of any interest on any transition bond when the same becomes due and payable and the continuation of this default for five business days,

 

  2. a default in the payment of the then unpaid principal of any transition bond on the final maturity date or, if applicable, any tranche on the final maturity date for that tranche,

 

  3. a default in the observance or performance of any of our covenants or agreements made in the indenture, other than those specifically dealt with in clause 1 or 2 above, or any of our representations or warranties made in the indenture or in any certificate or other writing delivered pursuant to the indenture or in connection with the indenture proving to have been incorrect in any material respect as of the time when made, and this default continues or is not cured for a period of 30 days after the earlier of (a) written notice of the default is given to us by the trustee or to us and the trustee by the holders of at least 25% of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds or (b) the date we have knowledge of the default,

 

  4. the filing of a decree or order for relief by a court having jurisdiction in respect of us or any substantial part of the collateral securing the transition bonds in an involuntary case or proceeding under any applicable federal or state bankruptcy, insolvency or other similar law now or hereafter in effect, or appointing a receiver, liquidator, assignee, custodian, trustee, sequestrator or similar official of us or our property or for any substantial part of the collateral securing the transition bonds or ordering the winding- up or liquidation of our affairs, and such decree or order remains unstayed and in effect for a period of 90 consecutive days,

 

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  5. the commencement by us of a voluntary case or proceeding under any applicable federal or state bankruptcy, insolvency or other similar law now or hereafter in effect, or the consent by us to the entry of an order for relief in an involuntary case under any such law, or the consent by us to the appointment or taking possession by a receiver, liquidator, assignee, custodian, trustee, sequestrator or similar official of us or our property for any substantial part of the collateral securing the transition bonds or the making by us of any general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or the failure by us generally to pay our debts as such debts become due, or the taking of action by us in furtherance of any of the foregoing,

 

  6. any act or failure to act by the State of Texas or any of its agencies (including the PUCT), officers or employees that violates or is not in accordance with the pledge of the State of Texas in Section 39.310 of the Restructuring Act including, without limitation, the failure of the PUCT to implement the statutory true-up mechanism in accordance with the financing order, or

 

  7. any other event designated as an event of default in the prospectus supplement.

Remedies Available Following an Event of Default. If an event of default with respect to the transition bonds, other than event number 6 above, occurs and is continuing, the trustee or holders holding not less than a majority in outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds may declare the unpaid principal balance of the transition bonds, together with accrued interest, to be immediately due and payable. This declaration may, under the circumstances specified therein involving a cure, be rescinded by the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds. The nature of our business will result in payment of principal upon such a declaration being made as funds become available. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with the Unusual Nature of the Transition Property—Foreclosure of the trustee’s lien on the transition property securing the transition bonds might not be practical, and acceleration of the transition bonds before maturity might have little practical effect” and “—You may experience material payment delays or incur a loss on your investment in the transition bonds because the source of funds for payment is limited.”

In addition to acceleration of the transition bonds described above, the trustee may, and upon the written direction of the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds, shall, exercise one or more of the following remedies upon an event of default (other than event number 6 above):

 

   

the trustee may institute proceedings in its own name and as trustee of an express trust for the collection of all amounts then payable on the transition bonds or under the indenture with respect to the transition bonds, whether by declaration or otherwise, enforce any judgment obtained, and collect from us or the servicer moneys adjudged due,

 

   

the trustee may institute proceedings from time to time for the complete or partial foreclosure of the indenture with respect to the collateral securing the transition bonds,

 

   

the trustee may exercise any remedies of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code or Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any other applicable law and take any other appropriate action to protect and enforce the rights and remedies of the trustee and the transition bondholders,

 

   

the trustee may sell the collateral securing the transition bonds or any portion thereof or rights or interest therein, at one or more public or private sales called and conducted in any manner permitted by law provided that certain conditions set forth in the indenture are met, and

 

   

the trustee may exercise all of our rights, remedies, powers, privileges and claims against the seller, administrator and the servicer under or in connection with the administration agreement, the sale agreement, the intercreditor agreement or the servicing agreement.

If event of default number 6 above occurs, the trustee may to the extent allowed by law, institute or participate in proceedings reasonably necessary to compel performance of or to enforce the pledge of the State of Texas and to collect any monetary damages incurred by the transition bondholders or the trustee as a result of such event of default. This is the only remedy the trustee may exercise if this event of default has occurred.

 

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When the Trustee Can Sell the Collateral. If the final maturity date of the transition bonds has occurred or the transition bonds have been declared to be due and payable following an event of default, the trustee may, or at the written direction of the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds shall:

 

   

subject to the paragraph immediately below, sell the collateral securing the transition bonds,

 

   

elect to have us maintain possession of the collateral securing the transition bonds, or

 

   

take such other remedial action as the trustee, at the written direction of the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds then outstanding and declared to have been due and payable, may direct and continue to apply distributions on the collateral securing the transition bonds as if there had been no declaration of acceleration.

The trustee is prohibited from selling the collateral securing the transition bonds following an event of default, unless:

 

   

the holders of 100% of the principal amount of the transition bonds consent to the sale,

 

   

the proceeds of the sale or liquidation are sufficient to pay in full the principal of and accrued interest on the outstanding transition bonds, or

 

   

the trustee determines, at its option, that funds provided by the collateral securing the transition bonds would not be sufficient on an ongoing basis to make all payments on the transition bonds as these payments would have become due if the transition bonds had not been declared due and payable, and the trustee obtains the written consent of the holders of 66 2/3% of the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds.

Right of Transition Bondholders to Direct Proceedings. Subject to the provisions for indemnification and the limitations contained in the indenture, the holders of a majority in principal amount of the outstanding transition bonds affected will have the right to direct the time, method and place of conducting any proceeding or any remedy available to the trustee or exercising any trust or power conferred on the trustee; provided that, among other things:

 

   

this direction does not conflict with any rule of law or with the indenture,

 

   

any direction to the trustee to sell or liquidate the collateral shall be by the holders of the transition bonds representing not less than 100% of the outstanding transition bonds, and

 

   

the trustee may take any other action deemed proper by the trustee that is not inconsistent with this direction.

However, in case an event of default occurs and is continuing, the trustee will be under no obligation to exercise any of the rights or powers under the indenture at the request or direction of any of the holders of the transition bonds if:

 

   

it reasonably believes it will not be indemnified to its reasonable satisfaction against the costs, expenses and liabilities which might be incurred by it in complying with this request, or

 

   

it determines that this action might materially adversely affect the rights of any transition bondholder not consenting to the action.

Waiver of Default. Prior to acceleration of the transition bonds, the holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds affected may, subject to certain conditions specified in the indenture, waive any default with respect to the transition bonds affected, as the case may be. However, they may not waive a default in the payment of principal or of interest on any of the transition bonds or a default in respect of a covenant or provision of the indenture that cannot be modified without the waiver or consent of all of the holders of the outstanding transition bonds affected.

 

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Limitation of Proceedings. Under the indenture, no transition bondholder will have the right to institute any proceeding, judicial or otherwise, or to avail itself of the right to foreclose on the transition property or otherwise enforce the lien in the transition property pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act, unless:

 

   

the holder previously has given to the trustee written notice of a continuing event of default,

 

   

the holders of not less than a majority in principal amount of the outstanding transition bonds have made written request of the trustee to institute the proceeding in its own name as trustee,

 

   

the holder or holders have offered the trustee security or indemnity reasonably satisfactory to the trustee against the costs, expenses and liabilities to be incurred in complying with the request,

 

   

the trustee for 60 days after its receipt of the notice, request and offer of indemnity has failed to institute the proceeding, and

 

   

no direction inconsistent with this written request has been given to the trustee during the 60-day period referred to above by the holders of a majority in principal amount of the outstanding transition bonds.

In addition, each of the trustee, the transition bondholders and the servicer will covenant that it will not, prior to the date that is one year and one day after the termination of the indenture, acquiesce in or institute or invoke or cause us or the underwriters to invoke against us or against our managers or our member or members any bankruptcy, reorganization or other proceeding under any federal or state bankruptcy or similar law. By purchasing transition bonds, each transition bondholder will be deemed to have made this covenant.

Undertaking for Costs. The parties to the indenture agree, and each bondholder is deemed to have agreed, that in any suit for the enforcement of any right or remedy under the indenture or in any suit against the trustee for any action taken or omitted to be taken under the indenture, any court in its discretion may require the party instituting suit to file an undertaking to pay the costs of such litigation and the court may in its discretion assess reasonable costs, including reasonable attorney’s fees, against such party. However, no costs will be assessed against the parties for a suit brought by the trustee, a suit initiated by any transition bondholder holding in the aggregate more than 10% of the outstanding amount of the transition bonds, or any suit brought by a transition bondholder to enforce the payment of interest not paid when due or principal not paid on the applicable final maturity date.

Our Covenants

Consolidation, Merger or Sale of Assets. We will keep in effect our existence, rights and franchises as a limited liability company under Delaware law, provided that we may consolidate with, merge into or convert into another entity or sell substantially all of our assets to another entity if:

 

   

the entity formed by or surviving the consolidation, merger or conversion or to whom substantially all of our assets are sold is organized under the laws of the United States or any state thereof and expressly assumes by a supplemental indenture the due and punctual payment of the principal of and interest on all outstanding transition bonds and the performance of our obligations under the indenture,

 

   

the entity formed by or surviving the consolidation, merger or conversion or to whom substantially all of our assets are sold expressly assumes all obligations and succeeds to all of our rights under the sale agreement, the administration agreement, the intercreditor agreement, the servicing agreement and any other basic document specified in the indenture to which we are a party or under which we have rights pursuant to an assignment and assumption agreement executed and delivered to the trustee,

 

   

no default or event of default will have occurred and be continuing immediately after giving effect to the merger, consolidation, conversion or sale,

 

   

prior notice will have been given to the rating agencies and the rating agency condition will have been satisfied with respect to the merger, consolidation, conversion or sale,

 

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we have received an opinion of independent counsel to the effect that the merger, consolidation, conversion or sale:

 

   

will have no material adverse tax consequence to us or any transition bondholder,

 

   

complies with the indenture and all conditions precedent therein provided relating to the merger, consolidation, conversion or sale, and

 

   

will result in the trustee maintaining a continuing valid first priority perfected security interest in the collateral,

 

   

none of the transition property, the financing order or our rights under the Restructuring Act or the financing order are impaired thereby, and

 

   

any action that is necessary to maintain the lien and security interest created by the indenture has been taken.

Additional Covenants. We will from time to time execute and deliver all documents, make all filings and take any other action necessary or advisable to, among other things, maintain and preserve the lien of the indenture and the priority thereof. We will not, among other things:

 

   

permit the validity of the indenture to be impaired or the lien to be amended, subordinated or terminated or discharged,

 

   

permit any person to be released from any covenants or obligations except as expressly permitted by the indenture,

 

   

permit any lien, charge, claim, security interest, mortgage or other encumbrance, other than the lien of the indenture, to be created on or extend to or otherwise arise upon or burden the collateral or any part thereof or any interest therein or the proceeds thereof,

 

   

permit the lien of the indenture not to constitute a continuing valid first priority perfected security interest in the trust estate,

 

   

except as expressly permitted by the indenture, any supplemental indenture, the sale agreement or the servicing agreement, sell, transfer, exchange or otherwise dispose of any of the collateral unless directed to do so by the trustee in accordance with the indenture,

 

   

claim any credit on, or make any deduction from the principal or interest payable in respect of, the transition bonds, other than amounts properly withheld under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or assert any claim against any present or former transition bondholder because of the payment of taxes levied or assessed upon us or any part of the collateral,

 

   

terminate our existence, dissolve or liquidate in whole or in part, except as otherwise permitted by the indenture,

 

   

take any action which is the subject of a rating agency condition if such action would result in a downgrade, suspension or withdrawal, or

 

   

elect to be classified as an association taxable as a corporation for federal income tax purposes or otherwise take any action inconsistent with our treatment for federal income tax purposes as a disregarded entity not separate from our sole owner.

We may not engage in any business other than purchasing and owning the transition property, issuing the transition bonds, pledging our interest in the collateral to the trustee under the indenture in order to secure the transition bonds, and performing activities that are necessary, suitable or convenient to accomplish the foregoing or are incidental thereto.

 

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We may not issue, incur, assume or guarantee any indebtedness except for the transition bonds. Also, we may not guarantee or otherwise become contingently liable in connection with the obligations, stocks or dividends of, or own, purchase, repurchase or acquire, or agree contingently to acquire, any stock, obligations, assets or securities of, or any other interest in, or make any capital contribution to, any other person, other than the specified eligible investments. We may not, except as contemplated by the indenture, the sale agreement, the servicing agreement and related documents, including our limited liability company agreement, make any loan or advance or credit to any person. We will not make any expenditure for capital assets or lease any capital asset other than the transition property purchased from CenterPoint Houston pursuant to, and in accordance with, the sale agreement. We may not make any payments, distributions or dividends to any member in respect of its membership interest except in accordance with the indenture.

The servicer will deliver to the trustee the annual accountant’s report, compliance certificates and reports regarding distributions and other statements required by the servicing agreement. Please read “The Servicing Agreement” in this prospectus.

Access to the List of Transition Bondholders

Any transition bondholder who has owned a transition bond for at least six months may, by written request to the trustee, obtain access to the list of all transition bondholders maintained by the trustee for the purpose of communicating with other transition bondholders with respect to their rights under the indenture or the transition bonds. In addition, a group of transition bondholders each of whom has owned a transition bond for at least six months may also obtain access to the list of all transition bondholders for the same purpose. The trustee may elect not to afford the requesting transition bondholders access to the list of transition bondholders if it agrees to mail the desired communication or proxy, on behalf and at the expense of the requesting transition bondholders, to all transition bondholders.

We Must File an Annual Compliance Statement

We will deliver to the trustee, within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year, an officer’s certificate (a copy of which we will deliver to each rating agency and the PUCT) stating, as to the manager signing such officer’s certificate, that

 

  (i) a review of the our activities during such year (or relevant portion thereof) and of performance under the indenture has been made under such manager’s supervision; and

 

  (ii) to the best of such manager’s knowledge, based on such review, we have complied with all conditions and covenants under the indenture throughout such fiscal year (or relevant portion thereof), or, if there has been a default in compliance with any such condition or covenant, describing each such default known to the manager and the nature and status thereof.

The Trustee May Be Required to Provide an Annual Report to All Transition Bondholders

If required by the Trust Indenture Act, the trustee will be required to mail each year to all transition bondholders a brief report. This report may state, in accordance with the requirements of the Trust Indenture Act, among other items:

 

   

the trustee’s eligibility and qualification to continue as the trustee under the indenture,

 

   

any amounts advanced by it under the indenture,

 

   

the amount, interest rate and maturity date of specific indebtedness owing by us to the trustee in the trustee’s individual capacity,

 

   

the property and funds physically held by the trustee, and

 

   

any action taken by it that materially affects the transition bonds and that has not been previously reported.

 

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What Will Trigger Satisfaction and Discharge of the Indenture

The transition bonds, all moneys payable with respect to the transition bonds and the indenture will cease to be of further effect and the lien of the indenture will be released, interest will cease to accrue on the transition bonds and the trustee, on our written demand and at our expense, will execute instruments acknowledging satisfaction and discharge of the indenture with respect to the transition bonds, when:

 

   

either (1) all transition bonds which have already been authenticated or delivered, with certain exceptions set forth in the indenture, have been delivered to the trustee for cancellation or (2) we have irrevocably deposited with the trustee cash, in trust for this purpose, in an amount sufficient to make payments of principal of and interest on the transition bonds and to pay and discharge the entire indebtedness on those transition bonds not previously delivered to the trustee,

 

   

we have paid or caused to be paid all other sums payable by us under the indenture, and

 

   

we have delivered to the trustee an officer’s certificate, an opinion of counsel, and if required by the Trust Indenture Act or the trustee, a certificate from a firm of independent certified public accountants, each stating that there has been compliance with the conditions precedent in the indenture or relating to the satisfaction and discharge of the indenture with respect to the transition bonds.

Our Legal Defeasance and Covenant Defeasance Options

We may, at any time, terminate:

 

   

all of our obligations under the indenture with respect to the transition bonds, or

 

   

our obligations to comply with some of the covenants in the indenture, including some of the covenants described under “—Our Covenants.”

The legal defeasance option is our right to terminate at any time our obligations under the indenture with respect to the transition bonds. The covenant defeasance option is our right at any time to terminate our obligations to comply with some of the covenants in the indenture. We may exercise the legal defeasance option of the transition bonds notwithstanding our prior exercise of the covenant defeasance option. If we exercise the legal defeasance option, the transition bonds will be entitled to payment only from the funds or other obligations set aside under the indenture for payment thereof on the scheduled final payment date therefor as described below. The transition bonds will not be subject to payment through redemption or acceleration prior to the scheduled final payment date. If we exercise the covenant defeasance option, the final payment of the transition bonds may not be accelerated because of an event of default relating to a default in the observance or performance of our covenant as described in “—What Constitutes an Event of Default on the Transition Bonds” above.

We may exercise the legal defeasance option or the covenant defeasance option with respect to the transition bonds only if:

 

   

we irrevocably deposit or cause to be deposited in trust with the trustee cash or U.S. government obligations specified in the indenture for the payment of principal of and interest on the transition bonds to the scheduled final payment date therefor, as applicable, and all other amounts due and payable under the indenture, the deposit to be made in the defeasance subaccount,

 

   

we deliver to the trustee a certificate from a nationally recognized firm of independent accountants expressing its opinion that the payments of principal and interest on the U.S. government obligations when due and without reinvestment plus any cash deposited in the defeasance subaccount without investment will provide cash at times and in sufficient amounts to pay in respect of the transition bonds:

 

   

principal in accordance with the expected sinking fund schedule therefor, and

 

   

interest when due,

 

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in the case of the legal defeasance option, 95 days pass after the deposit is made and during the 95-day period no default relating to events of our bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership or liquidation occurs and is continuing at the end of the period,

 

   

no default has occurred and is continuing on the day of this deposit and after giving effect thereto,

 

   

in the case of the legal defeasance option, we deliver to the trustee an opinion of counsel stating that:

 

   

we have received from, or there has been published by, the Internal Revenue Service a ruling, or

 

   

since the date of execution of the indenture, there has been a change in the applicable federal income tax law, and in either case confirming that the holders of the transition bonds will not recognize income, gain or loss for federal income tax purposes as a result of the exercise of the legal defeasance option and will be subject to federal income tax on the same amounts, in the same manner and at the same times as would have been the case if the legal defeasance had not occurred,

 

   

in the case of the covenant defeasance option, we deliver to the trustee an opinion of counsel to the effect that the holders of the transition bonds will not recognize income, gain or loss for federal income tax purposes as a result of the exercise of the covenant defeasance option and will be subject to federal income tax on the same amounts, in the same manner and at the same times as would have been the case if the covenant defeasance had not occurred,

 

   

we deliver to the trustee a certificate of one of our managers and an opinion of counsel, each stating that all conditions precedent to the legal defeasance option or the covenant defeasance option, as applicable, have been complied with as required by the indenture,

 

   

we deliver to the trustee an opinion of counsel to the effect that (a) in a case under the bankruptcy code in which CenterPoint Houston (or any of its affiliates, other than us) is the debtor, the court would hold that the deposited cash or U.S. government obligations would not be in the bankruptcy estate of CenterPoint Houston (or any of its affiliates, other than us, that deposited the cash or U.S. government obligations); and (b) in the event CenterPoint Houston (or any of its affiliates, other than us, that deposited the cash or U.S. government obligations), were to be a debtor in a case under the bankruptcy code, the court would not disregard the separate legal existence of CenterPoint Houston (or any of its affiliates, other than us, that deposited the cash or U.S. government obligations) and us so as to order substantive consolidation under the bankruptcy code of our assets and liabilities with the assets and liabilities of CenterPoint Houston (or any of its affiliates, other than us, that deposited the cash or U.S. government obligations), and

 

   

each rating agency has notified us and the trustee that the exercise of the proposed defeasance option will not result in a suspension, downgrade or withdrawal of the then-current rating of any then outstanding transition bonds.

The Trustee

The trustee for the transition bonds will be named in the prospectus supplement. You will also find information relating to the trustee’s form of organization and a description of its prior experience as a trustee in the prospectus supplement. The trustee may resign at any time upon 30 days’ notice by so notifying us. The holders of a majority in principal amount of the transition bonds then outstanding may remove the trustee by so notifying the trustee and us in writing and may appoint a successor trustee. We will remove the trustee by written notice if the trustee ceases to be eligible to continue in this capacity under the indenture, the trustee becomes a debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding or is adjudged insolvent, a receiver, administrator or other public officer takes charge of the trustee or its property, the trustee becomes incapable of acting or the trustee fails to provide to us certain information we reasonably request which is necessary for us to satisfy our reporting obligations under the securities laws. If the trustee resigns or is removed or a vacancy exists in the office of trustee for any reason, we will be obligated promptly to appoint a successor trustee eligible under the indenture. We are responsible,

 

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initially, for payment of the expenses associated with any such removal or resignation, but any such expenses will be treated as an operating expense and paid out of the general subaccount on a payment date in accordance with the priority of payments set forth in “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in this prospectus. No resignation or removal of the trustee will become effective until acceptance of the appointment by a successor trustee. The trustee shall at all times satisfy the requirements of certain provisions of the Trust Indenture Act, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and have a combined capital and surplus of at least $50 million and a long-term debt rating of “Baa3” or better by Moody’s, “BBB-” or better by S&P and, if applicable, “BBB-” or better by Fitch. If the trustee consolidates with, merges or converts into, or transfers all or substantially all of its corporate trust business or assets to, another entity, the resulting, surviving or transferee entity shall without any further action be the successor trustee. We and our affiliates may, from time to time, maintain various banking, investment banking and trust relationships with the trustee and its affiliates. Please read “The Sale Agreement” and “The Servicing Agreement” in this prospectus for further information.

The trustee shall not be liable for any action it takes or omits to take in good faith which it believes to be authorized or within its rights or powers; provided that its conduct does not constitute willful misconduct, negligence or bad faith. We have agreed to indemnify the trustee and its officers, directors, employees and agents against any and all loss, liability or expense (including reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses) incurred by it in connection with the administration of the trust and the performance of its duties under the indenture, provided that we are not required to pay any expense or indemnify against any loss, liability or expense incurred by the trustee through the trustee’s own willful misconduct, negligence or bad faith. Please read “Prospectus Summary—Priority of Distributions” and “—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in this prospectus for further information.

Governing Law

The indenture will be governed by the laws of the State of Texas.

WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

The rate of principal payments, the amount of each interest payment, the final payment date of the transition bonds and the weighted average life thereof will depend primarily on the timing of receipt of collected transition charges by the trustee and the statutory true-up mechanism. The aggregate amount of collected transition charges and the rate of principal amortization on the transition bonds will depend, in part, on actual energy usage and energy demands, and the rate of delinquencies and write-offs. The transition charges are required to be adjusted from time to time based in part on the historical transition charge collections. However, we can give no assurance that the servicer will be able to forecast accurately actual electricity usage or implement adjustments to the transition charges that will cause collected transition charges to be received at any particular rate. Please read “Risk Factors—Servicing Risks,” “—Other Risks Associated With an Investment in the Transition Bonds” and “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups” in this prospectus.

The transition bonds may be retired later than expected. Except in the event of the acceleration of the final payment date of the transition bonds after an event of default, however, the transition bonds will not be paid earlier than is contemplated in the expected bond amortization schedule for the transition bonds. Receipts in excess of the amounts necessary to amortize the transition bonds in accordance with the expected amortization schedule, to pay interest and related fees and expenses and to fund subaccounts of the collection account will be allocated to the excess funds subaccount. Future transition charges will be decreased by any amount in the excess funds subaccount due to overcollection. Acceleration of the final maturity date after an event of default in accordance with the terms thereof will result in payment of principal earlier than the related scheduled final payment dates. A payment on a date that is earlier than the scheduled payment date might result in a shorter weighted average life, and a payment on a date that is later than the scheduled payment date might result in a longer weighted average life.

 

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THE SALE AGREEMENT

The following summary describes particular material terms and provisions of the sale agreement pursuant to which we will purchase the transition property from the seller. We and CenterPoint Houston have filed the form of the sale agreement with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part. This summary does not purport to be complete and is subject to and qualified by reference to the provisions of the sale agreement.

CenterPoint Houston’s Sale and Assignment of the Transition Property

In connection with the issuance of the transition bonds, the seller will offer and sell the transition property to us pursuant to the terms and conditions of the sale agreement. The sale of the transition property to us by CenterPoint Houston will be financed through the corresponding issuance of the transition bonds. Pursuant to the sale agreement, CenterPoint Houston will sell and assign to us, without recourse, except as provided therein, its rights and interests under the financing order, which will become transition property upon such transfer pursuant to the Restructuring Act. The transition property will represent all rights and interests of CenterPoint Houston under the financing order, including the right to impose, collect and receive the transition charges and the revenues and collections resulting from such transition charges. We will apply the net proceeds that we receive from the sale of the transition bonds to the purchase of the transition property.

As provided by the Restructuring Act, our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement, which will expressly provide that such transfer is a sale, will be a true sale, and all title to the transition property, legal or equitable, will pass to us. Under the Restructuring Act, such sale will constitute a true sale under state law whether or not

 

   

we have any recourse against CenterPoint Houston,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston retains any equity interest in the transition property under state law,

 

   

CenterPoint Houston acts as a collector of transition charges relating to the transition property, or

 

   

CenterPoint Houston treats the transfer as a financing for tax, financial reporting or other purposes.

Under the Restructuring Act, all rights and interests under the financing order will become transition property upon transfer of such rights to us by CenterPoint Houston in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds. The transition property will constitute our present property right for purposes of contracts concerning the sale or pledge of property.

Upon the execution and delivery of the sale agreement and bill of sale and the filing of a notice with the Secretary of State of the State of Texas in accordance with the rules prescribed under the Restructuring Act, our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston will be perfected as against all third persons, including subsequent judicial or other lien creditors. In accordance with the Restructuring Act, a valid and enforceable lien and security interest in the transition property will be created upon the issuance of the financing order and the execution and delivery of the sale agreement. The lien and security interest attaches automatically from the time that value is received for the transition bonds and, on perfection through the timely filing of a notice with the Secretary of State of the State of Texas in accordance with the rules prescribed under the Restructuring Act, will be a continuously perfected lien and security interest in the transition property and all proceeds of the transition property.

The records and computer systems of CenterPoint Houston and CenterPoint Energy will reflect the sale and assignment of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests under the financing order to us. However, we expect that the transition bonds will be reflected as debt on CenterPoint Energy’s consolidated financial statements. In addition, we anticipate that the transition bonds will be treated as debt of CenterPoint Energy for federal income tax purposes. Please read “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders.”

 

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CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties

In the sale agreement, CenterPoint Houston will make representations and warranties to us as of the transfer date to the effect, among other things, that:

 

  1. subject to clause 9 below (assumptions used in calculating the transition charges as of the transfer date), all written information, as amended or supplemented from time to time, provided by CenterPoint Houston to us with respect to the transferred transition property (including the financing order and the issuance advice letter) is correct in all material respects;

 

  2. it is the intention of the parties to the sale agreement that, other than for specified tax purposes, the sale, transfer, assignment, setting over and conveyance contemplated by the sale agreement constitutes a sale or other absolute transfer of all right, title and interest of CenterPoint Houston related to the transition bonds in, to and under the financing order to us, whereupon (subject to the effectiveness of the issuance advice letter) such rights and interests will become transition property; upon execution and delivery of the sale agreement and the bill of sale and payment of the purchase price, CenterPoint Houston will have no right, title or interest in, to or under the transferred transition property; and that such transferred transition property would not be a part of the estate of CenterPoint Houston in the event of the filing of a bankruptcy petition by or against CenterPoint Houston under any bankruptcy law;

 

  3.    a. CenterPoint Houston is the sole owner of the rights and interests under the financing order,

 

  b. on the transfer date, immediately upon the sale under the sale agreement, the transferred transition property will have been validly sold, assigned, transferred, set over and conveyed to us free and clear of all liens (except for any lien created in favor of the transition bondholders pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any lien created by us under the basic documents), and

 

  c. all actions or filings (including filings with the Secretary of State of the State of Texas in accordance with the rules prescribed under the Restructuring Act and the Uniform Commercial Code) necessary in any jurisdiction to give us a perfected ownership interest (subject to any lien created in favor of the transition bondholders pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any lien created by us under the basic documents) in the transferred transition property and to grant to the trustee a first priority perfected security interest in the transferred transition property, free and clear of all liens of CenterPoint Houston or anyone else (except for any lien created in favor of the transition bondholders pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any lien created by us under the basic documents) have been taken or made;

 

  4. the financing order has been issued by the PUCT in accordance with the Restructuring Act, the financing order and the process by which it was issued comply with all applicable laws, rules and regulations of the State of Texas and the federal laws of the United States, and the financing order is final, non-appealable and in full force and effect;

 

  5. as of the date of issuance of the transition bonds, the transition bonds will be entitled to the protections provided by the Restructuring Act and the financing order, and the financing order and the transition charges authorized therein will have become irrevocable and not subject to reduction, impairment or adjustment by further action of the PUCT, except as permitted by Section 39.307 of the Restructuring Act, the issuance advice letter relating to the transferred transition property will have been filed in accordance with the financing order, and the PUCT will not have issued any order prior to noon on the fourth business day after submission of the issuance advice letter that the transition bonds do not comply with specified ordering provisions of the financing order and the initial transition charges and the final term of the transition bonds set forth in the issuance advice letter will have become effective;

 

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  6.    a. under the Restructuring Act, the State of Texas has pledged that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property transferred under the sale agreement or, except as permitted in Section 39.307 of the Restructuring Act, reduce, alter or impair the transition charges until the principal, interest and premium, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the transition bonds, have been paid and performed in full,

 

  b. under the laws of the State of Texas and the federal laws of the United States, the State of Texas could not constitutionally take any action of a legislative character, including the repeal or amendment of the Restructuring Act, which would substantially limit, alter or impair the transition property or other rights vested in the transition bondholders pursuant to the financing order, or substantially limit, alter, impair or reduce the value or amount of the transition property, unless that action is a reasonable exercise of the State of Texas’s sovereign powers and of a character reasonable and appropriate to further a legitimate public purpose, and, under the takings clauses of the Texas and United States Constitutions, the State of Texas could not repeal or amend the Restructuring Act or take any other action in contravention of its pledge quoted above without paying just compensation to the transition bondholders, as determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, if doing so would constitute a permanent appropriation of a substantial property interest of those transition bondholders in the transition property and deprive those transition bondholders of their reasonable expectations arising from their investments in the transition bonds; however, there is no assurance that, even if a court were to award just compensation, it would be sufficient to pay the full amount of principal and interest on those transition bonds;

 

  7. there is no order by any court providing for the revocation, alteration, limitation or other impairment of the Restructuring Act, the financing order or issuance advice letter, the transferred transition property or the transition charges or any rights arising under any of them or that seeks to enjoin the performance of any obligations under the financing order;

 

  8. under the laws of the State of Texas and the federal laws of the United States in effect on the transfer date, no other approval, authorization, consent, order or other action of, or filing with any court, federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or other governmental instrumentality is required in connection with the creation or transfer of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests related to the transition bonds under the financing order and our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston, except those that have been obtained or made;

 

  9. based on information available to CenterPoint Houston on the transfer date, the assumptions used in calculating the transition charges in the issuance advice letter are reasonable and made in good faith; however, notwithstanding the foregoing, CenterPoint Houston makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, that amounts actually collected arising from the transition charges will in fact be sufficient to meet the payment obligations on the transition bonds or that the assumptions used in calculating the transition charges will in fact be realized;

 

  10.  a. upon the effectiveness of the issuance advice letter, the transfer of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests related to the transition bonds under the financing order and our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement, the transferred transition property will constitute a present property right,

 

  b. upon the effectiveness of the issuance advice letter, the transfer of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests under the financing order and our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston pursuant to the sale agreement, the transferred transition property will include, without limitation:

 

  (1) the right to impose, collect and receive transition charges authorized in the financing order, including, without limitation, the right to receive transition charges in amounts and at times sufficient to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds,

 

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  (2) all rights and interests of CenterPoint Houston under the financing order that relate to the transition bonds,

 

  (3) the rights to file for periodic adjustments of the transition charges as provided in the financing order, and

 

  (4) all revenues and collections resulting from the transition charges,

 

  c. upon the effectiveness of the issuance advice letter and the transfer of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests under the financing order and our purchase of the transition property from CenterPoint Houston on such transfer date pursuant to the sale agreement, the transferred transition property will not be subject to any lien created by a previous indenture;

 

  11. CenterPoint Houston is a limited liability company duly organized and in good standing under the laws of the State of Texas, with limited liability company power and authority to own its properties and conduct its business as currently owned or conducted;

 

  12. CenterPoint Houston has the limited liability company power and authority to obtain the financing order and to execute and deliver the sale agreement and to carry out its terms; CenterPoint Houston has the limited liability company power and authority to own the rights and interests under the financing order, to sell and assign those rights and interests under the financing order to us, whereupon (subject to the effectiveness of the issuance advice letter) such rights and interests will become transition property; and the execution, delivery and performance of the sale agreement have been duly authorized by CenterPoint Houston by all necessary limited liability company action;

 

  13. the sale agreement constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of CenterPoint Houston, enforceable against CenterPoint Houston in accordance with its terms, subject to customary exceptions relating to bankruptcy, creditors’ rights and equitable principles;

 

  14. the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the sale agreement and the fulfillment of the terms thereof do not (a) conflict with or result in any breach of any of the terms and provisions of, or constitute (with or without notice or lapse of time) a default under, the articles of organization or limited liability company regulations of CenterPoint Houston, or any indenture, mortgage, credit agreement or other agreement or instrument to which CenterPoint Houston is a party or by which it or its properties is bound; (b) result in the creation or imposition of any lien upon any of CenterPoint Houston’s properties pursuant to the terms of any such indenture or agreement or other instrument (except for any lien created in favor of the transition bondholders pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any lien created by us under the basic documents) or (c) violate any existing law or any existing order, rule or regulation applicable to CenterPoint Houston of any court or of any federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or other governmental instrumentality having jurisdiction over CenterPoint Houston or its properties;

 

  15. except for continuation filings under the Uniform Commercial Code and other filings under the Restructuring Act and the Uniform Commercial Code, no approval, authorization, consent, order or other action of, or filing with, any court, federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or other governmental instrumentality is required under any applicable law, rule or regulation in connection with the execution and delivery by CenterPoint Houston of the sale agreement, the performance by CenterPoint Houston of the transactions contemplated by the sale agreement or the fulfillment by CenterPoint Houston of the terms of the sale agreement, except those that have previously been obtained or made and those that CenterPoint Houston, in its capacity as servicer under the servicing agreement, is required to make in the future pursuant to the servicing agreement;

 

  16.

except as disclosed in this prospectus or the prospectus supplement, there are no proceedings pending, and to CenterPoint Houston’s knowledge, (a) there are no proceedings threatened and (b) there are no investigations pending or threatened before any court, federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or other governmental instrumentality having jurisdiction over CenterPoint Houston or its

 

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  properties involving or related to CenterPoint Houston or us or, to CenterPoint Houston’s knowledge, to any other person:

 

  a. asserting the invalidity of the sale agreement, any of the other basic documents, the transition bonds, the Restructuring Act or the financing order,

 

  b. seeking to prevent the issuance of the transition bonds or the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the sale agreement or any of the other basic documents,

 

  c. seeking any determination or ruling that could reasonably be expected to materially and adversely affect the performance by CenterPoint Houston of its obligations under, or the validity or enforceability of, the sale agreement or any of the other basic documents or the transition bonds, or

 

  d. challenging CenterPoint Houston’s treatment of the transition bonds as debt of CenterPoint Energy for federal or state income, gross receipts or franchise tax purposes;

 

  17. after giving effect to the sale of the transition property under the sale agreement, CenterPoint Houston:

 

  a. is solvent and expects to remain solvent,

 

  b. is adequately capitalized to conduct its business and affairs considering its size and the nature of its business and intended purposes,

 

  c. is not engaged and does not expect to engage in a business for which its remaining property represents an unreasonably small portion of its capital,

 

  d. reasonably believes that it will be able to pay its debts as they become due, and

 

  e. is able to pay its debts as they become due and does not intend to incur, or believes that it will incur, indebtedness that it will not be able to repay at its maturity; and

 

  18. CenterPoint Houston is duly qualified to do business as a foreign limited liability company in good standing, and has obtained all necessary licenses and approvals, in all jurisdictions in which the ownership or lease of property or the conduct of its business requires such qualifications, licenses or approvals (except where the failure to so qualify or obtain such licenses and approvals would not be reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on CenterPoint Houston’s business, operations, assets, revenues or properties).

The representations and warranties made by CenterPoint Houston survive the sale of the transferred transition property to us and the pledge thereof on the transfer date to the trustee. Any change in the law occurring after the transfer date that renders any of the representations and warranties untrue does not constitute a breach under the sale agreement.

CenterPoint Houston’s Covenants

In the sale agreement, CenterPoint Houston will make the following covenants:

 

  1. subject to its rights to assign its rights and obligations under the sale agreement, so long as any transition bonds are outstanding, CenterPoint Houston will (i) keep in full force and effect its existence and remain in good standing under the laws of the state of its organization, and will obtain and preserve its qualification to do business in each jurisdiction in which such qualification is or will be necessary to protect the validity and enforceability of the sale agreement and each other instrument or agreement to which CenterPoint Houston is a party necessary to the proper administration of the sale agreement and the transactions contemplated by the sale agreement and (ii) continue to operate its transmission and distribution system in order to provide electric services to retail electric customers in its certificated service area, provided that CenterPoint Houston is not prohibited from selling, assigning or otherwise divesting its transmission and distribution system or any part thereof in accordance with the sale agreement and the financing order;

 

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  2. except for the conveyances under the sale agreement or any lien under Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act for our benefit, the transition bondholders and the trustee, CenterPoint Houston may not sell, pledge, assign or transfer to any other person, or grant, create, incur, assume or suffer to exist any lien on, any of the transferred transition property, whether then existing or thereafter created, or any interest therein. CenterPoint Houston may not at any time assert any lien against or with respect to the transferred transition property, and CenterPoint Houston shall defend the right, title and interest of us and of the trustee, as our assignee, in, to and under the transferred transition property against all claims of third parties claiming through or under CenterPoint Houston;

 

  3. in the event that CenterPoint Houston receives any payments under the terms of an intercreditor agreement in respect of the transition charges or the proceeds thereof other than in its capacity as the servicer, CenterPoint Houston agrees to pay all those payments to the servicer, in accordance with the intercreditor agreement, as soon as practicable after receipt thereof by CenterPoint Houston;

 

  4. CenterPoint Houston will notify us and the trustee promptly after becoming aware of any lien on any of the transferred transition property, other than the conveyances under the sale agreement, any lien created in favor of the transition bondholders under Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act or any lien created by us under the indenture;

 

  5. CenterPoint Houston agrees to comply with its organizational or governing documents and all laws, treaties, rules, regulations and determinations of any court or federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or governmental instrumentality applicable to it, except to the extent that failure to so comply would not materially adversely affect our or the trustee’s interests in the transferred transition property or under the basic documents or CenterPoint Houston’s performance of its obligations under the sale agreement;

 

  6. so long as any transition bonds are outstanding, CenterPoint Houston

 

  a. will treat the transition bonds as our debt and not debt of CenterPoint Houston, except for financial reporting or tax purposes;

 

  b. will disclose in its financial statements that it is not the owner of the transferred transition property and that our assets are not available to pay creditors of CenterPoint Houston or its affiliates (other than us);

 

  c. will not own or purchase any transition bonds; and

 

  d. will disclose the effects of all transactions between us and CenterPoint Houston in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

  7. so long as any transition bonds are outstanding:

 

  a. in all proceedings relating directly or indirectly to the transferred transition property, CenterPoint Houston will affirmatively certify and confirm that it has sold all of its rights and interests under the financing order that relate to the transition bonds to us (other than for financial reporting or tax purposes), and will not make any statement or reference in respect of the transferred transition property that is inconsistent with our ownership interest (other than for financial reporting or tax purposes), and

 

  b. CenterPoint Houston will not take any action in respect of the transferred transition property except solely in its capacity as servicer thereof pursuant to the servicing agreement or as contemplated by the basic documents, including the intercreditor agreement;

 

  8. CenterPoint Houston agrees that, upon the sale by CenterPoint Houston of all of its rights and interests under the financing order to us pursuant to the sale agreement any payment to the servicer by any person responsible for remitting transition charges to the servicer under the terms of the financing order or the Restructuring Act or applicable tariff shall discharge such person’s obligations in respect of the transferred transition property to the extent of such payment, notwithstanding any objection or direction to the contrary by CenterPoint Houston;

 

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  9. CenterPoint Houston will execute and file such filings, and cause to be executed and filed such filings in such manner and in such places as may be required by law fully to preserve, maintain and protect our and the trustee’s interests in the transferred transition property, including all filings required under the Restructuring Act and the Uniform Commercial Code relating to the transfer of the ownership of the rights and interests related to the transition bonds under the financing order by CenterPoint Houston to us and the pledge of the transferred transition property by us to the trustee. CenterPoint Houston will deliver (or cause to be delivered) to us and the trustee file-stamped copies of, or filing receipts for, any document filed as provided above, as soon as available following such filing. CenterPoint Houston will institute any action or proceeding reasonably necessary to compel performance by the PUCT or the State of Texas of any of their obligations or duties under the Restructuring Act, the financing order or the issuance advice letter relating to the transfer of the rights and interests under the financing order by CenterPoint Houston to us, and CenterPoint Houston agrees to take such legal or administrative actions, including defending against or instituting and pursuing legal actions and appearing or testifying at hearings or similar proceedings, in each case as may be reasonably necessary:

 

  a. to protect us and the transition bondholders from claims, state actions or other actions or proceedings of third parties which, if successfully pursued, would result in a breach of any representation described above under the caption “—CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties”; or

 

  b. so long as CenterPoint Houston is also the servicer, to block or overturn any attempts to cause a repeal of, modification of or supplement to the Restructuring Act, the financing order, the issuance advice letter or the rights of transition bondholders by legislative enactment or constitutional amendment that would be materially adverse to us, the trustee or the transition bondholders.

The costs of any such actions or proceedings would be reimbursed by us to CenterPoint Houston from amounts on deposit in the collection account as an operating expense in accordance with the terms of the indenture. CenterPoint Houston’s obligations pursuant to this covenant survive and continue notwithstanding that the payment of operating expenses pursuant to the indenture may be delayed;

 

  10. so long as any transition bonds are outstanding, CenterPoint Houston will pay all material taxes, assessments and governmental charges imposed upon it or any of its properties or assets or with respect to any of its franchises, businesses, income or property before any penalty accrues thereon if the failure to pay any such taxes, assessments and governmental charges would, after any applicable grace periods, notices or other similar requirements, result in a lien on the transferred transition property; provided that no such tax need be paid if CenterPoint Houston or any of its affiliates is contesting the same in good faith by appropriate proceedings promptly instituted and diligently conducted and if CenterPoint Houston or such affiliate has established appropriate reserves as shall be required in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

  11. CenterPoint Houston will comply with all filing requirements imposed upon it in its capacity as seller of the transferred transition property under the financing order, including making any post-closing filings; and

 

  12. even if the sale agreement or the indenture is terminated, CenterPoint Houston will not, prior to the date that is one year and one day after the termination of the indenture, petition or otherwise make or cause us to invoke the process of any court or federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or governmental instrumentality for the purpose of commencing or sustaining a case against us under any federal or state bankruptcy, insolvency or similar law or appointing a receiver, liquidator, assignee, trustee, custodian, sequestrator or other similar official of ours, or any substantial property of ours or ordering the winding up or liquidation of our affairs. We will also agree in the sale agreement not to petition or otherwise invoke or cause CenterPoint Houston to invoke such a process for the same period of time.

 

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CenterPoint Houston’s Obligation to Indemnify Us and the Trustee and to Take Legal Action

Under the sale agreement, CenterPoint Houston is obligated to indemnify us and the trustee, for itself and on behalf of the transition bondholders and related parties specified therein, against:

 

  1. any and all taxes, other than any taxes imposed on transition bondholders solely as a result of their ownership of transition bonds, that may at any time be imposed on or asserted against any of those persons under existing law as of the transfer date as a result of the sale and assignment of CenterPoint Houston’s rights and interests under the financing order that relates to the transition bonds by CenterPoint Houston to us, the acquisition or holding of the transferred transition property by us or the issuance and sale by us of transition bonds, including any sales, gross receipts, tangible personal property, privilege, franchise or license taxes, but excluding any taxes imposed as a result of a failure of that person to properly withhold or remit taxes imposed with respect to payments on any transition bond, in the event and to the extent such taxes are not recoverable qualified costs, it being understood that the transition bondholders will be entitled to enforce their rights against CenterPoint Houston solely through a cause of action brought for their benefit by the trustee in accordance with the terms of the indenture; and

 

  2.    a. any and all amounts of principal of and interest on the transition bonds not paid when due or when scheduled to be paid in accordance with their terms and the amount of any deposits to us required to have been made in accordance with the terms of the basic documents which are not made when so required, in each case as a result of CenterPoint Houston’s breach of any of its representations, warranties or covenants contained in the sale agreement; and

 

  b. any and all liabilities, obligations, claims, actions, suits or payments of any kind whatsoever that may be imposed on or asserted against any such person, other than any liabilities, obligations or claims for or payments of principal of or interest on the transition bonds, together with any reasonable costs and expenses incurred by that person, in each case as a result of CenterPoint Houston’s breach of any of its representations, warranties or covenants contained in the sale agreement.

However, CenterPoint Houston is not required to indemnify the trustee or related parties against any loss incurred by them through their own willful misconduct, negligence or bad faith.

These indemnification obligations will rank equally in right of payment with other general unsecured obligations of CenterPoint Houston. The indemnities described above will survive the resignation or removal of the trustee and the termination of the sale agreement and include reasonable fees and expenses of investigation and litigation (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses). The representations and warranties described above under the caption “—CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties” are made under existing law as in effect as of the date of issuance of the transition bonds. CenterPoint Houston will not indemnify any party for any changes of law after the issuance of the transition bonds, including by means of legislative enactment, constitutional amendment or voter initiative, or for any liability resulting solely from a downgrade in the ratings on such transition bonds.

CenterPoint Houston’s Limited Obligation to Undertake Legal Action. As described in clause 9 above under “—CenterPoint Houston’s Covenants,” the sale agreement will require CenterPoint Houston to institute any action or proceeding reasonably necessary to compel performance by the PUCT or the State of Texas of any of their obligations or duties under the Restructuring Act, the financing order or the related issuance advice letter with respect to the transferred transition property. Except for the foregoing and subject to CenterPoint Houston’s further covenant to fully preserve, maintain and protect our interests in the transition property, CenterPoint Houston will not be under any obligation to appear in, prosecute or defend any legal action that is not incidental to its obligations under the sale agreement and that in its opinion may involve it in any expense or liability.

 

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Successors to CenterPoint Houston

The sale agreement will provide that any person which succeeds by merger, consolidation, sale or other similar transaction to all or substantially all of the electric transmission and distribution business of CenterPoint Houston (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, the person which provides distribution service to a majority of the retail electric customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory), which person executes an agreement of assumption to perform every obligation of CenterPoint Houston under the sale agreement, will be the successor to CenterPoint Houston with respect to CenterPoint Houston’s ongoing obligations under the sale agreement without the execution or filing of any document or any further act by any of the parties to the sale agreement. The sale agreement will further require that:

 

   

immediately after giving effect to any transaction referred to in this paragraph, no representation or warranty made in the sale agreement will have been breached in any material respect, and no servicer default, and no event that, after notice or lapse of time, or both, would become a servicer default will have occurred and be continuing,

 

   

the rating agencies specified in the sale agreement will have received prior written notice of the transaction, and

 

   

officers’ certificates and opinions of counsel specified in the sale agreement will have been delivered to us and the trustee.

Amendment

The sale agreement may be amended in writing by the seller and us, if notice of the amendment is provided by us to each rating agency and the rating agency condition has been satisfied, with the consent of the trustee and, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT.

 

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THE SERVICING AGREEMENT

The following summary describes the material terms and provisions of the servicing agreement pursuant to which the servicer will undertake to service the transition property. This summary does not purport to be complete and is qualified by reference to the provisions of the servicing agreement. We and CenterPoint Houston have filed the form of the servicing agreement with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part.

Servicing Procedures

General. The servicer, as our agent, will manage, service, administer and make collections in respect of the transition property. The servicer’s duties will include:

 

   

calculating and billing the transition charges,

 

   

obtaining meter reads and collecting the transition charges from retail electric providers or an agent appointed by the servicer or an account designated under the intercreditor agreement to collect the transition charges, as applicable, and posting all collections,

 

   

responding to inquiries by retail electric customers, retail electric providers, the PUCT or any federal, local or other state governmental authority with respect to the transition property and transition charges,

 

   

accounting for collected transition charges and late-payment penalties received from retail electric providers, investigating and resolving delinquencies, processing and depositing collections, making periodic remittances to the trustee and furnishing periodic reports to us, the trustee, the PUCT and the rating agencies,

 

   

providing certified calculations and other information reasonably requested by agents appointed by the servicer to collect the charges to enable the agents to perform collection services properly under the intercreditor agreement and monitoring the collections of the agents for compliance with the intercreditor agreement,

 

   

monitoring payments by each retail electric provider, reviewing reports provided by each retail electric provider and monitoring compliance by each retail electric provider with the credit standards and deposit obligations set forth in the financing order,

 

   

notifying each retail electric provider of any defaults by such retail electric provider in its payment obligations and other obligations (including its credit standards), and enforcing against such retail electric provider at the earliest date permitted any remedies provided by applicable law,

 

   

making all filings with the PUCT and taking all other actions necessary to perfect our ownership interests in and the trustee’s lien on the transition property and other collateral,

 

   

selling, as our agent, defaulted or written-off accounts in accordance with the servicer’s usual and customary practices,

 

   

taking action in connection with adjustments to the transition charges and allocation of the transition charges among various classes of customers as described below,

 

   

any other duties specified for a servicer under the financing order or applicable law, and

 

   

reconciling, within 30 calendar days after bank statement cutoff dates or such later time as is consistent with the servicer’s usual and customary practices that does not materially impair the ability of the servicer to correct errors, all bank account debits and credits for bank accounts that are held in our name or the name of the servicer (as servicer under the servicing agreement) that relate to the collateral or the transition bonds.

 

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Please read “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order” in this prospectus. The servicer is required to notify us, the trustee, the PUCT and the rating agencies in writing of any laws or PUCT regulations promulgated after the execution of the servicing agreement that have a material adverse effect on the servicer’s ability to perform its duties under the servicing agreement. The servicer is also authorized to execute and deliver documents and to make filings and participate in proceedings on our behalf.

In the servicing agreement, the servicer will agree, among other things, that, in servicing the transition property:

 

   

except where the failure to comply with any of the following would not materially adversely affect our or the trustee’s respective interests in the transition property,

 

   

it will manage, service, administer and make collections in respect of the transition property with reasonable care and in material compliance with applicable law, including all applicable PUCT regulations and guidelines, using the same degree of care and diligence that the servicer exercises with respect to billing and collection activities that the servicer conducts for itself and others,

 

   

it will follow standards, policies and procedures in performing its duties as servicer that are customary in the electric transmission and distribution industry or that the PUCT has mandated and consistent with the terms of the financing order, tariffs and existing law,

 

   

it will use all reasonable efforts, consistent with its customary servicing procedures, to enforce and maintain the trustee’s and our rights in respect of the transition property,

 

   

it will calculate the transition charges and the allocation of transition charges among customer classes in compliance with the Restructuring Act, the financing order, any PUCT order related to transition charge allocation and any applicable tariffs,

 

   

it will provide all reports to such parties to the intercreditor agreement regarding the transition charges and allocation of the transition charges among various classes of customers as are necessary to effect collection, allocation and remittance of payments in respect of transition charges and other collected funds in accordance with the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement,

 

   

it will make all filings required under the applicable Uniform Commercial Code or the Restructuring Act to maintain the perfected security interest of the trustee in the collateral and use all reasonable efforts to otherwise enforce and maintain the trustee’s rights in respect of the transition property and the collateral,

 

   

it will petition the PUCT for adjustments to the transition charges and allocation of the transition charges among customer classes that the servicer determines to be necessary in accordance with the financing order, and

 

   

it will keep on file, in accordance with customary procedures, all documents pertaining to the transition property and will maintain accurate and complete accounts, records and computer systems pertaining to the transition property.

The duties of the servicer set forth in the servicing agreement are qualified by any PUCT regulations or orders in effect at the time those duties are to be performed.

Servicer Obligation to Undertake Legal Action. The servicer is required, subject to applicable law, to institute any action or proceeding necessary to compel performance by any retail electric provider and any party to the intercreditor agreement of any of their respective obligations or duties under the Restructuring Act, the financing order or the intercreditor agreement, as the case may be, with respect to the transition property. The costs of any such actions or proceedings would be reimbursed by us to the servicer from amounts on deposit in the collection account as an operating expense in accordance with the terms of the indenture. The servicer’s obligations pursuant to this covenant survive and continue notwithstanding that the payment of operating expenses pursuant to the indenture may be delayed.

 

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Collections. Each retail electric provider in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory will include the applicable transition charges in its bill to retail electric customers. The servicer or its agent will bill each retail electric provider for the applicable transition charges attributable to the retail electric provider’s retail electric customers at least monthly. Pursuant to the financing order, each retail electric provider must remit to the servicer the amount of applicable transition charges attributable to its retail electric customers (less an allowance for charge-offs of delinquent customer accounts) within 35 days of the servicer’s bill for such charges regardless of whether payments have been received by the retail electric providers from such retail electric customers. In addition, in the event a retail electric provider fails to pay the servicer in full within 35 days of the date the applicable transition charges are billed to such retail electric provider, the servicer will assess a late-payment penalty against the retail electric provider in the amount of five percent of the outstanding balance of such transition charges payable by the retail electric provider. All late-payment penalties will be remitted to the collection account to be applied against transition charge obligations. A grace period of 10 days from the 35th day after the payment due date will be allowed before the retail electric provider is considered to be in default. If there is a shortfall in a retail electric provider’s payment of an amount billed, the amount paid shall first be allocated ratably among the transition charges relating to the transition bonds and other fees and charges (including transition charges and system restoration charges relating to other transition bonds and system restoration bonds, delivery charges and nuclear decommissioning charges) other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the payment shall be attributed to late fees owed to CenterPoint Houston or any successor.

Remittances to the Trustee. The servicer will collect and remit to the trustee, on a daily basis, transition charges plus any accrued interest thereon from the date such transition charges were actually received. The servicer will be required to pay transition charges to the trustee on or before the second business day after the servicer receives those transition charge collections.

Adjustment Process for Transition Charges

Annual True-Ups. Among other things, the servicing agreement will require the servicer to file adjustment requests annually and, if necessary, semi-annually (or quarterly in the fourteenth and fifteenth years) to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to provide timely payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds. For more information on the true-up process, please refer to “CenterPoint Houston’s Financing Order—Statutory True-Ups.” These adjustment requests will be based on actual collected transition charges and updated assumptions by the servicer as to projected future usage of electricity by retail electric customers, expected write-offs and future payments and expenses relating to the transition property and the transition bonds. The servicer agrees to calculate these adjustments to result in:

 

   

the transition bond balance equaling the projected transition bond balance and the aggregate reimbursement amount due and owing for the preceding calendar year to any retail electric provider,

 

   

the replenishment of any amounts drawn from the related capital subaccount,

 

   

amortization of the remaining outstanding principal amount in accordance with the expected amortization schedule and payment of interest when due,

 

   

the servicer’s reconciliation of past overpayments and underpayments by any retail electric provider of transition charges arising out of the retail electric provider’s right to hold back certain payments of transition charges in expectation of future write-offs from customers who do not pay their electric bills,

 

   

the servicer’s recovery of any interest paid to a retail electric provider arising out of a dispute between the servicer and such retail electric provider in which the servicer’s claim to the funds in dispute was not clearly unfounded, and

 

   

the payment of the fees and expenses of the servicer, the trustee, our independent manager(s) and the administrator and other fees, expenses, charges and costs authorized in the financing order.

 

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In addition to filing requests for adjustments to the transition charges, the servicer may be required in some years to file a request to adjust the allocation of the transition charges among the transition charge classes, according to the methodology set forth in the tariff established by the PUCT.

In the servicing agreement, the servicer will agree to file adjustment requests on each calculation date for us as specified in the servicing agreement. In accordance with the financing order, the PUCT generally has 15 days to approve the adjustments. Any adjustment to the allocation of transition charges must be filed with the PUCT at least 90 days before the date the proposed adjustment will become effective. The PUCT must enter a final order by the proposed adjustment date stated in the filing. The adjustments to the transition charges are expected to occur on each adjustment date. Adjustments to the transition charges will cease with respect to the transition bonds on the final adjustment date specified in the prospectus supplement.

Interim True-Ups. In addition to the annual adjustment process, the servicer will be required under the servicing agreement to seek an interim true-up adjustment with respect to the transition bonds once every six months, or quarterly in the fourteenth and fifteenth years:

 

   

if the servicer expects, at the next payment date, more than a 5% variation in absolute value between (a) the actual principal balance of the transition bonds, taking into account amounts on deposit in the excess funds subaccount, and (b) the outstanding principal balance anticipated on the expected amortization schedule,

 

   

as needed to meet any rating agency requirement that the transition bonds be paid in full at the scheduled final payment date, or

 

   

to correct any undercollection or overcollection of transition charges, regardless of cause, in order to assure timely payment of the transition bonds based on rating agency and transition bondholder considerations.

Reconciliation of Charge-Off Allowances. Under the financing order, retail electric providers will be entitled to withhold an allowance for charge-offs from their payments of the transition charges to the servicer. In connection with the annual adjustment process, the servicer and each retail electric provider will reconcile the retail electric provider’s hold-backs with the amount actually written off as uncollectible during that time. If the retail electric provider has held back less than the amount actually written off as uncollectible during that time, it will be entitled to a credit, in the amount of the hold-back shortfall, toward the retail electric provider’s future payments of the transition charges. If the retail electric provider has held back more than the amount actually written off as uncollectible during that time, the charge-off allowance will be adjusted so that the retail electric provider will pay the servicer the amount of such underpayment over the twelve months following the adjustment.

Collected Transition Charges. In the servicing agreement, the servicer will agree to remit all related collected transition charges from whatever source and all proceeds of our other collateral, if any, to the trustee for deposit pursuant to the indenture. Until the collected transition charges are remitted to the collection account, the servicer will not segregate them from its general funds. Remittances of related collected transition charges will include accrued interest thereon from the date such transition charges were actually received, and also include any penalties assessed against retail electric providers for delinquent remittances of the transition charges. Please read “Risk Factors—Risks Associated with Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or the Servicer” in this prospectus.

Servicer Compensation

The servicer will be entitled to receive an aggregate annual servicing fee for the transition bonds in an amount equal to:

 

   

0.05% of the aggregate initial principal amount of the transition bonds, for so long as the servicer remains CenterPoint Houston or any of its permitted successors or assigns or an affiliate, or

 

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an amount agreed upon by the successor servicer and the trustee, but, unless the PUCT consents, not more than 0.60% of the aggregate initial principal amount of the transition bonds if CenterPoint Houston, any permitted successor or assign or an affiliate is not the servicer.

The servicing fee will be paid semi-annually with respect to the transition bonds, with half of the annual servicing fee being paid on each semi-annual payment date. The servicing fee for the transition bonds, together with any portion of the servicing fee that remains unpaid from prior payment dates, will be paid solely to the extent funds are available therefor as described under “The Transition Bonds—How Funds in the Collection Account Will Be Allocated” in this prospectus. The servicing fee for the transition bonds will be paid prior to the payment of or provision for any amounts in respect of interest on and principal of the transition bonds. As long as CenterPoint Houston is the servicer, the PUCT may adjust CenterPoint Houston’s transmission and distribution rates to take into account the extent, if any, by which its servicing fees exceed its actual incremental costs in servicing the transition bonds.

CenterPoint Houston’s Representations and Warranties as Servicer

In the servicing agreement, the servicer will represent and warrant as of the date CenterPoint Houston sells or otherwise transfers the transition property to us to the effect, among other things, that:

 

   

the servicer is duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the state of its organization (which is Texas, when CenterPoint Houston is the servicer), with the limited liability company or corporate, as the case may be, power and authority to conduct its business as presently conducted and to execute, deliver and carry out the terms of the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement, and has the power, authority and legal right to service the transition property and to hold the transition property records as custodian,

 

   

the servicer is duly qualified to do business and is in good standing and has obtained all necessary licenses and approvals, in all jurisdictions in which it is required to do so (except where such failure would not be reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on its business, operations or properties or adversely affect the servicing of the transition property),

 

   

the servicer has the limited liability company power and authority to execute and deliver the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement, and the servicer’s execution, delivery and performance of the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement have been duly authorized by the servicer by all necessary limited liability company or corporate, as the case may be, action,

 

   

the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement both constitute legal, valid and binding obligations of the servicer, enforceable against the servicer in accordance with their terms, subject to customary exceptions relating to bankruptcy and equitable principles,

 

   

the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the servicing agreement and the intercreditor agreement (to the extent applicable to the servicer’s duties thereunder) and the fulfillment of the terms of each will not conflict with or result in any breach of the terms and provisions of nor constitute a default under the servicer’s limited liability company agreement or articles of incorporation or by-laws, as the case may be, or any material agreement to which the servicer is a party or by which it is bound or result in the creation or imposition of any lien upon the servicer’s properties (other than any lien that may be granted under the basic documents or any lien created pursuant to Section 39.309 of the Restructuring Act) or violate any law or any existing order, rule or regulation applicable to the servicer,

 

   

except for the issuance advice letter and filings with the PUCT for adjusting the amount and allocation of the transition charges and filings under the Uniform Commercial Code and under the Restructuring Act, no governmental approvals, authorizations, consents, orders or other actions or filings are required for the servicer to execute, deliver and perform its obligations under the servicing agreement, except those that have previously been obtained,

 

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except as disclosed in this prospectus or the prospectus supplement, there are no proceedings pending and, to the servicer’s knowledge, there are no proceedings threatened before any court, federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or other governmental instrumentality having jurisdiction over the servicer or its properties:

 

   

asserting the invalidity of the servicing agreement or any other basic document,

 

   

seeking any determination or ruling that might materially and adversely affect the transition property or the performance by the servicer of its obligations under, or the validity or enforceability against the servicer of, the servicing agreement,

 

   

relating to the servicer and that might materially and adversely affect the federal or state income, gross receipts or franchise tax attributes of the transition property or the transition bonds, or

 

   

seeking to prevent the issuance of the transition bonds or the consummation of any of the transactions contemplated by the servicing agreement or any other basic document, and

 

   

each report and certificate delivered in connection with any filing made with the PUCT by the servicer on our behalf with respect to transition charges or adjustments will be true and correct in all material respects except that the servicer represents and warrants with respect to any assumption, forecast or prediction in such report or certificate that it is reasonably based on historical performance.

The servicer is not responsible for any ruling, action or delay of the PUCT, except those caused by the servicer’s failure to file required applications in a timely and correct manner or other breach of its duties under the servicing agreement. The servicer also is not liable for the calculation of the transition charges and adjustments, including any inaccuracy in the assumptions made in the calculation, so long as the servicer has acted in good faith and has not acted in a negligent manner.

The Servicer Will Indemnify Us, Other Entities and the PUCT in Limited Circumstances

Under the servicing agreement, the servicer will agree to indemnify, defend and hold harmless us, the trustee, for itself and on behalf of the transition bondholders, and related parties specified in the servicing agreement, including our managers, against any costs, expenses, losses, damages and liabilities of any kind whatsoever that may be imposed upon, incurred by or asserted against any of those persons as a result of:

 

   

the servicer’s willful misconduct, bad faith or negligence in the performance of, or reckless disregard of, its duties or observance of its covenants under the servicing agreement or the intercreditor agreement,

 

   

the servicer’s breach of any of its representations or warranties under the servicing agreement or the intercreditor agreement, and

 

   

litigation and related expenses relating to its status and obligations as servicer (other than any proceedings the servicer is required to institute under the servicing agreement),

except to the extent that any such costs, expenses, losses, damages or liabilities resulted from the bad faith, willful misconduct or negligence of any such person or resulted from a breach of a representation or warranty made by any such person in any of the basic documents that gives rise to the servicer’s indemnification obligation.

In addition, the servicer will agree to indemnify, defend and hold harmless the PUCT (for the benefit of retail electric customers) us, the trustee, for itself and on behalf of the transition bondholders, and related parties specified in the servicing agreement, including our managers, in connection with any increase in servicing fees as described under “—Servicer Compensation” if that increase is the result of a servicer default arising out of the servicer’s willful misconduct, bad faith or negligence in performance of its duties or observance of its covenants under the servicing agreement. Any such indemnity payments made to the PUCT for the benefit of the retail electric consumers will be remitted to the trustee promptly for deposit in the collection account.

 

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In the servicing agreement, the servicer will release us, our managers and the trustee from any and all claims whatsoever relating to the transition property or the servicer’s servicing activities with respect thereto except to the extent of bad faith, willful misconduct or negligence.

The PUCT, acting through its authorized legal representative, may enforce the servicer’s obligations imposed pursuant to the financing order for the benefit of ratepayers to the extent permitted by law.

The Servicer Will Provide Statements to Us, the PUCT, the Rating Agencies and the Trustee

For each calculation date for the transition bonds, which will be either 15 or 90 days before each annual true-up filing is made by the servicer with the PUCT, the servicer will provide to us, the PUCT, the trustee and the rating agencies a statement indicating, with respect to the transition property, among other things:

 

   

the transition bond balance and the projected transition bond balance as of the immediately preceding payment date,

 

   

the amount on deposit in the capital subaccount and the amount required to be on deposit in the capital subaccount as of the immediately preceding payment date,

 

   

the amount on deposit in the excess funds subaccount as of the immediately preceding payment date,

 

   

the projected transition bond balance on the calculation date and the servicer’s projection of the transition bond balance on the payment date immediately preceding the next succeeding adjustment date,

 

   

the required capital subaccount balance and the servicer’s projection of the amount on deposit in the capital subaccount for the payment date immediately preceding the next succeeding adjustment date, and

 

   

the servicer’s projection of the amount on deposit in the excess funds subaccount for the payment date immediately preceding the next succeeding adjustment date.

The servicer will prepare and furnish to us, the PUCT and the trustee a statement setting forth the aggregate amount remitted or to be remitted by the servicer to the trustee on or before each such remittance. In addition, on or before each payment date, the servicer will prepare and furnish to us and the trustee a statement setting forth the transfers and payments to be made on that payment date and the amounts thereof. Further, on or before each payment date for the transition bonds, the servicer will prepare and furnish to us, the PUCT and the trustee a statement setting forth the amounts to be paid to the holders of the transition bonds. The trustee will forward to the transition bondholders on each payment date such report prepared by the servicer.

The Servicer Will Provide Compliance Reports Concerning the Servicing Agreement

The servicing agreement will provide that the servicer will furnish annually to us, the PUCT, the trustee and the rating agencies, on or before March 31 of each year, beginning March 31, 2013 or, if earlier, on the date on which CenterPoint Houston’s annual report on Form 10-K is required to be filed, a report on its assessment of compliance with specified servicing criteria as required by Item 1122(a) of Regulation AB of the SEC, during the preceding 12 months ended December 31 (or preceding period since the closing date of the issuance of the transition bonds in the case of the first statement), together with a certificate by an officer of the servicer certifying the statements set forth therein.

The servicing agreement will provide that a firm of independent certified public accountants will furnish to us, the PUCT, the trustee and the rating agencies, on or before March 31st of each year, beginning March 31, 2013, or, if earlier, on the date on which CenterPoint Houston’s annual report on Form 10-K is required to be filed, a statement as to compliance by the servicer during the preceding calendar year, or the relevant portion thereof, with procedures relating to the servicing of transition property. This report, which is referred to in this

 

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prospectus as the “annual accountant’s report,” will state that the firm has performed a review of the servicer’s compliance with the servicing obligations of the servicing agreement, identify the results of this review and include any exceptions to the procedures relating to the servicing of the transition property noted. The annual accountant’s report will also indicate that the accounting firm providing the report is independent of the servicer within the meaning of the Code of Professional Ethics of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and of the Rules of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. The servicing agreement also will provide for delivery to us, the PUCT and the trustee, on or before March 31 of each year, beginning March 31, 2013, a certificate signed by an officer of the servicer. This certificate will state that to the best of such officer’s knowledge, the servicer has fulfilled its obligations under the servicing agreement for the preceding calendar year, or the relevant portion thereof, or, if there has been a default in the fulfillment of any relevant obligation, stating that there has been a default and describing each default. The servicer has agreed to give us, each rating agency and the trustee written notice of any servicer default under the servicing agreement.

Matters Regarding CenterPoint Houston as the Servicer

Under the servicing agreement, any person:

 

   

into which the servicer may be merged, converted or consolidated and which succeeds to all or substantially all of the electric transmission and distribution business of the servicer (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, which provides distribution services directly to a majority of the customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory),

 

   

which results from the division of the servicer into two or more persons and which succeeds to all or substantially all of the electric transmission and distribution business of the servicer (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, which provides distribution services directly to a majority of the customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory),

 

   

which may result from any merger, conversion or consolidation to which the servicer shall be a party and which succeeds to all or substantially all of the electric transmission and distribution business of the servicer (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, which provides distribution services directly to a majority of the customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory),

 

   

which may purchase or otherwise succeed to the properties and assets of the servicer substantially as a whole and which purchases or succeeds to all or substantially all of the electric transmission and distribution business of the servicer (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, which provides distribution services directly to a majority of the customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory), or

 

   

which may otherwise purchase or succeed to the major part of the electric transmission and distribution business of the servicer (or, if the transmission and distribution business is split, which provides distribution services directly to a majority of the customers in CenterPoint Houston’s service territory),

will be the successor of the servicer under the servicing agreement.

The servicing agreement will further require that:

 

   

immediately after giving effect to any transaction referred to above, the representations and warranties made by the servicer in the servicing agreement will be true and correct and no servicer default, and no event which, after notice or lapse of time, or both, would become a servicer default, will have occurred and be continuing,

 

   

the successor to the servicer must execute an agreement of assumption to perform every obligation of the servicer under the servicing agreement,

 

   

officers’ certificates and opinions of counsel will have been delivered to us, the PUCT and the trustee, and

 

   

prior written notice will have been received by the PUCT and rating agencies.

 

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So long as the conditions of any such assumptions are met, then the prior servicer will automatically be released from its obligations under the servicing agreement. The servicing agreement will permit the servicer, with written notice to the trustee and the PUCT, to appoint any person to perform any or all of its obligations including a collection agent acting pursuant to any intercreditor agreement, provided the appointment must satisfy the rating agency condition. In all cases where an agent is appointed, the servicer will remain obligated and liable under the servicing agreement.

The servicing agreement will provide that, subject to the foregoing provisions, CenterPoint Houston may not resign from the obligations and duties imposed on it as servicer unless CenterPoint Houston delivers an opinion of independent legal counsel that the performance of its duties under the servicing agreement shall no longer be permissible under applicable law. Written notice of any such determination will be communicated to us, the trustee, the PUCT and each rating agency at the earliest practicable time and shall be evidenced by an opinion of counsel. A resignation by CenterPoint Houston as servicer will not become effective until a successor servicer has assumed the servicing obligations and duties of CenterPoint Houston under the servicing agreement.

Except as expressly provided in the servicing agreement, the servicer will not be liable to us, our managers, the trustee, you or any other person for any action taken or for refraining from taking any action pursuant to the servicing agreement or for errors in judgment. However, the servicer will be liable to the extent this liability is imposed by reason of the servicer’s willful misconduct, bad faith or negligence in the performance of its duties. The servicer and any of its directors, officers, employees or agents may rely in good faith on the advice of counsel reasonably acceptable to the trustee or on any document submitted by any person respecting any matters under the servicing agreement. In addition, the servicing agreement will provide that the servicer is under no obligation to appear in, prosecute, or defend any legal action, except as provided in the servicing agreement.

Events Constituting a Default by the Servicer

Servicer defaults under the servicing agreement will include, among other things:

 

   

any failure by the servicer to remit to the trustee, on our behalf, any required remittance by the date that such remittance must be made and that continues unremedied for a period of five business days,

 

   

any failure by the servicer to duly perform its obligations to make transition charge adjustment filings in the time and manner set forth in the servicing agreement, which failure continues unremedied for a period of five days,

 

   

any failure by the servicer duly to observe or perform, in any material respect, any other covenant or agreement in the servicing agreement or any other basic document to which it is a party, which failure materially and adversely affects the transition property or the timely collection of the transition charges or the rights of the trustee or the transition bondholders and which continues unremedied for 60 days after written notice of this failure has been given to the servicer by us, the PUCT or the trustee or after discovery of this failure by an officer of the servicer, as the case may be,

 

   

any representation or warranty made by the servicer in the servicing agreement proves to have been incorrect when made, which has a material adverse effect on any of the transition property or our ownership therein, the transition bondholders or their investment in the transition bonds, the security interest of the trustee, the PUCT or us and which continues unremedied for 60 days after written notice of this failure has been given to the servicer by us or the trustee or after discovery of this failure by an officer of the servicer, as the case may be, or

 

   

an event of bankruptcy, insolvency, readjustment of debt, marshaling of assets and liabilities or similar proceedings with respect to the servicer or an action by the servicer indicating its insolvency, reorganization pursuant to bankruptcy proceedings or inability to pay its obligations as specified in the servicing agreement.

 

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The Trustee’s Rights if the Servicer Defaults

As long as a servicer default under the servicing agreement remains unremedied, the trustee may, and upon the instruction of the holders of a majority of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds, must, except as described below under “—Intercreditor Agreement,” by written notice to the servicer, terminate all the rights and obligations of the servicer under the servicing agreement. However, the servicer’s indemnification obligation and obligation to continue performing its functions as servicer may not be terminated until a successor servicer is appointed. Under the servicing agreement, the servicer’s indemnity obligations will survive its replacement as servicer. In the event of the removal or resignation of the servicer, the trustee in compliance with the intercreditor agreement may, and upon the written instruction of the holders of a majority of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds, must, appoint a successor servicer which will succeed to all the rights and duties of the servicer under the servicing agreement. In no event will the trustee be liable for its appointment of a successor servicer made with due care. The trustee may make arrangements for compensation to be paid to any successor servicer consistent with the terms of the financing order but shall in no event be responsible in its individual capacity for payment of the servicing fee.

In addition, when a servicer defaults, the transition bondholders (subject to the provisions of the indenture) and the trustee as beneficiary of any statutory lien permitted by the Restructuring Act will be entitled to (i) apply to a Travis County, Texas district court for sequestration and payment of revenues arising from the transition property, (ii) foreclose on or otherwise enforce the lien on and security interests in, any transition property and (iii) apply to the PUCT for an order that amounts arising from the transition charges be transferred to a separate account for the benefit of the transition bondholders. Upon a servicer default based upon the commencement of a case by or against the servicer under the bankruptcy or insolvency laws, the trustee may be prevented from effecting a transfer of servicing. Please read the “Risk Factors—Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings of the Seller or Servicer” and “How a Bankruptcy May Affect Your Investment” in this prospectus. The trustee may appoint, or petition a court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of, a successor servicer which satisfies criteria specified by the rating agencies rating the transition bonds.

Waiver of Past Defaults

The trustee, with the written consent of the holders of transition bonds evidencing not less than a majority in principal amount of the then outstanding transition bonds, on behalf of all bondholders, may waive in writing in whole or in part any default by the servicer in the performance of its obligations under the servicing agreement and its consequences, except a default in making any required remittances to the collection account under the servicing agreement. The servicing agreement will provide that no waiver will impair the transition bondholders’ rights relating to subsequent defaults.

The Obligations of a Successor Servicer

Pursuant to the provisions of the servicing agreement, if for any reason a third party assumes or succeeds to the role of the servicer under the servicing agreement, the existing servicer must cooperate with us, the trustee and the successor servicer in terminating the existing servicer’s rights and responsibilities under the servicing agreement. This procedure includes the transfer to the successor servicer of all documentation pertaining to the transition property and all cash amounts then held by the servicer for remittance or subsequently acquired by the servicer. The servicing agreement will provide that the servicer will be liable for all reasonable costs and expenses incurred in transferring servicing responsibilities to the successor servicer in the event the successor servicer is appointed as a result of a servicer default provided that to the extent not reimbursed by the servicer, such costs and expenses will be paid from the indenture trust estate. In all other cases, those costs and expenses will be paid by the party incurring them. A successor servicer may not resign unless it is prohibited from serving by law. The predecessor servicer is obligated, on an ongoing basis, to cooperate with the successor servicer and provide whatever information is, and take whatever actions are, reasonably necessary to assist the successor servicer in performing its obligations under the servicing agreement.

 

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Amendment

The servicing agreement may be amended by the parties thereto, if the rating agency condition has been satisfied, with the consent of the trustee and, with respect to amendments that would increase ongoing qualified costs as defined in the financing order, the consent or deemed consent of the PUCT. The servicing agreement will provide that to the extent that the PUCT adopts rules or regulations permitted by the financing order or the Restructuring Act the effect of which is to modify or supplement any provision of the servicing agreement related to retail electric provider standards, the servicing agreement will be deemed to have been so modified or supplemented on the effective date of such rule or regulation without the necessity of any further action by any party to the servicing agreement. The servicer will notify us, the rating agencies and the trustee of any such PUCT rules or regulations and the corresponding modification of or supplement to the servicing agreement promptly upon obtaining knowledge thereof.

Intercreditor Agreement

In connection with the issuance of the transition bonds, we will enter into an intercreditor agreement with CenterPoint Houston (on behalf of itself and in its capacities as (i) servicer of the transition bonds and as servicer of the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company and (ii) the collection agent with respect to nuclear decommissioning charges), the trustee of the transition bonds, Transition Bond Company I and the trustee under the indenture relating to the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II and the trustee under the indenture relating to the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and the trustee under the indenture relating to the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company III, and Restoration Bond Company and the trustee under the indenture relating to the system restoration bonds issued by Restoration Bond Company, pursuant to which:

 

   

the servicer that allocates and remits funds received from retail electric providers for the transition bonds and for the transition bonds and system restoration bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company and places such funds into deposit accounts (such allocation, remittance and deposits hereafter referred to as the “allocation services”) must be the same entity under the servicing agreement and the servicing agreements relating to the transition bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company, and

 

   

the trustee of the transition bonds, acting upon the vote of transition bondholders representing a majority of the outstanding principal amount of the transition bonds, and the trustees of the transition bonds and system restoration bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company must agree upon a replacement servicer that performs the allocation services.

In the event of a default by the servicer under any servicing agreement relating to the transition bonds or the transition bonds or system restoration bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company if the trustees are unable to agree on a replacement servicer, no trustee would be able to replace CenterPoint Houston or any successor as servicer. Instead, under the intercreditor agreement, any trustee could upon such a default require all collections by the servicers to be deposited directly into a designated account with a financial institution selected by the trustees, subject to satisfaction of the rating agency condition. The financial institution holding the designated account would then be responsible for allocating the collections in the account between transition charges or system restoration charges, as the case may be relating to the transition bonds and the transition bonds and system restoration bonds issued by Transition Bond Company I, Transition Bond Company II, Transition Bond Company III and Restoration Bond Company.

 

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HOW A BANKRUPTCY MAY AFFECT YOUR INVESTMENT

Challenge to True Sale Treatment. CenterPoint Houston will represent and warrant that the transfer of the transition property in accordance with the sale agreement constitutes a true and valid sale and assignment of the transition property by CenterPoint Houston to us. It will be a condition of closing for the sale of transition property pursuant to the sale agreement that CenterPoint Houston will take the appropriate actions under the Restructuring Act, including filing a notice of transfer of an interest in the transition property, to perfect this sale. The Restructuring Act provides that a transfer of transition property by an electric utility to an assignee which the parties have in the governing documentation expressly stated to be a sale or other absolute transfer, in a transaction approved in a financing order, shall be treated as an absolute transfer of all the transferor’s right, title and interest, as in a “true sale” under applicable creditors’ rights principles, and not as a pledge or other financing, of the relevant transition property. We and CenterPoint Houston will treat such a transaction as a sale under applicable law. However, we expect that transition bonds will be reflected as debt on CenterPoint Energy’s consolidated financial statements. In addition, we anticipate that the transition bonds will be treated as debt of CenterPoint Energy for federal income tax purposes. Please read “The Restructuring Act—Recovery of Qualified Costs for CenterPoint Houston and Other Texas Utilities” and “Material U.S. Federal Tax Consequences for the Transition Bondholders.” In the event of a bankruptcy of a party to a sale agreement, if a party in interest in the bankruptcy were to take the position that the transfer of the transition property to us pursuant to that sale agreement was a financing transaction and not a true sale under applicable creditors’ rights principles, there can be no assurance that a court would not adopt this position. Even if a court did not ultimately recharacterize the transaction as a financing transaction, the mere commencement of a bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston and the attendant possible uncertainty surrounding the treatment of the transaction could result in delays in payments on the transition bonds.

In that regard, we note that the bankruptcy court in In re: LTV Steel Company, Inc., et al., 274 B.R. 278 (Bankr. N. D. Oh. 2001) issued an interim order that observed that a debtor, LTV Steel Company, which had previously entered into securitization arrangements with respect both to its inventory and its accounts receivable may have “at least some equitable interest in the inventory and receivables, and that this interest is property of the Debtor’s estate… sufficient to support the entry of” an interim order permitting the debtor to use proceeds of the property sold in the securitization. 274 B.R. at 285. The court based its decision in large part on its view of the equities of the case.

LTV and the securitization investors subsequently settled their dispute over the terms of the interim order and the bankruptcy court entered a final order in which the parties admitted and the court found that the pre-petition transactions constituted “true sales.” The court did not otherwise overrule its earlier ruling. The LTV memorandum opinion serves as an example of the pervasive equity powers of bankruptcy courts and the importance that such courts may ascribe to the goal of reorganization, particularly where the assets sold are integral to the ongoing operation of the debtor’s business.

We and CenterPoint Houston have attempted to mitigate the impact of a possible recharacterization of a sale of transition property as a financing transaction under applicable creditors’ rights and principles. The sale agreement will provide that if the transfer of the transition property is thereafter recharacterized by a court as a financing transaction and not a true sale, the transfer by CenterPoint Houston will be deemed to have granted to us on behalf of ourselves and the trustee a first priority security interest in all CenterPoint Houston’s right, title and interest in and to the transition property and all proceeds thereof. In addition, the sale agreement will require the filing of a notice of security interest in the transition property and the proceeds thereof in accordance with the Restructuring Act. As a result of this filing, we would be a secured creditor of CenterPoint Houston and entitled to recover against the collateral or its value. This does not, however, eliminate the risk of payment delays or reductions and other adverse effects caused by a CenterPoint Houston bankruptcy. Further, if, for any reason, a transition property notice is not filed under the Restructuring Act or we fail to otherwise perfect our interest in the transition property, and the transfer is thereafter deemed not to constitute a true sale, we would be an unsecured creditor of CenterPoint Houston.

 

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The Restructuring Act provides that the creation, granting, perfection and enforcement of liens and security interests in transition property are governed by the Restructuring Act and not by the Texas Business & Commerce Code. Under the Restructuring Act, a valid and enforceable lien and security interest in transition property may be created only by a financing order issued under the Restructuring Act and the execution and delivery of a security agreement with a holder of transition bonds or a trustee or agent for the holder. The lien and security interest attaches automatically from the time value is received for the transition bonds. Upon perfection through the filing of notice with the Secretary of State of Texas pursuant to rules established by the Secretary of State of Texas, the security interest shall be a continuously perfected lien and security interest in the transition property, with priority in the order of filing and take precedence over any subsequent judicial or other lien creditor. If this notice is filed within ten days after value is received for the transition bonds, the security interest will be perfected retroactive to the date value was received, otherwise, the security interest will be perfected as of the date of filing.

None of this, however, mitigates the risk of payment delays and other adverse effects caused by a CenterPoint Houston bankruptcy. Further, if, for any reason, a transition property notice is not filed under the Restructuring Act or we fail to otherwise perfect our interest in the transition property sold pursuant to the sale agreement, and the transfer is thereafter deemed not to constitute a true sale, we would be an unsecured creditor of CenterPoint Houston.

Consolidation of the Issuing Entity and CenterPoint Houston. If CenterPoint Houston were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, a party in interest might attempt to substantively consolidate the assets and liabilities of CenterPoint Houston and us. We and CenterPoint Houston have taken steps to attempt to minimize this risk. Please read “CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, The Issuing Entity” in this prospectus. However, no assurance can be given that if CenterPoint Houston were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, a court would not order that our assets and liabilities be substantively consolidated with those of CenterPoint Houston. Substantive consolidation would result in payment of the claims of the beneficial owners of the transition bonds to be subject to substantial delay and to adjustment in timing and amount under a plan of reorganization in the bankruptcy case.

Status of Transition Property as Current Property. CenterPoint Houston will represent in the sale agreement, and the Restructuring Act provides, that the transition property sold pursuant to the sale agreement constitutes a current property right on the date that it is first transferred or pledged in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds. Nevertheless, no assurance can be given that, in the event of a bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston, a court would not rule that the transition property comes into existence only as retail electric customers use electricity.

If a court were to accept the argument that the transition property comes into existence only as retail electric customers use electricity, no assurance can be given that a security interest in favor of the transition bondholders would attach to the transition charges in respect of electricity consumed after the commencement of the bankruptcy case or that the transition property has been sold to us. If it were determined that the transition property had not been sold to us, and the security interest in favor of the transition bondholders did not attach to the applicable transition charges in respect of electricity consumed after the commencement of the bankruptcy case, then we would have an unsecured claim against CenterPoint Houston. If so, there would be delays and/or reductions in payments on the transition bonds. Whether or not a court determined that transition property had been sold to us pursuant to a sale agreement, no assurances can be given that a court would not rule that any transition charges relating to electricity consumed after the commencement of the bankruptcy could not be transferred to us or the trustee.

In addition, in the event of a bankruptcy of CenterPoint Houston, a party in interest in the bankruptcy could assert that we should pay, or that we should be charged for, a portion of CenterPoint Houston’s costs associated with the transmission or distribution of the electricity, consumption of which gave rise to the transition charge receipts used to make payments on the transition bonds.

 

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Regardless of whether CenterPoint Houston is the debtor in a bankruptcy case, if a court were to accept the argument that transition property sold pursuant to the sale agreement comes into existence only as customers use electricity, a tax or government lien or other nonconsensual lien on property of CenterPoint Houston arising before that transition property came into existence could have priority over our interest in that transition property. Adjustments to the transition charges may be available to mitigate this exposure, although there may be delays in implementing these adjustments.

Estimation of Claims; Challenges to Indemnity Claims. If CenterPoint Houston were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, claims, including indemnity claims, by us or the trustee against CenterPoint Houston as seller under the sale agreement and the other documents executed in connection therewith would be unsecured claims and would be subject to being discharged in the bankruptcy case. In addition, a party in interest in the bankruptcy may request that the bankruptcy court estimate any contingent claims that we or the trustee have against CenterPoint Houston. That party may then take the position that these claims should be estimated at zero or at a low amount because the contingency giving rise to these claims is unlikely to occur. If a court were to hold that the indemnity provisions were unenforceable, we would be left with a claim for actual damages against CenterPoint Houston based on breach of contract principles. The actual amount of these damages would be subject to estimation and/or calculation by the court.

No assurances can be given as to the result of any of the above-described actions or claims. Furthermore, no assurance can be given as to what percentage of their claims, if any, unsecured creditors would receive in any bankruptcy proceeding involving CenterPoint Houston.

Enforcement of Rights by the Trustee. Upon an event of default under the indenture, the Restructuring Act permits the trustee to enforce the security interest in the transition property sold pursuant to the sale agreement in accordance with the terms of the indenture. In this capacity, the trustee is permitted to request the PUCT or a Travis County, Texas district court to order the sequestration and payment to holders of transition bonds of all revenues arising from the applicable transition charges. There can be no assurance, however, that the PUCT or a district court judge would issue this order after a seller bankruptcy in light of the automatic stay provisions of Section 362 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. In that event, the trustee may under the indenture seek an order from the bankruptcy court lifting the automatic stay with respect to this action by the PUCT or a district court judge and an order requiring an accounting and segregation of the revenues arising from the transition property sold pursuant to the sale agreement. There can be no assurance that a court would grant either order.

Bankruptcy of the Servicer. The servicer is entitled to commingle the transition charges that it receives with its own funds until each date on which the servicer is required to remit funds to the trustee as specified in the servicing agreement. The Restructuring Act provides that the relative priority of a lien created under the Restructuring Act is not defeated or adversely affected by the commingling of transition charges arising with respect to the transition property with funds of the electric utility. In the event of a bankruptcy of the servicer, a party in interest in the bankruptcy might assert, and a court might rule, that the transition charges commingled by the servicer with its own funds and held by the servicer, prior to and as of the date of bankruptcy were property of the servicer as of that date, and are therefore property of the servicer’s bankruptcy estate, rather than our property. If the court so rules, then the court would likely rule that the trustee has only a general unsecured claim against the servicer for the amount of commingled transition charges held as of that date and could not recover the commingled transition charges held as of the date of the bankruptcy.

However the court rules on the ownership of the commingled transition charges, the automatic stay arising upon the bankruptcy of the servicer could delay the trustee from receiving the commingled transition charges held by the servicer as of the date of the bankruptcy until the court grants relief from the stay. A court ruling on any request for relief from the stay could be delayed pending the court’s resolution of whether the commingled transition charges are our property or are property of the servicer, including resolution of any tracing of proceeds issues.

 

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The servicing agreement will provide that the trustee, as our assignee, together with the other persons specified therein, may vote to appoint a successor servicer that satisfies the rating agency condition. The servicing agreement will also provide that the trustee, together with the other persons specified therein, may petition the PUCT or a court of competent jurisdiction to appoint a successor servicer that meets this criterion. However, the automatic stay in effect during a servicer bankruptcy might delay or prevent a successor servicer’s replacement of the servicer. Even if a successor servicer may be appointed and may replace the servicer, a successor may be difficult to obtain and may not be capable of performing all of the duties that CenterPoint Houston as servicer was capable of performing. Furthermore, should the servicer enter into bankruptcy, it may be permitted to stop acting as servicer.

Bankruptcy of a Retail Electric Provider. A retail electric provider is not required to segregate the transition charges it collects from its general funds. The Restructuring Act provides that our rights to the transition property are not affected by the commingling of these funds with other funds. In a bankruptcy of a retail electric provider, however, a bankruptcy court might rule that federal bankruptcy law takes precedence over the Restructuring Act and does not recognize our right to receive the collected transition charges that are commingled with other funds of a retail electric provider prior to or as of the date of bankruptcy, including transition charges associated with other series of transition bonds. If so, the collected transition charges held by a retail electric provider as of the date of bankruptcy would not be available to us to pay amounts owing on the transition bonds. In this case, we would have only a general unsecured claim against that retail electric provider for those amounts.

In addition, the bankruptcy of a retail electric provider may cause a delay in or prohibition of enforcement of various rights against the retail electric provider, including rights to require payments by the retail electric provider, rights to retain preferential payments made by the retail electric provider prior to bankruptcy, rights to require the retail electric provider to comply with financial provisions of the Restructuring Act or other state laws, rights to terminate contracts with the retail electric provider and rights that are conditioned on the bankruptcy, insolvency or financial condition of the retail electric provider.

Other risks relating to bankruptcy may be found in “Risk Factors—The Risks Associated With Potential Bankruptcy Proceedings or Defaults of Retail Electric Providers.”

 

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MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES FOR THE TRANSITION BONDHOLDERS

General

The following is a summary of the material federal income and, in the case of non-U.S. holders (as defined below), estate tax consequences to transition bondholders of the purchase, ownership and disposition of transition bonds and is based on the opinion of Baker Botts L.L.P., special federal tax counsel to us and to CenterPoint Houston, referred to in this prospectus as special tax counsel. Special tax counsel is of the opinion that the description of material federal income and estate tax consequences in this summary is accurate in all material respects. The opinion of special tax counsel is based on some assumptions and is limited by some qualifications stated in this discussion or in the opinion. This discussion is based on current provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, currently applicable Treasury Regulations and judicial and administrative rulings and decisions. Legislative, judicial or administrative changes could alter or modify the statements and conclusions in this discussion. Any legislative, judicial or administrative changes or new interpretations may be retroactive and could affect tax consequences to transition bondholders.

This discussion only applies to transition bondholders who acquire transition bonds at original issue for a price equal to the issue price of those bonds and hold the transition bonds as capital assets. The issue price of the transition bonds is the first price at which a substantial amount of the transition bonds is sold other than to bond houses, brokers or similar persons or organizations acting in the capacity of underwriters, placement agents or wholesalers. This discussion does not address all of the tax consequences relevant to a particular transition bondholder in light of that holder’s circumstances, and some transition bondholders may be subject to special tax rules and limitations not discussed below (e.g., life insurance companies, tax-exempt organizations, financial institutions, dealers in securities, persons that have a “functional currency” other than the U.S. dollar, S corporations, taxpayers subject to the alternative minimum tax provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, broker-dealers and persons who hold the transition bonds as part of a hedge, straddle, “synthetic security” or other integrated investment, risk reduction or constructive sale transaction). Except as described below, this discussion also does not address the tax consequences to nonresident aliens, foreign corporations, foreign partnerships or foreign trusts that are subject to U.S. federal income tax on a net basis on income with respect to the transition bonds because that income is effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business. In addition, except as described below, this discussion does not address any tax consequences under state, local or foreign tax laws. Consequently, you are urged to consult your tax adviser to determine the federal, state, local and foreign income and any other tax consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the transition bonds.

Income Tax Status of the Transition Bonds and the Issuing Entity

Based upon guidance from the IRS and certain representations from us, including a representation by us that we will not make, or allow there to be made, any election to the contrary, special tax counsel has rendered its opinion that for United States federal income tax purposes we will not be considered an entity separate from CenterPoint Energy and the transition bonds will be treated as debt of CenterPoint Energy. By acquiring a transition bond, a transition bondholder agrees to treat the transition bond as debt of CenterPoint Energy for United States federal, state and local income and franchise tax purposes for so long as we are not treated as a taxable entity separate from CenterPoint Energy for federal income tax purposes.

CenterPoint Energy expects to receive prior to the issuance of the transition bonds, a ruling from the Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas to the effect that (i) our receipt of the transition property, (ii) our receipt of the transition charges, and (iii) our earnings on eligible investments of the transition charges and the amounts held in the excess funds subaccount and the collection account will not be subject to Texas franchise tax.

 

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Taxation of Transition Bondholders

Based on the assumptions and subject to the qualifications stated herein, it is the opinion of special tax counsel that the material federal income tax consequences to transition bondholders are as follows:

Definition of U.S. Holder and Non-U.S. Holder

For purposes of the discussion below, a U.S. holder is a beneficial owner of a transition bond that is:

 

   

an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States for U.S. federal income tax purposes,

 

   

a corporation, including an entity treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, created or organized in or under the laws of the United States, or any state, including the District of Columbia, or any political subdivision thereof,

 

   

an estate, the net income of which is subject to United States federal income taxation regardless of its source, or

 

   

a trust, if a court within the United States is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of such trust and one or more United States persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of such trust or if the trust has a valid election in effect under applicable Treasury Regulations to be treated as a United States person.

A non-U.S. holder means a beneficial owner of a transition bond that is not (i) a U.S. holder, (ii) an entity or arrangement treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes, (iii) a former citizen of the United States or (iv) a former resident of the United States. If a partnership (or other entity classified as a partnership for United States federal income tax purposes) is a beneficial owner of transition bonds, the treatment of a partner in the partnership will generally depend upon the status of the partner and upon the activities of the partnership. A holder of transition bonds that is a partnership or partners in such partnership are urged to consult their own tax advisors regarding the U.S. federal income tax consequences of purchasing, owning and disposing of the transition bonds. Similarly, former citizens and former residents of the United States are encouraged to consult their tax advisors about the particular U.S. federal income tax consequences that may be applicable to them.

Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders

Payments of Interest. Interest on the transition bonds will be taxable as ordinary interest income when received or accrued by U.S. holders under their method of accounting. Generally, interest on the transition bonds will constitute “investment income” for purposes of Internal Revenue Code limitations on the deductibility of investment interest expense.

Original Issue Discount. This discussion assumes that the transition bonds will not be considered to be issued with original issue discount (“OID”). OID is generally defined as any excess of the stated redemption price at maturity over the issue price which is greater than a de minimis amount (an amount less than 0.25% of a bond’s stated redemption price at maturity multiplied by the weighted average number of years to maturity), all within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Code and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder (the “OID Regulations”). If the transition bonds are issued with OID, U.S. holders generally will be subject to the special tax accounting rules for OID obligations provided under the OID Regulations. U.S. holders of transition bonds issued with OID should be aware that they generally must include OID in income for United States federal income tax purposes as it accrues economically, in advance of the receipt of cash attributable to that income. If any transition bonds are issued with OID, prospective holders will be so informed in the prospectus supplement.

Payments of Principal Prior to Maturity. If the transition bonds are issued with a de minimis amount of OID for U.S. federal income tax purposes, generally, a pro rata portion of such de minimis OID must be included in income by a holder as principal payments are received with respect to the transition bonds. More specifically, when a holder receives a principal payment on a transition bond prior to its maturity, such holder generally must include in income as capital gain the product of (i) the total amount of de minimis OID on the transition bond as of the issue date and (ii) a fraction, the numerator of which is the amount of such principal payment and the

 

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denominator of which is the stated principal amount of the transition bond. Capital gains of non-corporate U.S. holders, including individuals, derived with respect to capital assets held for more than one year are generally eligible for reduced rates of taxation. The deductibility of capital losses is subject to limitations.

Sale or Other Taxable Disposition of the Transition Bonds. If there is a sale, exchange, redemption, retirement or other taxable disposition of a transition bond, a U.S. holder generally will recognize gain or loss equal to the difference between (a) the amount of cash and the fair market value of any other property received (other than amounts attributable to, and taxable as, accrued stated interest) and (b) the holder’s adjusted tax basis in the transition bond. The adjusted tax basis in the transition bond generally will equal its cost, increased by any de minimis OID previously included in income by the holder with respect to the transition bond (as discussed above), and reduced by any payments reflecting principal previously received with respect to the bond. Gain or loss generally will be capital gain or loss if the transition bond was held as a capital asset. If a U.S. holder sells a transition bond between interest payment dates, a portion of the amount received will reflect interest that has accrued on the transition bond but that has not yet been paid by the sale date. To the extent that amount has not already been included in the U.S. holder’s income, it will be treated as ordinary interest income and not capital gain.

Backup Withholding. Payments made on and proceeds from the sale of a transition bond may be subject to backup withholding unless a U.S. holder complies with certain identification requirements. Any amounts withheld from a payment to a U.S. holder will be allowed as a credit against such U.S. holder’s federal income tax liability, provided that the required information is timely furnished to the IRS.

New Legislation Regarding Medicare Tax. For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2012, a U.S. holder that is an individual or estate, or a trust that does not fall into a special class of trusts that is exempt from such tax, will be subject to a 3.8% tax on the lesser of (1) the U.S. holder’s “net investment income” (in the case of individuals) or “undistributed net investment income” (in the case of estates and trusts) for the relevant taxable year and (2) the excess of the U.S. holder’s “modified adjusted gross income” (in the case of individuals) or “adjusted gross income” (in the case of estates and trusts) for the taxable year over a certain threshold (which in the case of individuals will be between $125,000 and $250,000, depending on the individual’s circumstances). A U.S. holder’s net investment income generally will include its interest income on the transition bonds and its net gains from the disposition of the transition bonds, unless such interest income or net gains are derived in the ordinary course of the conduct of a trade or business (other than a trade or business that consists of certain passive or trading activities). Holders that are individuals, estates or trusts, are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the applicability of the Medicare tax to their income and gains in respect of an investment in the transition bonds.

Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders

Withholding. Under present United States federal income tax law, and subject to the discussion below concerning backup withholding, payments of principal and interest on a transition bond by us or any paying agent to any non-U.S. holder, and gain realized on the sale or exchange of a transition bond by a non-U.S. holder, will be exempt from United States federal income or withholding tax, provided that:

 

   

such non-U.S. holder does not own, actually or constructively, 10% or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of voting stock of CenterPoint Energy, is not a controlled foreign corporation related, directly or indirectly, to CenterPoint Energy, through stock ownership and is not a bank receiving interest pursuant to a loan agreement entered into in the ordinary course of its trade or business,

 

   

the statement requirement described below has been fulfilled with respect to the beneficial owner,

 

   

such non-U.S. holder is not an individual who is present in the United States for 183 days or more in the taxable year of disposition, or such individual does not have a “tax home” (as defined in the Internal Revenue Code) or an office or other fixed place of business in the United States and such holder is not subject to the rules under the Internal Revenue Code applicable to expatriates, and

 

   

such payments and gain are not effectively connected with the conduct by such non-U.S. holder of a trade or business in the United States (and, if a U.S. income tax treaty applies, are not attributable to a U.S. “permanent establishment” maintained by such non-U.S. holder).

 

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The statement requirement referred to in the preceding paragraph will be fulfilled if the beneficial owner of a transition bond certifies on an appropriate form (generally IRS Form W-8BEN), under penalties of perjury, that it is not a United States person and provides its name and address, and (a) the beneficial owner delivers that form to the withholding agent or (b) a securities clearing organization, bank or other financial institution holding customers’ securities in the ordinary course of its trade or business holds the transition bond on behalf of the beneficial owner, files with the withholding agent a statement that it has received that form from the beneficial owner and furnishes the withholding agent with a copy thereof. Prospective investors should consult their tax advisers regarding possible additional reporting requirements.

If a non-U.S. holder of a transition bond is engaged in a trade or business in the United States, and if interest on the transition bond is effectively connected with the conduct of such trade or business (and, if a U.S. income tax treaty applies, is attributable to a U.S. “permanent establishment” maintained by such non-U.S. holder), the non-U.S. holder, although exempt from the withholding tax discussed in the preceding paragraphs, will generally be subject to regular United States federal income tax on interest and on any gain realized on the sale or exchange of the transition bond in the same manner as if it were a U.S. holder. In lieu of the certificate described in the preceding paragraph, such a non-U.S. holder will be required to provide to the withholding agent an appropriate form (generally IRS Form W-8ECI), executed under penalties of perjury, in order to claim an exemption from withholding tax. In addition, if such a non-U.S. holder is a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, it may be subject to a branch profits tax equal to 30% (or such lower rate provided by an applicable treaty) of its effectively connected earnings and profits for the taxable year, subject to certain adjustments.

Estate Tax. A transition bond held by an individual who is not a citizen or resident of the United States (as determined for U.S. federal estate tax purposes) at the time of his death will not be subject to United States federal estate tax as a result of such individual’s death, provided that at the time of death:

 

   

the individual did not own, actually or constructively, 10% or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of CenterPoint Energy’s voting stock, and

 

   

payments with respect to a transition bond would not have been effectively connected with the conduct by such individual of a trade or business in the United States.

Backup Withholding and Information Reporting. Payments on a transition bond may be subject to information reporting. Backup withholding will not apply to payments made on or proceeds from the sale of a transition bond if the statement requirement described above is met, provided in each case that the payor does not have actual knowledge or reason to know that the payee is a United States person. Any amounts withheld from a payment to a non-U.S. holder under the backup withholding rules will be allowed as a credit against such non-U.S. holder’s United States federal income tax liability and may entitle such non-U.S. holder to a refund, provided that the required information is timely furnished to the IRS. In any event, we generally will be required to file information returns with the IRS reporting payments of interest on the transition bonds. Non-U.S. holders of a transition bond should consult their tax advisers regarding the application of information reporting and backup withholding in their particular situations, the availability of an exemption therefrom and the procedure for obtaining such an exemption, if available.

Recently Enacted Legislation

Recently enacted legislation regarding foreign account tax compliance, effective for payments made after December 31, 2012, imposes a 30% withholding tax on interest and gross proceeds from the disposition of certain debt instruments paid to certain foreign entities unless various information reporting and other requirements are satisfied. However, the withholding tax will not be imposed on payments pursuant to obligations outstanding as of March 18, 2012. Nevertheless, certain account information with respect to U.S. holders who hold transition bonds through certain foreign financial institutions may be reportable to the IRS. Holders should consult with their own tax advisors regarding the possible implications of this recently enacted legislation on their investment in the transition bonds.

 

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ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended (“Code”), impose restrictions on:

 

   

employee benefit plans, as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA, that are subject to Title I of ERISA;

 

   

plans, as defined in Section 4975(e)(1) of the Code, that are subject to Section 4975 of the Code, including, but not limited to, individual retirement accounts and certain types of Keogh plans;

 

   

any entities whose underlying assets include plan assets by reason of that plan’s investment in those entities, each of the entities described in the first three bullet points being referred to as a “plan”; and

 

   

persons who, based on their specific relationship to a plan, are “parties in interest” under Section 3(14) of ERISA or “disqualified persons” under Section 4975(e)(2) of the Code (collectively referred to as “parties in interest”). Parties in interest with respect to a plan include, but are not limited to, fiduciaries, persons providing services to the plan, employers any of whose employees are covered by the plan, and employee organizations any of whose members are covered by the plan.

Moreover, based on the reasoning of the United States Supreme Court in John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Harris Trust and Savings Bank, 510 U.S. 86 (1993), an insurance company’s general account may be deemed to include assets of the plans investing in the general account, such as through the purchase of an annuity contract. ERISA also imposes specific duties on persons who are fiduciaries of plans subject to ERISA, and ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code prohibit specified transactions between a plan and parties in interest with respect to the plan. Violations of these rules may result in the imposition of excise taxes and other penalties and liabilities under ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code.

Plan Asset Issues for an Investment in the Transition Bonds

Pursuant to Department of Labor Regulation Section 2510.3-101, as modified by the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the “plan asset regulation”), in general, when a plan acquires an equity interest in an entity such as a trust, corporation, partnership or other specified entity, and such interest does not represent a “publicly offered security” or a security issued by an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the plan’s assets include both the equity interest and an undivided interest in each of the underlying assets of the entity, unless it is established either that the entity is an “operating company” or that equity participation in the entity by “benefit plan investors” is not “significant.” In general, an “equity interest” is defined under the plan asset regulation as any interest in an entity other than an instrument which is treated as indebtedness under applicable local law and which has no substantial equity features. Although there is little statutory or regulatory guidance on this subject, and there can be no assurances in this regard, it appears that the transition bonds should not be treated as an equity interest for purposes of the plan asset regulation. Accordingly, our assets should not be treated as the assets of plans investing in the transition bonds.

If the transition bonds were deemed to be equity interests in us and none of the exceptions contained in the plan regulation were applicable, then our assets would be considered to be assets of any plans that purchase the transition bonds. The extent to which the transition bonds are owned by benefit plan investors will not be monitored. If our assets were deemed to constitute “plan assets” pursuant to the plan regulation, as modified by Section 3(42) of ERISA, transactions we might enter into, or may have entered into in the ordinary course of business, might constitute non-exempt prohibited transactions under ERISA and/or Section  4975 of the Internal Revenue Code.

Prohibited Transaction Exemptions

It should be noted, however, that without regard to the treatment of the transition bonds as equity interests under the plan asset regulation, CenterPoint Houston, the underwriters and/or their affiliates, as providers of services to plans or otherwise, may be deemed to be parties in interest with respect to many plans. The purchase

 

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and holding of the transition bonds by or on behalf of one or more of these plans could result in a prohibited transaction within the meaning of Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code. However, the purchase and holding of the transition bonds may be subject to one or more exemptions from the prohibited transaction rules of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code.

Examples of Prohibited Transaction Exemptions. Potentially applicable prohibited transaction exemptions, include the following:

 

   

Prohibited Transaction Class Exemption (“PTCE”) 84-14, which exempts certain transactions effected on behalf of a plan by a “qualified professional asset manager” (“QPAM”), with such exemption referred to as the “QPAM exemption”;

 

   

PTCE 90-1, which exempts certain transactions between insurance company pooled separate accounts and parties in interest;

 

   

PTCE 91-38, which exempts certain transactions between bank collective investment funds and parties in interest;

 

   

PTCE 95-60, which exempts certain transactions between insurance company general accounts and parties in interest;

 

   

PTCE 96-23, which exempts certain transactions effected on behalf of a plan by an “in-house asset manager”; and

 

   

the statutory exemption (the “Statutory Exemption”) under Section 408(b)(17) of ERISA and Section 4975(d)(20) of the Code for certain prohibited transactions between a plan and a party in interest to such plan solely by reason of providing services to the plan (other than a party in interest that is a fiduciary with respect to the assets of the plan involved in the transaction, or an affiliate of such fiduciary), provided that there is adequate consideration for the transaction.

It should be noted, however, that even if the conditions specified in one or more of these exemptions are met, the scope of relief provided by these exemptions may not necessarily cover all acts that might be construed as prohibited transactions.

Prior to making an investment in the transition bonds, each fiduciary causing the transition bonds to be purchased by, on behalf of, or using plan assets of a plan that is subject to the prohibited transaction rules of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code, including, without limitation, an insurance company general account, shall be deemed to have represented and warranted that a class exemption from the prohibited transaction rules or the Statutory Exemption applies, so that the use of plan assets of the plan to purchase and hold the transition bonds does not and will not constitute or otherwise result in a nonexempt prohibited transaction in violation of Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code.

General Investment Considerations for Prospective Plan Investors in the Transition Bonds

Prior to making an investment in the transition bonds, prospective plan investors should consult with their legal advisors concerning the impact of ERISA and the Code and the potential consequences of this investment with respect to their specific circumstances. Moreover, each plan fiduciary should take into account, among other considerations:

 

   

whether the fiduciary has the authority to make the investment;

 

   

whether the investment constitutes a direct or indirect transaction with a party in interest;

 

   

the composition of the plan’s portfolio with respect to diversification by type of asset;

 

   

the plan’s funding objectives;

 

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the tax effects of the investment; and

 

   

whether, under the general fiduciary standards of investment prudence and diversification, an investment in the transition bonds is appropriate for the plan, taking into account the overall investment policy of the plan and the composition of the plan’s investment portfolio.

Governmental plans and some church plans are generally not subject to the fiduciary responsibility provisions of ERISA or the provisions of Section 4975 of the Code. However, these plans may be subject to substantially similar rules under state or other federal law and may also be subject to the prohibited transaction rules of Section 503 of the Code.

The sale of the transition bonds to a plan shall not be deemed a representation by CenterPoint Houston, the underwriters, or us that this investment meets all relevant legal requirements with respect to plans generally or any particular plan.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

Distribution

We may sell the transition bonds to or through the underwriters named in the prospectus supplement by a negotiated firm commitment underwriting and public reoffering by the underwriters. The transition bonds may also be sold to or through any other underwriting arrangement as may be specified in the prospectus supplement. We may also offer or place the transition bonds either directly or through agents. We intend that transition bonds will be offered through these various methods from time to time and that offerings may be made concurrently through more than one of these methods or that an offering of the transition bonds may be made through a combination of these methods.

The distribution of the transition bonds may be effected from time to time in one or more transactions at a fixed price or prices, which may be changed, or at market prices prevailing at the time of sale, at prices related to prevailing market prices or in negotiated transactions or otherwise at varying prices to be determined at the time of sale.

The transition bonds may be offered through one or more different methods, including offerings through underwriters. It is not anticipated that transition bonds will be listed on any securities exchange. The underwriters may, from time to time, buy and sell transition bonds, but there can be no assurance that a secondary market for the transition bonds will develop or, if one does develop, that it will continue.

Compensation to Underwriters

In connection with the sale of the transition bonds, underwriters or agents may receive compensation in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions. Underwriters may sell transition bonds to particular dealers at prices less a concession. Underwriters may allow, and these dealers may reallow, a concession to other dealers. Underwriters, dealers and agents that participate in the distribution of the transition bonds may be deemed to be underwriters. Any discounts or commissions received by the underwriters from us and any profit on the resale of the transition bonds by them may be deemed to be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act of 1933. These underwriters or agents will be identified, and any compensation received from us will be described, in the prospectus supplement.

Other Distribution Matters

Under agreements which may be entered into by CenterPoint Houston, us and the trustee, underwriters and agents who participate in the distribution of the transition bonds may be entitled to indemnification by CenterPoint Houston and us against liabilities specified therein, including under the Securities Act of 1933.

 

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RATINGS FOR THE TRANSITION BONDS

We expect that the transition bonds will receive credit ratings from three nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (“NRSRO”).

A security rating is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities and may be revised or withdrawn at any time by the assigning NRSRO. Each rating should be evaluated independently of any other rating. No person is obligated to maintain its rating on the transition bonds, and accordingly, we cannot assure you that a rating assigned to any tranche of the transition bonds upon initial issuance will not be revised or withdrawn by an NRSRO at any time thereafter. If a rating of any tranche of the transition bonds is revised or withdrawn, the liquidity of that tranche may be adversely affected. In general, ratings address credit risk and do not represent any assessment of the likelihood of any particular level of principal payments on the transition bonds other than payment in full of each tranche of the transition bonds by the applicable final maturity date, as well as the timely payment of interest.

Under Rule 17g-5 of the Exchange Act, NRSROs providing the sponsor with the requisite certification will have access to all information posted on a website by the sponsor for the purpose of determining the initial rating and monitoring the rating after the closing date in respect of the transition bonds. As a result, an NRSRO other than the NRSRO hired by the sponsor (the “hired NRSRO”) may issue ratings on the transition bonds (“Unsolicited Ratings”), which may be lower, and could be significantly lower, than the ratings assigned by the hired NRSROs. The Unsolicited Ratings may be issued prior to, or after, the closing date in respect of the transition bonds. Issuance of any Unsolicited Rating will not affect the issuance of the transition bonds. Issuance of an Unsolicited Rating lower than the ratings assigned by the hired NRSRO on the transition bonds might adversely affect the value of the transition bonds and, for regulated entities, could affect the status of the transition bonds as a legal investment or the capital treatment of the transition bonds. Investors in the transition bonds should consult with their legal counsel regarding the effect of the issuance of a rating by a non-hired NRSRO that is lower than the rating of a hired NRSRO.

A portion of the fees paid by CenterPoint Houston to an NRSRO that is hired to assign a rating on the transition bonds is contingent upon the issuance of the transition bonds. In addition to the fees paid by CenterPoint Houston to an NRSRO at closing, CenterPoint Houston may pay a fee to the NRSRO for ongoing surveillance for so long as the transition bonds are outstanding. However, no NRSRO is under any obligation to continue to monitor or provide a rating on the transition bonds.

 

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WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

This prospectus is part of a registration statement we and CenterPoint Houston have filed with the SEC relating to the transition bonds. This prospectus and each prospectus supplement describe the material terms of some of the documents we have filed as exhibits to the registration statement. However, this prospectus and each prospectus supplement do not contain all of the information contained in the registration statement and the exhibits. Any statements contained in this prospectus or any prospectus supplement concerning the provisions of any document filed as an exhibit to the registration statement or otherwise filed with the SEC are not necessarily complete. Each statement concerning those provisions is qualified in its entirety by reference to the respective exhibit. Information filed with the SEC can be inspected at the SEC’s Internet site located at http://www.sec.gov. You may also read and copy the registration statement, the exhibits and any other documents we file with the SEC at the SEC’s Public Reference Room located at 100F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. You may obtain further information regarding the operation of the SEC’s Public Reference Room by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain a copy of our filings or any information that has been incorporated by reference with the SEC at no cost, by writing to or telephoning us at the following address:

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC

1111 Louisiana, Suite 4664B

Houston, Texas 77002

(713) 207-5776

We or CenterPoint Houston as sponsor will also file with the SEC all of the periodic reports we or the sponsor are required to file under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the rules, regulations or orders of the SEC thereunder.

The SEC allows us to “incorporate by reference” into this prospectus information we or the sponsor file with the SEC. This means we can disclose important information to you by referring you to the documents containing the information. The information we incorporate by reference is considered to be part of this prospectus, unless we update or supersede that information by the information contained in the prospectus supplement or information that we or the sponsor file subsequently that is incorporated by reference into this prospectus. We are incorporating by reference into this prospectus any future filings, which we or CenterPoint Houston, but solely in its capacity as our sponsor, make with the SEC under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 until the offering of the transition bonds is completed, excluding any information that is furnished to, and not filed with, the SEC. These reports will be filed under our own name as issuing entity. Any statement contained in this prospectus, in any prospectus supplement or in a document incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference in this prospectus or any prospectus supplement will be deemed to be modified or superseded for purposes of this prospectus and any prospectus supplement to the extent that a statement contained in this prospectus, any prospectus supplement or in any separately filed document which also is or is deemed to be incorporated by reference herein modifies or supersedes that statement. Any statement so modified or superseded will not be deemed, except as so modified or superseded, to constitute part of this prospectus or the prospectus supplement.

 

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LEGAL MATTERS

Certain legal matters relating to us and the issuance of transition bonds will be passed upon for CenterPoint Houston and for us by Baker Botts L.L.P., Houston, Texas. Christopher J. Arntzen, Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Assistant Corporate Secretary of CenterPoint Energy, may pass upon other legal matters for CenterPoint Houston and for us. Mr. Arntzen is the beneficial owner of less than 1% of CenterPoint Energy’s outstanding common stock. Certain legal matters relating to the federal tax consequences of the issuance of the transition bonds will be passed upon for us by Baker Botts L.L.P. Underwriters will be advised about certain legal matters relating to the issuance of transition bonds by Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP.

 

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GLOSSARY OF DEFINED TERMS

The following definitions are used in this prospectus and in any accompanying prospectus supplement:

2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds means the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC in February 2008.

Adjustment request with regard to the transition charges means a request filed by the servicer with the PUCT requesting modifications to the transition charges.

Bankruptcy Code means Title 11 of the United States Code (11 U.S.C. section 101 et. seq.), as amended.

Basic documents means, the administration agreement, the sale agreement, the servicing agreement, the indenture and any supplements thereto, the bill of sale given by the seller and the notes evidencing the transition bonds.

Business day means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday or a day on which banking institutions in Houston, Texas or New York, New York are, or DTC is, authorized or obligated by law, regulation or executive order to remain closed.

Capital subaccount means that subaccount of the collection account into which the seller will contribute capital in an amount at least equal to 0.5% of the principal amount of the transition bonds issued by us.

CenterPoint Houston means CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC.

Clearstream means Clearstream Banking, Luxembourg, S.A.

Collection account means the segregated trust account relating to the transition bonds designated the collection account and held by the trustee under the indenture.

DTC means The Depository Trust Company, New York, New York, and its nominee holder, Cede & Co.

ERCOT means the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Inc.

ERISA means the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended.

Euroclear means the Euroclear System.

Excess funds subaccount means that subaccount of the collection account into which funds collected by the servicer in excess of amounts necessary to make the payments specified on a given payment date.

Excess payments means advances paid to the servicer by the retail electric provider in excess of amounts paid by retail electric customers to the retail electric provider on an annual basis.

Financing order means, unless the context indicates otherwise, the financing order issued by the PUCT on October 27, 2011 to CenterPoint Houston relating to the transition bonds.

Fitch means Fitch, Inc.

General subaccount means that subaccount that will hold funds held in the collection account that are not held in the other subaccounts of the collection account.

 

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Indenture means the indenture to be entered into between the issuing entity and the trustee, providing for the issuance of transition bonds, as the same may be amended and supplemented from time to time by one or more indentures supplemental thereto.

Internal Revenue Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

IRS means the Internal Revenue Service of the United States.

Issuing Entity means CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC.

Integrated utility means Reliant Energy, Incorporated, the legal predecessor to CenterPoint Houston, as it existed prior to its corporate restructuring on August 31, 2002 in response to the Restructuring Act.

kVA means kilovolt amperes.

kW means kilowatt.

kWh means kilowatt-hour.

Moody’s means Moody’s Investors Service, Inc.

MWh means megawatt-hour.

New on-site generation means electric generation capacity greater than 10 megawatts capable of being lawfully delivered to a site without use of utility transmission and distribution facilities and which was not on or before December 31, 1999, either (a) a fully operational facility or (b) a project supported by substantially complete filings for all necessary site-specific environmental permits under the rules of the Texas Commission of Environmental Quality.

Nonbypassable refers to the right of the servicer to collect the transition charges from all existing and future retail electric customers located within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory, subject to certain limitations specified in the Restructuring Act, even if those customers elect to purchase electricity from another supplier or choose to operate new on-site generation or if the utility goes out of business and its service area is acquired by another utility or is municipalized.

NRSRO means a nationally recognized statistical rating organization.

Payment date means the date or dates on which interest and principal are to be payable on the transition bonds.

PUCT means the Public Utility Commission of Texas.

Qualified costs means the costs of an electric utility recoverable through the issuance of transition bonds, the costs of issuing, supporting and servicing the transition bonds, and any costs of retiring and refunding existing debt and equity securities in connection with the issuance of transition bonds.

Rating agencies means Moody’s, S&P and Fitch.

Rating agency condition means, with respect to any action, the notification in writing to each rating agency of such action and the confirmation by S&P to the servicer, the trustee and the issuing entity that such action will not result in a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the then-current rating by such rating agency of any outstanding transition bonds and that, prior to the taking of the proposed action, no other rating agency should provide written notice that such action would result in the suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the then-current rating of the outstanding transition bonds.

 

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Record date means the date or dates with respect to each payment date on which it is determined the person in whose name each transition bond is registered will be paid on the respective payment date.

Regulation AB means the rules of the SEC promulgated under Subpart 229.1100—Asset Backed Securities (Regulation AB), 17 C.F.R. §§229.1100-229.1123, as such may be amended from time to time.

Restoration Bond Company means CenterPoint Energy Restoration Bond Company, LLC, the issuer of the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds.

Restructuring Act means the Texas legislation adopted in June 1999 that substantially amended the regulatory structure governing electric utilities in order to allow retail competition beginning on January 1, 2002.

Retail electric customers means the consumers of electricity and related services within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory.

Retail electric providers means entities certified under state law that provide electricity and related services to retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory.

S&P means Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services, a Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC business.

Sale agreement means the sale agreement to be entered into between the issuing entity and CenterPoint Houston, pursuant to which CenterPoint Houston sells and the issuing entity buys the transition property.

SEC means the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Securitizable Balance means the $1.695 billion aggregate principal amount that is authorized to be securitized through the issuance of transition bonds as approved by the PUCT in Docket No. 39809.

Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A means the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC in December 2005.

Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds means the Senior Secured System Restoration Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Restoration Bond Company in November 2009.

Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds means the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC in October 2001.

Service territory means, with regard to CenterPoint Houston, the certificated service area of the integrated utility as it existed on May 1, 1999, within which CenterPoint Houston may recover qualified costs through nonbypassable transition charges assessed on retail electric customers within that area.

Servicer means CenterPoint Houston, acting as the servicer, and any successor or assignee servicer, which will service the transition property under the servicing agreement with the issuing entity.

Servicing agreement means the servicing agreement to be entered into between the issuing entity and CenterPoint Houston, as the same may be amended and supplemented from time to time, pursuant to which CenterPoint Houston undertakes to service the transition property.

System restoration charges means, with regard to CenterPoint Houston, the amounts authorized to be imposed on all retail electric customer bills for service at distribution voltage within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory and collected, through a nonbypassable mechanism, by the servicer, to recover qualified costs pursuant to a financing order issued on August 14, 2009.

 

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System restoration costs means the recoverable distribution-related costs of system restoration after outages due to Hurricane Ike as determined by the PUCT in a final order issued on August 14, 2009.

Transition Bond Company I means CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC, the issuer of the Series 2001-1 Transition Bonds.

Transition Bond Company II means CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC, the issuer of the Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A.

Transition Bond Company III means CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC, the issuer of the 2008 Senior Secured Transition Bonds.

Transition charges means, with regard to CenterPoint Houston, the amounts authorized to be imposed on all retail electric customer bills within CenterPoint Houston’s service territory and collected, through a nonbypassable mechanism, by the servicer, pursuant to the financing order.

Transition property means, with regard to CenterPoint Houston, all of CenterPoint Houston’s right, title, and interest in and to the financing order that are transferred to the issuing entity pursuant to the sale agreement. Transition property includes, among other things, the right to impose, collect and receive the transition charges in amounts sufficient to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds and make deposits to the various subaccounts within the collection account.

Treasury Regulations means proposed or issued regulations promulgated from time to time under the Internal Revenue Code.

True-up provision means a mechanism required by the financing order whereby the servicer will apply to the PUCT for adjustments to the applicable transition charges based on actual collected transition charges and updated assumptions by the servicer as to future collections of transition charges. The PUCT will approve properly filed adjustments. Adjustments will immediately be reflected in the customers’ next billing cycle. Any corrections for mathematical errors will be reflected in the next true-up. Adjustments are made to provide adequate revenue to service the transition bonds and correct any overcollections or undercollections.

Trust Indenture Act means the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, as amended.

 

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CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC

Until 90 days after the date of the prospectus supplement, all dealers that effect transactions in these securities, whether or not participating in the offering described in this prospectus supplement, may be required to deliver a prospectus supplement and prospectus. This is in addition to the dealers’ obligation to deliver a prospectus supplement and prospectus when acting as underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.

 

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PART II

INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

 

Item 14. Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.

The following is an itemized list of the estimated expenses to be incurred in connection with the offering of the securities being offered hereunder other than underwriting discounts and commissions:

 

Registration Fee

   $ 194,247   

Financial advisory fees

     *   

Trustee’s fees and expenses

     *   

Legal fees and expenses

     *   

Independent accountant’s fees and expenses

     *   

Printing and engraving expenses

     *   

Rating agency fees

     *   

Miscellaneous expenses

     *  
  

 

 

 

Total

     *  
  

 

 

 

 

* To be filed by amendment

 

Item 15. Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC

Section 18-108 of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act provides that subject to such standards and restrictions, if any, as are set forth in the limited liability company agreement of a limited liability company, a limited liability company may, and shall have the power to, indemnify and hold harmless any member or manager or other person from and against any and all claims and demands whatsoever. Under our limited liability company agreement, we will indemnify our managers to the fullest extent permitted by law against any liability incurred with respect to their services as managers under our limited liability company agreement, except for liabilities arising from their own fraud, gross negligence or willful misconduct.

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Article 2.20 of the Texas Limited Liability Company Act and Article VIII of CenterPoint Houston’s Limited Liability Company Regulations provide CenterPoint Houston with broad powers and authority to indemnify its member, managers and officers and to purchase and maintain insurance for such purposes. Pursuant to such statutory and Limited Liability Company Regulation provisions, CenterPoint Houston has purchased insurance against certain costs of indemnification that may be incurred by it and by its member, manager and officers.

Additionally, Section 7.12 of CenterPoint Houston’s Limited Liability Company Regulations provides that a manager of CenterPoint Houston is not liable to CenterPoint Houston or its member for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a manager, except that Section 7.12 does not eliminate or limit the liability of a manager for any acts or omissions that involve intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law or for a distribution in violation of Texas law as a result of the willful or grossly negligent act or omission of the manager.

 

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Section 7.12 also provides that any subsequent amendments to Texas statutes that further limit the liability of managers will inure to the benefit of the managers. Any repeal or modification of Section 7.12 shall not adversely affect any right of protection of a manager of CenterPoint Houston existing at the time of the repeal or modification.

 

Item 16. Exhibits.

See Index to Exhibits at page II-7.

 

Item 17. Undertakings.

 

 

As to Rule 415:

Each undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes:

(1) To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made of the securities registered hereby, a post-effective amendment to this Registration Statement:

(i) to include any prospectus required by section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”);

(ii) to reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after the effective date of this Registration Statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in this Registration Statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more than a 20 percent change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective Registration Statement; and

(iii) to include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in this Registration Statement or any material change to such information in this Registration Statement;

provided, however, that the undertakings set forth in clauses (1)(i), (1)(ii) and (1)(iii) above do not apply if the information required to be included in a post-effective amendment by those clauses is contained in periodic reports filed by the Registrant pursuant to section 13 or section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), that are incorporated by reference in this Registration Statement, or is contained in a form of prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) that is part of this Registration Statement; and provided further, however, that the undertakings set forth in clauses (1)(i) and (1)(ii) above do not apply if the information required to be included in a post-effective amendment by those clauses is provided pursuant to Item 1100(c) of Regulation AB.

(2) That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

(3) To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering.

(4) That, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act to any purchaser, if the Registrants are relying on Rule 430B:

(i) Each prospectus filed by the Registrants pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3) shall be deemed to be part of this Registration Statement as of the date the filed prospectus was deemed part of and included in this Registration Statement; and

 

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(ii) Each prospectus required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(2), (b)(5), or (b)(7) as part of a registration statement in reliance on Rule 430B relating to an offering made pursuant to Rule 415(a)(1)(i), (vii) or (x) for the purpose of providing the information required by section 10(a) of the Securities Act shall be deemed to be part of and included in this Registration Statement as of the earlier of the date such form of prospectus is first used after effectiveness or the date of the first contract of sale of securities in the offering described in the prospectus. As provided in Rule 430B, for liability purposes of the issuing entity and any person that is at that date an underwriter, such date shall be deemed to be a new effective date of the registration statement relating to the securities in the registration statement to which that prospectus relates, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof; provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to the purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such effective date, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such effective date.

(5) That, for the purpose of determining liability of the Registrants under the Securities Act to any purchaser in the initial distribution of the securities, each Registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities of such Registrant pursuant to this Registration Statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the Registrants will be sellers to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to such purchaser:

(i) Any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned Registrants relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424;

(ii) Any free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on behalf of the Registrants or used or referred to by the Registrants;

(iii) The portion of any other free writing prospectus relating to the offering containing material information about the Registrants or the securities provided by or on behalf of the Registrants; and

(iv) Any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the Registrants to the purchaser.

 

 

As to documents subsequently filed that are incorporated by reference:

The Registrants hereby undertake that, for purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each filing of the Registrants’ annual report pursuant to section 13(a) or section 15(d) of the Exchange Act that is incorporated by reference in this Registration Statement shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

 

 

As to indemnification:

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of each Registrant pursuant to the provisions described under Item 15 above, or otherwise, each Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by a Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of such Registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, each Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its respective counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

 

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As to qualification of trust indentures:

The Registrants hereby undertake to file an application for the purpose of determining the eligibility of the trustee to act under subsection (a) of Section 310 of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, as amended (the “Trust Indenture Act”), in accordance with the rules and regulations prescribed by the Commission under Section 305(b)(2) of the Trust Indenture Act.

 

 

As to incorporating by reference subsequent Exchange Act documents by third parties:

The Registrants hereby undertake that, for purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each filing of an annual report pursuant to section 13(a) or section 15(d) of the Exchange Act of a third party that is incorporated by reference in this Registration Statement in accordance with Item 1100(c)(1) of Regulation AB shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered herein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

 

 

As to providing certain information through an Internet Web site:

The Registrants hereby undertake that, except as otherwise provided by Item 1105 of Regulation AB, information provided in response to that Item pursuant to Rule 312 of Regulation S-T through the specified Internet address in the prospectus is deemed to be a part of the prospectus included in this Registration Statement. In addition, the Registrants hereby undertake to provide to any person without charge, upon request, a copy of the information provided in response to Item 1105 of Regulation AB pursuant to Rule 312 of Regulation S-T through the specified Internet address as of the date of the prospectus included in this Registration Statement if a subsequent update or change is made to the information.

 

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SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form S-3 and has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Houston, State of Texas, on the 2nd day of November, 2011.

 

CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC       (Registrant)

By:   /s/ David M. McClanahan
  David M. McClanahan
  Chairman

POWER OF ATTORNEY

KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each person whose signature appears below constitutes and appoints Gary L. Whitlock, David M. McClanahan and Christopher J. Arntzen, and each of them severally, his true and lawful attorney or attorneys-in-fact and agents, with full power to act with or without the others and with full power of substitution and resubstitution, to execute in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, any or all amendments (including pre-effective and post-effective amendments) to this Registration Statement and any registration statement for the same offering filed pursuant to Rule 462 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorneys-in-fact and agents and each of them full power and authority, to do and perform in the name and on behalf of the undersigned, in any and all capacities, each and every act and thing necessary or desirable to be done in and about the premises, to all intents and purposes and as fully as they might or could do in person, hereby ratifying, approving and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents or their substitutes may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons on the 2nd day of November, 2011 in the capacities indicated.

 

Signature

  

Title

/s/ David M. McClanahan

David M. McClanahan

  

Manager and Chairman

(Principal Executive Officer and Manager)

/s/ Gary L. Whitlock

Gary L. Whitlock

   Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer)

/s/ Walter L. Fitzgerald

Walter L. Fitzgerald

   Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer (Principal Accounting Officer)

 

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SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form S-3 and has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Houston, State of Texas, on the 2nd day of November, 2011.

 

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC       (Registrant)

By:   /s/ Marc Kilbride
  Marc Kilbride
  Sole Manager

POWER OF ATTORNEY

KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each person whose signature appears below constitutes and appoints Gary L. Whitlock, Marc Kilbride and Christopher J. Arntzen, and each of them severally, his true and lawful attorney or attorneys-in-fact and agents, with full power to act with or without the others and with full power of substitution and resubstitution, to execute in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, any or all amendments (including pre-effective and post-effective amendments) to this Registration Statement and any registration statement for the same offering filed pursuant to Rule 462 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorneys-in-fact and agents and each of them full power and authority, to do and perform in the name and on behalf of the undersigned, in any and all capacities, each and every act and thing necessary or desirable to be done in and about the premises, to all intents and purposes and as fully as they might or could do in person, hereby ratifying, approving and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents or their substitutes may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons on the 2nd day of November, 2011 in the capacities indicated.

 

Signature

  

Title

/s/ Gary L. Whitlock

Gary L. Whitlock

  

President

(Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ Marc Kilbride

Marc Kilbride

  

Vice President and Treasurer

(Principal Financial Officer and Sole Manager)

/s/ Walter L. Fitzgerald

Walter L. Fitzgerald

   Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer (Principal Accounting Officer)

 

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INDEX TO EXHIBITS

 

Exhibit
Number

 

Document Description

  1.1*   Form of Underwriting Agreement
  3.1**   Restated Certificate of Formation of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC (Exhibit 3.1 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2011 (SEC File No. 1-3187))
  3.2**   Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC (Exhibit 3.2 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2011 (SEC File No. 1-3187)
  3.3   Certificate of Formation of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC
  3.4   Limited Liability Company Agreement of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC
  3.5*   Form of Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC
  4.1*   Form of Indenture
  4.2*   Form of the Transition Bonds (included in Exhibit 4.3)
  4.3*   Form of Supplemental Indenture relating to the issuance of the Transition Bonds
  5.1*   Opinion of Baker Botts L.L.P. relating to legality of the transition bonds
  8.1*   Opinion of Baker Botts L.L.P. with respect to federal tax matters
23.1*   Consent of Baker Botts L.L.P. (included in Exhibits 5.1 and 8.1)
24.1   Power of Attorney (CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC, included on page II-5, and CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC, included on page II-6)
25.1*   Statement of Eligibility under the Trust Indenture Act on Form T-1 of Trustee
99.1*   Form of Transition Property Sale Agreement
99.2*   Form of Transition Property Servicing Agreement
99.3*   Form of Administration Agreement
99.4*   Form of Intercreditor Agreement
99.5   Financing Order dated October 27, 2011
99.6*   Opinion of Baker Botts L.L.P. with respect to the constitutionality of certain matters

 

* To be filed by amendment or as an exhibit to a Current Report on Form 8-K pursuant to Item 601(b)(1) of Regulation S-K.
** Incorporated by reference herein as indicated.

 

II-7

Certificate of Formation of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Co IV, LLC

Exhibit 3.3

CERTIFICATE OF FORMATION

OF

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC

This Certificate of Formation of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC (the “Company”) is being executed and filed by the undersigned authorized person to form a limited liability company under the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (6 Del. Code § 18-101, et seq.).

ARTICLE I

The name of the Company is CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC.

ARTICLE II

The address of the registered office of the Company in the County of New Castle, State of Delaware is Corporation Trust Center, 1209 Orange Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801, and the name of the registered agent of the Company at such address is The Corporation Trust Company.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned has executed this Certificate of Formation as of October 14, 2011.

/s/ Richard B. Dauphin                                    

Richard B. Dauphin, Authorized Person

Limited Liability Company Agmt of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Co IV, LLC

Exhibit 3.4

LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY AGREEMENT

OF

CENTERPOINT ENERGY TRANSITION BOND COMPANY IV, LLC

Effective as of October 21, 2011


TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

 

          Page  

ARTICLE I DEFINITIONS

     1   

ARTICLE II FORMATION OF THE COMPANY

     3   

2.1

   Formation      3   

2.2

   Name      3   

2.3

   Place of Business      3   

2.4

   Registered Office and Registered Agent      3   

2.5

   Term      3   

2.6

   Business Purpose      3   

ARTICLE III INITIAL MEMBER

     4   

ARTICLE IV CAPITAL OF THE COMPANY

     4   

4.1

   Common Shares and Initial Contributions      4   

4.2

   Additional Contributions      5   

4.3

   Interest      5   

ARTICLE V RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE MEMBER

     5   

5.1

   Limitation of Member’s Responsibility, Liability      5   

5.2

   Return of Distributions      5   

ARTICLE VI ACTS OF THE MEMBER

     5   

6.1

   Action by the Member With a Meeting      5   

6.2

   Action by the Member Without a Meeting      5   

6.3

   Waiver of Notice      6   

6.4

   Special Prohibitions and Limitations      6   

6.5

   Amendments to be Adopted Solely by the Managers      6   

6.6

   Amendments      7   

ARTICLE VII RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF MANAGERS

     7   

7.1

   Management      7   

7.2

   Number and Qualifications      7   

7.3

   Powers of the Managers      7   

7.4

   Initial Manager      7   

7.5

   Place of Meetings      7   

7.6

   Meetings of Managers      7   

7.7

   Quorum      7   

7.8

   Attendance and Waiver of Notice      8   

7.9

   Action by Managers Without a Meeting      8   

7.10

   Compensation of Managers      8   

7.11

   Committees      8   

7.12

   Liability of Managers      8   

ARTICLE VIII INDEMNIFICATION

     9   

8.1

   Indemnification      9   

8.2

   Advancement or Reimbursement of Expenses      9   

 

-i-


8.3

   Nonexclusivity and Survival of Indemnification      9   

8.4

   Insurance      10   

ARTICLE IX ALLOCATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

     10   

9.1

   Allocations      10   

9.2

   Distributions      10   

ARTICLE X ACCOUNTING PERIOD, RECORDS AND REPORTS

     10   

10.1

   Accounting Period      10   

10.2

   Records, Audits and Reports      10   

ARTICLE XI TAX MATTERS

     10   

11.1

   Tax Returns and Elections      10   

11.2

   State, Local or Foreign Income Taxes      10   

ARTICLE XII RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFERABILITY

     11   

ARTICLE XIII DISSOLUTION AND TERMINATION

     11   

13.1

   Dissolution      11   

13.2

   Effect of Dissolution      11   

13.3

   Winding Up, Liquidating and Distribution of Assets      11   

13.4

   Certificate of Cancellation      12   

13.5

   Return of Contribution      12   

ARTICLE XIV MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

     12   

14.1

   Notices      12   

14.2

   Books of Account and Records      13   

14.3

   Application of Delaware Law      13   

14.4

   Waiver of Action for Partition      13   

14.5

   Execution of Additional Instruments      13   

14.6

   Headings      13   

14.7

   Waivers      13   

14.8

   Rights and Remedies Cumulative      13   

14.9

   Severability      13   

14.10

   Heirs, Successors and Assigns      13   

14.11

   Creditors      14   

14.12

   Counterparts      14   

 

-ii-


LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY AGREEMENT

This Limited Liability Company Agreement (this “Agreement”) is made and executed to be effective as of October 21, 2011, by CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC, a Texas limited liability company (“CenterPoint Houston”).

WHEREAS, a certificate of formation of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC (the “Company”), has been filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware; and

WHEREAS, it is desired that the orderly management of the affairs of the Company be provided for;

ARTICLE I

DEFINITIONS

The following terms used in this Agreement shall have the following meanings (unless otherwise expressly provided herein):

“Agreement” shall mean this Limited Liability Company Agreement as originally executed and as it may be amended from time to time hereafter.

“Capital Contribution” shall mean any contribution to the capital of the Company in cash or property by the Member whenever made.

“Certificate of Formation” shall mean the Certificate of Formation of the Company filed with and endorsed by the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware, as such certificate may be amended from time to time hereafter.

“Code” shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or corresponding provisions of subsequent superseding federal revenue laws.

“Common Interest” shall have the meaning given such term in Section 4.1.

“Common Share” shall mean an undivided portion of all of the rights, duties, obligations and ownership interests in the Company.

“Delaware Act” shall mean the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, as the same may be amended from time to time hereafter.

“Entity” shall mean any foreign or domestic general partnership, limited partnership, limited liability company, corporation, joint enterprise, trust, business trust, employee benefit plan, cooperative or association.

“Financing Order” shall mean and include the financing order to be issued by the PUCT in Docket No. 39809 and any subsequent financing order issued by the PUCT to the Member pursuant to which the Member transfers its rights and interests thereunder to the Company in connection with the issuance of a separate series of Transition Bonds.


“Fiscal Year” shall mean the Company’s fiscal year, which shall be determined by the Managers in accordance with Section 706(b) of the Code.

“Governmental Authority” shall mean any court or any federal or state regulatory body, administrative agency or governmental instrumentality.

“Manager” shall mean any of the managers of the Company duly appointed or elected to serve in such capacity under Delaware law and this Agreement.

“Member” shall mean each Person who executes a counterpart of this Agreement as a Member and each Person who may hereafter become a Member pursuant to Article XII; but shall not include any Member that ceases to be a Member.

“Person” shall mean any individual or Entity, and any heir, executor, administrator, legal representative, successor or assign of such “Person” where the context so admits.

“Public Utility Regulatory Act” means the Texas Public Utility Regulatory Act, as codified in Title II of the Texas Utilities Code.

“PUCT” shall mean the Public Utility Commission of Texas or any successor entity thereto.

“Transition Bonds” shall have the meaning given such term in Section 2.6.

“Transition Property” shall mean the rights and interests of CenterPoint Houston or its successor under a Financing Order, once those rights are first transferred to the Company or pledged in connection with the issuance of the related series of Transition Bonds, including the right to impose, collect and receive through transition charges payable by retail electric customers within CenterPoint Houston’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999, an amount sufficient to cover the qualified costs of CenterPoint Houston authorized in such Financing Order, the right to receive transition charges in amounts and at times sufficient to pay principal and interest and make other deposits in connection with such related series of Transition Bonds and all revenues and collections resulting from transition charges.

“Treasury Regulations” shall mean regulations, including proposed or temporary regulations, promulgated under the Code. References herein to specific provisions of proposed or temporary regulations shall include analogous provisions of final Treasury Regulations or other successor Treasury Regulations.

 

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ARTICLE II

FORMATION OF THE COMPANY

2.1 Formation. On October 14, 2011, the Certificate of Formation of the Company was filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware pursuant to the Delaware Act.

2.2 Name. The name of the Company is CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC. If the Company shall conduct business in any jurisdiction other than the State of Delaware, it shall register the Company or its trade name with the appropriate authorities in such state in order to have the legal existence of the Company recognized.

2.3 Place of Business. The Company may locate its places of business and registered office at any place or places as the Managers may from time to time deem advisable.

2.4 Registered Office and Registered Agent. The Company’s registered office shall be at the office of its registered agent at 1209 Orange Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801, and the name of its initial registered agent at such address shall be The Corporation Trust Company.

2.5 Term. The Company and this Agreement shall continue until the earliest of (a) such time as all of the Company’s assets have been sold or otherwise disposed of or (b) such time as the Company’s existence has been terminated as otherwise provided herein or in the Delaware Act.

2.6 Business Purpose. The nature of the business or purpose to be conducted or promoted by the Company is to engage exclusively in the following business and financial activities:

(a) to authorize, issue, sell and deliver one or more series or classes of transition bonds (as defined in the Public Utility Regulatory Act) (the “Transition Bonds”) and, in connection therewith, to enter into any agreement or document providing for the authorization, issuance, sale and delivery of the Transition Bonds;

(b) to purchase, acquire, own, hold, administer, service, and enter into agreements for the servicing of, finance, manage, sell, assign, pledge, collect amounts due on and otherwise deal with the Transition Property and other assets to be acquired in connection therewith and any proceeds or rights associated therewith;

(c) to negotiate, authorize, execute, deliver, assume the obligations under, and perform its duties under, any agreement, instrument or document relating to the activities set forth in clauses (a) and (b) above; provided, that each party to any such agreement under which material obligations are imposed upon the Company shall covenant that it shall not, prior to the date which is one year and one day after the termination of the indenture providing for the Transition Bonds and the payment in full of each series of Transition Bonds and any other amounts owed under such indenture, acquiesce, petition or otherwise invoke or cause the Company to invoke the process of any court or Governmental Authority for the purpose of

 

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commencing or sustaining a case against the Company under any federal or state bankruptcy, insolvency or similar law or appointing a receiver, liquidator, assignee, trustee, custodian, sequestrator or other similar official of the Company or any substantial part of the property of the Company; or ordering the winding up or liquidation of the affairs of the Company; and provided, further, that the Company shall be permitted to incur additional indebtedness or other liabilities payable to service providers and trade creditors in the ordinary course of business in connection with the foregoing activities;

(d) to invest proceeds from the Transition Property and its other assets and any capital and income of the Company in accordance with the applicable agreements or instruments entered into in connection with the issuance of the Transition Bonds or as otherwise determined by the Managers and not inconsistent with this Section or such applicable agreements or instruments;

(e) to do such other things and carry on any other activities which the Managers determine to be necessary, convenient or incidental to any of the foregoing purposes, and have and exercise all of the powers and rights conferred upon limited liability companies formed pursuant to the Delaware Act that are related or incidental to any of the foregoing; and

(f) to enter into and perform all agreements or instruments entered into in connection with the issuance of the Transition Bonds and all documents, certificates or financing statements contemplated thereby or related thereto, all without any further act, vote or approval of the Member, any Manager or other Person notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the Delaware Act or applicable law, rule or regulation. The foregoing authorization shall not be deemed a restriction on the powers of the Member or any Manager to enter into other agreements on behalf of the Company.

ARTICLE III

INITIAL MEMBER

The name and place of business of the initial Member are as follows:

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

1111 Louisiana

Houston, Texas 77002

ARTICLE IV

CAPITAL OF THE COMPANY

4.1 Common Shares and Initial Contributions.

(a) A class of equity interests denominated the “Common Shares” is hereby designated as the sole class of equity interests of the Company. Each issued and outstanding Common Share shall at any time represent that undivided portion of all of the rights, duties, obligations and ownership interests in the Company in proportion to the total number of Common Shares outstanding at such time.

 

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(b) The Company will issue to the initial Member 1,000 Common Shares (together, the “Common Interest”) upon payment of $1,000 to the Company from the Initial Member, which shall be deemed to be the initial Capital Contribution of the initial Member. Upon receipt of such initial Capital Contribution and execution of this Agreement by the Member, such Common Shares shall be validly issued and outstanding, fully paid and nonassessable.

4.2 Additional Contributions. The Member shall not be required to make additional Capital Contributions unless, and except on such terms as, the Managers and the Member unanimously agree.

4.3 Interest. No interest shall be paid by the Company on Capital Contributions.

ARTICLE V

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE MEMBER

5.1 Limitation of Member’s Responsibility, Liability. The Member shall not perform any act on behalf of the Company, incur any expense, obligation or indebtedness of any nature on behalf of the Company, or in any manner participate in the management of the Company or receive or be credited with any amounts, except as specifically contemplated hereunder. The Member shall not be personally liable for any amount in excess of its Capital Contribution, and shall not be liable for any of the debts or losses of the Company, except to the extent that a liability of the Company is founded upon or results from an unauthorized act or activity of the Member. In addition, the Member’s liability shall be limited as set forth in the Delaware Act and other applicable law hereafter in effect.

5.2 Return of Distributions. In accordance with Section 18-607 of the Delaware Act, the Member will be obligated to return any distribution from the Company only as provided by applicable law.

ARTICLE VI

ACTS OF THE MEMBER

6.1 Action by the Member at a Meeting. The Member may act by voting the Common Interest at a meeting, which may be called by the Member or any Manager, and which may be held at any place designated by the Member. If a Manager calls such a meeting, written notice shall be given to the Member not less than 10 and not more than 60 days before the date of the meeting. At all meetings of the Member, the Member may vote in person or by proxy executed in writing by the Member or by a duly authorized attorney in fact. Such proxy shall be filed with the Managers of the Company before or at the time of the meeting. No proxy shall be valid after 11 months from the date of its execution, unless otherwise provided in the proxy.

6.2 Action by the Member Without a Meeting. Action required or permitted to be taken at a meeting of the Member may be taken without a meeting if the action is evidenced by one or more written consents describing the action taken, signed by the Member

and delivered to the Managers of the Company for inclusion in the minutes or for filing with the Company records.

 

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6.3 Waiver of Notice. When any notice is required to be given to the Member, a waiver thereof in writing signed by the Person entitled to such notice, whether before, at or after the time stated therein, shall be equivalent to the giving of such notice.

6.4 Special Prohibitions and Limitations. Without the prior approval of the Member, the Company shall not (i) sell, exchange or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company outside the ordinary course of business of the Company (provided, however, that this provision shall not be interpreted to preclude or limit the mortgage, pledge, hypothecation or grant of a security interest in all or substantially all of the assets of the Company and shall not apply to any forced sale of any or all of the assets of the Company pursuant to the foreclosure of (or in lieu of foreclosure), or other realization upon, any such encumbrance), (ii) merge, consolidate or combine with any other Person, or (iii) issue additional Common Shares.

6.5 Amendments to Be Adopted Solely by the Managers. The Managers, without the consent at the time of the Member, may amend any provision of this Agreement and execute, swear to, acknowledge, deliver, file and record whatever documents may be required in connection therewith, to reflect:

(a) a change in the name of the Company or the location of the principal place of business of the Company;

(b) a change that is necessary or advisable in the opinion of the Managers to qualify the Company as a company in which members have limited liability under the laws of any state or other jurisdiction or to ensure that the Company will not be treated as an association taxable as a corporation for federal income tax purposes;

(c) a change that (i) in the sole discretion of the Managers does not adversely affect the Member in any material respect, (ii) is necessary or desirable to satisfy any requirements, conditions or guidelines contained in any opinion, directive, order, ruling or regulation of any Governmental Authority or contained in any federal or state statute or (iii) is required or contemplated by this Agreement;

(d) a change in any provision of this Agreement that requires any action to be taken by or on behalf of the Company or the Member pursuant to the requirements of Delaware law if the provisions of Delaware law are amended, modified or revoked so that the taking of such action is no longer required; provided that this Section 6.5(d) shall be applicable only if such changes are not materially adverse to the Member; or

(e) any other amendments similar to the foregoing.

The Member hereby appoints each Manager as its attorney in fact to execute any amendment permitted by this Section 6.5.

 

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6.6 Amendments. A proposed amendment to this Agreement (other than one permitted by Section 6.5) shall be effective upon its adoption by the Member.

ARTICLE VII

RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF MANAGERS

7.1 Management. The powers of the Company shall be exercised by or under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the Company shall be managed under, its Managers. In addition to the powers and authorities expressly conferred by this Agreement upon the Managers, the Managers may exercise all such powers of the Company and do all such lawful acts and things as are not directed or required to be exercised or done by the Member by the Delaware Act, the Certificate of Formation or this Agreement. In accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of Section 18-407 of the Delaware Act, the Managers may delegate to one or more other persons their rights and powers to manage and control the business and affairs of the Company, provided that any such delegation may not authorize any action that would violate or reasonably be expected to violate the limited business purpose of the Company specified in Section 2.6.

7.2 Number and Qualifications. The number of Managers of the Company shall initially be one; but the number of Managers may be changed by the Member. Managers need not be residents of the State of Delaware or Members of the Company. The Managers, in their discretion, may elect a chairman of the Managers who shall preside at any meetings of the Managers.

7.3 Powers of the Managers. Without limiting the generality of Section 7.1, the Managers shall have power and authority, acting in concert in accordance with this Agreement, to cause the Company to do and perform all acts as may be necessary or appropriate to the conduct of the Company’s business.

7.4 Initial Manager. The initial Manager shall be Marc Kilbride. The Member shall have the right to take action pursuant to Section 6.1 or Section 6.2 to designate one or more Managers and to remove, replace or fill any vacancy occurring for any reason of any Manager.

7.5 Place of Meetings. All meetings of the Managers or committees thereof may be held either within or without the State of Delaware. Any Manager may participate in a meeting by means of conference telephone or similar equipment, and participation by such means shall constitute presence in person at the meeting.

7.6 Meetings of Managers. Meetings of the Managers may be called by any Manager on two days’ notice to each Manager, either personally or by mail, telephone or telegram.

7.7 Quorum. At all meetings of the Managers, the presence of a majority of the Managers shall be necessary and sufficient to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business unless a greater number is required by law. The act of a majority of the Managers present at a meeting at which a quorum is present shall be the act of the Managers, except as

 

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otherwise provided by law, the Certificate of Formation or this Agreement. If a quorum shall not be present at any meeting of the Managers, the Managers present at the meeting may adjourn the meeting from time to time, without notice other than announcement at the meeting, until a quorum shall be present.

7.8 Attendance and Waiver of Notice. Attendance of a Manager at any meeting shall constitute a waiver of notice of such meeting, except where a Manager attends a meeting for the express purpose of objecting to the transaction of any business on the ground that the meeting is not lawfully called or convened. Neither the business to be transacted at, nor the purpose of, any regular or special meeting of the Managers need be specified in the notice or waiver of notice of such meeting.

7.9 Action by Managers Without a Meeting. Action required or permitted to be taken at a meeting of Managers may be taken without a meeting if the action is evidenced by one or more written consents describing the action taken, signed by a majority of the Managers and included in the Company minutes or records. Action taken under this Section is effective when a majority of the Managers have signed the consent, unless the consent specifies a different effective date. The record date for determining Managers entitled to take action without a meeting shall be the date the first Manager signs a written consent.

7.10 Compensation of Managers. Managers, as such, shall not receive any stated salary for their services, but shall receive such compensation for their services as may be from time to time approved by the Member, provided that nothing contained in this Agreement shall preclude any Manager from serving the Company in any other capacity and receiving compensation for service. In addition, a fixed sum and expenses of attendance, if any, may be allowed for attendance at each meeting of the Managers.

7.11 Committees. The Managers may, by resolution, designate from among the Managers one or more committees, each of which shall be comprised of one or more Managers, and may designate one or more of the Managers as alternate members of any committee, who may, subject to any limitations imposed by the Managers, replace absent or disqualified Managers at any meeting of that committee. Such committee shall have and may exercise all of the authority of the Managers, subject to the limitations set forth in this Agreement and under the Delaware Act.

7.12 Liability of Managers. A Manager shall not be liable under any judgment, decree or order of a court, or in any other manner, for any debt, obligation or liability of the Company by reason of his acting as a Manager. A Manager shall not be personally liable to the Company or the Member for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a Manager, except for liability for any acts or omissions that involve intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law or for a distribution in violation of Delaware law as a result of the willful or grossly negligent act or omission of the Manager. If the laws of the State of Delaware are amended after the date of this Agreement to authorize action further eliminating or limiting the personal liability of Managers, then the liability of a Manager of the Company, in addition to the limitation on personal liability provided herein, shall be limited to the fullest extent permitted by the amended laws of the State of Delaware. Any repeal or modification of this Section 7.12 by the Member shall be prospective only, and shall not adversely affect any limitation on the personal liability of a Manager existing at the time of such repeal or modification or thereafter arising as a result of acts or omissions prior to the time of such repeal or modification.

 

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ARTICLE VIII

INDEMNIFICATION

8.1 Indemnification. Each Person who at any time shall be, or shall have been, a Member or Manager, or any Person who, while a Member, Manager or agent of the Company, is or was serving at the request of the Company as a director, member, manager, officer, partner, venturer, proprietor, trustee, employee, agent or similar functionary of an Entity, shall be entitled to indemnification by the Company as and to the fullest extent permitted by the provisions of Delaware law or any successor statutory provisions, as from time to time amended. The foregoing right of indemnification shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which one to be indemnified may be entitled as a matter of law or under this Agreement, any other agreement, by vote of the Member or disinterested Managers or otherwise, both as to any action in an official capacity and as to action in another capacity while holding such office. Any repeal of this Section 8.1 shall be prospective only, and shall not adversely affect any right of indemnification existing at the time of such repeal or modification or thereafter arising as a result of acts or omissions prior to the time of such repeal or modification. Any Person entitled to indemnification in accordance with this Section 8.1 shall hereinafter be referred to as an “Indemnitee.” If any provision or provisions of this Agreement relating to indemnification shall be held to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable for any reason whatsoever, the validity, legality and enforceability of the remaining provisions shall not in any way be affected or impaired thereby; and, to the fullest extent possible, the provisions of this Agreement shall be construed so as to give effect to the intent manifested by the provision held invalid, illegal or unenforceable, including, without limitation, by allowing indemnification by vote of the Member or Managers or the disinterested minority thereof.

8.2 Advancement or Reimbursement of Expenses. The Company may pay in advance or reimburse expenses actually or reasonably incurred or anticipated by an Indemnitee in connection with an appearance as a witness or other participation in a proceeding whether or not such Indemnitee is a named defendant or a respondent in the proceeding.

8.3 Nonexclusivity and Survival of Indemnification. The indemnification and advancement of expenses provided by, or granted pursuant to, the other subsections of this Article VIII shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which one seeking indemnification and advancement of expenses may be entitled under this Agreement, any other agreement, by vote of the disinterested Member or Managers or otherwise, both as to action in an official capacity and as to action in any other capacity while holding such office, it being the policy of the Company that, if the Managers and the Member unanimously approve, indemnification specified in this Article VIII shall be made to the fullest extent permitted by law. The provisions of this Article VIII shall not be deemed to preclude the indemnification of any Person who is not specified in this Article VIII but whom the Company has the power or obligation to indemnify under the provisions of the Delaware Act or otherwise.

 

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8.4 Insurance. The Company may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any Person who is or was a Member, Manager or agent of the Company, or is or was serving at the request of the Company as a director, member, manager, officer, partner, venturer, proprietor, trustee, employee, agent or similar functionary of an Entity against any liability asserted against and incurred by such Person in any such capacity or arising out of such Person’s status as such, whether or not the Company would have the power or the obligation to indemnify such Person against such liability under the provisions of this Article VIII.

ARTICLE IX

ALLOCATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

9.1 Allocations. Except as may otherwise be unanimously agreed by the Managers with the consent of the Member, all items of income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit of the Company shall be allocated to the Member in respect of its Common Interest.

9.2 Distributions. The Member shall be entitled to receive, out of the assets of the Company legally available therefor, when, as and if declared by unanimous vote of the Managers, distributions payable in cash in such amounts, if any, as the Managers shall declare. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary contained in this Agreement, the Company shall not be required to make a distribution to the Member on account of its interest in the Company if such distribution would violate Sections 18-607 or 18-804 of the Delaware Act or any other applicable law or any agreement or instrument entered into by the Company in connection with the issuance of the Transition Bonds.

ARTICLE X

ACCOUNTING PERIOD, RECORDS AND REPORTS

10.1 Accounting Period. The Company’s accounting period shall be the Fiscal Year.

10.2 Records, Audits and Reports. At the expense of the Company, the Managers shall maintain records and accounts of all operations and expenditures of the Company.

ARTICLE XI

TAX MATTERS

11.1 Tax Returns and Elections. The Managers or their designees shall cause the preparation and timely filing of all tax returns required to be filed by the Company pursuant to the Code and all other tax returns that the Managers or their designees deem necessary and are required to be filed by the Company. Copies of such returns, or pertinent information therefrom, shall be furnished to the Member as promptly as practicable after filing.

11.2 State, Local or Foreign Income Taxes. In the event state or foreign income taxes are applicable, any references to federal income taxes or to “income taxes” contained herein shall refer to federal, state, local and foreign income taxes. References to the Code or Treasury Regulations shall be deemed to refer to corresponding provisions that may become applicable under state, local or foreign income tax statutes and regulations.

 

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ARTICLE XII

RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFERABILITY

The Common Interest constitutes personal property and shall be freely transferable and assignable in whole but not in part upon registration of such transfer and assignment on the books of the Company in accordance with the procedures established for such purpose by the Managers. Upon registration of the transfer and assignment of the Common Interest on the books of the Company, and without any further action of any Person, the transferee/assignee shall be admitted as a member and become the sole Member of the Company and shall have the rights and powers, and be subject to the restrictions and liabilities, of the Member under this Agreement and the Delaware Act, and following such admission, the transferor/assignor shall cease to be the Member, each as of the date of such registration. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Common Interest may not be transferred unless any conditions thereto specified in agreements or instruments entered into by the Company in connection with the issuance of the Transition Bonds are satisfied.

ARTICLE XIII

DISSOLUTION AND TERMINATION

13.1 Dissolution. The Company shall dissolve upon the occurrence of any of the following events:

(i) when all of the Company’s assets have been sold or otherwise disposed of;

(ii) if the Member so elects by vote or in writing; or

(iii) as otherwise provided under Delaware law.

13.2 Effect of Dissolution. Upon the occurrence of any of the events specified in this Article effecting the dissolution of the Company, the Company shall cease to carry on its business, except insofar as may be necessary for the winding up of its business, but its separate existence shall continue until a Certificate of Cancellation has been issued by the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware.

13.3 Winding Up, Liquidating and Distribution of Assets.

(a) Upon dissolution, an accounting shall be made of the accounts of the Company and of the Company’s assets, liabilities and operations, from the date of the last previous accounting until the date of dissolution. The Managers shall immediately proceed to wind up the affairs of the Company.

 

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(b) If the Company is dissolved and its affairs are to be wound up, the Managers shall (i) sell or otherwise liquidate all of the Company’s assets as promptly as practicable (except to the extent the Managers may determine to distribute any assets in kind to the Member), (ii) allocate any income or loss resulting from such sales to the Member in accordance with this Agreement, (iii) satisfy (whether by payment or making reasonable provision for payment thereof) all liabilities to creditors in the order of priority as provided by law, (iv) discharge all liabilities of the Member (other than liabilities to the Member or for Capital Contributions to the extent unpaid in breach of an obligation to do so), including all costs relating to the dissolution, winding up and liquidation and distribution of assets, (v) discharge any liabilities of the Company to the Member other than on account of their interests in Company capital or profits and (vi) distribute the remaining assets to the Member, either in cash or in kind, as determined by the Managers.

(c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, upon a liquidation of the Company no Member shall have any obligation to make any contribution to the capital of the Company other than any Capital Contributions such Member agreed to make in accordance with this Agreement.

(d) Upon (i) completion of the winding up, liquidation and distribution of the assets, and (ii) the filing of a Certificate of Cancellation as provided in Section 13.4, the Company shall terminate.

(e) The Managers shall comply with any applicable requirements of applicable law pertaining to the winding up of the affairs of the Company and the final distribution of its assets.

13.4 Certificate of Cancellation. When all debts, liabilities and obligations have been paid and discharged or adequate provisions have been made therefor and all of the remaining property and assets have been distributed to the Member, a Certificate of Cancellation shall be executed and filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware, which Certificate shall set forth the information required by the Delaware Act.

13.5 Return of Contribution . Except as provided by law, upon dissolution, the Member shall look solely to the assets of the Company for the return of its Capital Contribution.

ARTICLE XIV

MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

14.1 Notices. Any notice, demand or communication required or permitted to be given by any provision of this Agreement shall be deemed to have been sufficiently given or served for all purposes if delivered personally to the party or to an executive officer of the party to whom the same is directed or if sent by registered or certified mail, postage and charges prepaid, addressed to the Member’s and/or Company’s address, as appropriate, which is set forth in this Agreement. If mailed, any such notice shall be deemed to be delivered two calendar days after being deposited in the United States mail with postage thereon prepaid, addressed and sent as aforesaid.

 

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14.2 Books of Account and Records. Proper and complete records and books of account in which shall be entered fully and accurately all transactions and other matters relating to the Company’s business in such detail and completeness as is customary and usual for businesses of the type engaged in by the Company shall be kept or shall be caused to be kept by the Company. The books and records of the Company shall at all times be maintained at the principal place of business of the Company and shall be open to the reasonable inspection and examination of the Member or its duly authorized representatives during reasonable business hours.

14.3 Application of Delaware Law. This Agreement, and the application of interpretation hereof, shall be governed exclusively by its terms and by the laws of the State of Delaware, and specifically the Delaware Act.

14.4 Waiver of Action for Partition. The Member irrevocably waives, during the term of the Company, any right that the Member may have to maintain any action for partition with respect to the property of the Company.

14.5 Execution of Additional Instruments. The Member hereby agrees to execute such other and further statements of interest and holdings, designations, powers of attorney and other instruments necessary to comply with any laws, rules or regulations.

14.6 Headings. The headings in this Agreement are inserted for convenience only and are in no way intended to describe, interpret, define or limit the scope, extent or intent of this Agreement or any provision hereof.

14.7 Waivers. No waiver of any right under this Agreement shall be effective unless evidenced in writing and executed by the Person entitled to the benefits thereof. The failure of any party to seek redress for violation of or to insist upon the strict performance of any covenant or condition of this Agreement shall not prevent another act or omission, which would have originally constituted a violation, from having the effect of an original violation.

14.8 Rights and Remedies Cumulative. The rights and remedies provided by this Agreement are cumulative and the use of any one right or remedy by any party shall not preclude or waive the right to use any or all other rights or remedies. Said rights and remedies are given in addition to any other rights the parties may have by law, statute, ordinance or otherwise.

14.9 Severability. If any provision of this Agreement or the application thereof to any person or circumstance shall be invalid, illegal or unenforceable to any extent, the remainder of this Agreement and the application thereof shall not be affected and shall be enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law.

14.10 Heirs, Successors and Assigns. Each and all of the covenants, terms, provisions and agreements herein contained shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and, to the extent permitted by this Agreement, their respective heirs, legal representatives, successors and assigns.

 

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14.11 Creditors. None of the provisions of this Agreement shall be for the benefit of or enforceable by any creditors of the Company.

14.12 Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original but all of which shall constitute one and the same instrument.

 

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EXECUTED to be effective as of the date first above written.

 

CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC
By:   /s/ Marc Kilbride         
  Name: Marc Kilbride
  Title:   Vice President and Treasurer

 

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Financing Order

Exhibit 99.5

PUC DOCKET NO. 39809

 

APPLICATION OF CENTERPOINT

ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC,

LLC FOR A FINANCING ORDER

   §
§
§
   PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION

OF TEXAS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

I. DISCUSSION AND STATUTORY OVERVIEW

     5   

II. DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED TRANSACTION

     11   

III. FINDINGS OF FACT

     16   

A. IDENTIFICATION AND PROCEDURE

     16   

1. Identification of Applicant and Application

     16   

2. Procedural History

     18   

3. Notice of Application

     18   

B. QUALIFIED COSTS AND AMOUNT TO BE SECURITIZED

     19   

1. Identification and Amounts

     19   

2. Balance to be Securitized

     20   

3. Issuance Advice Letter

     21   

4. Tangible and Quantifiable Benefit

     22   

5. Present Value Cap

     23   

6. Total Amount of Revenue to be Recovered

     24   

C. STRUCTURE OF THE PROPOSED SECURITIZATION

     25   

1. BondCo

     25   

2.Credit Enhancement and Arrangements to Reduce Interest Rate Risk or Enhance Marketability

     27   

3. Transition Property

     28   

4. Servicer and the Servicing Agreement

     29   

5. Retail Electric Providers

     32   

6. Transition Bonds

     38   

7. Security for Transition Bonds

     39   

a. The General Subaccount

     40   

b. The Capital Subaccount

     40   

c. The Excess Funds Subaccount

     41   

d. Other Subaccounts

     42   

8. General Provisions

     42   

9. Transition Charges—Imposition and Collection, Nonbypassability, and Self-Generation

     43   

10. Allocation of Qualified Costs among Texas Retail Consumers

     45   

11. True-Up of Transition Charges

     47   

12. Interim True-Up

     48   

13. Adjustment to PBRAFs

     49   

14. Additional True-Up Provisions

     50   

15. Designated Representative

     51   

16. Lowest Transition Bond Charges

     52   

D. USE OF PROCEEDS

     54   

E. WAIVER OF P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.35(B)

     54   

IV. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

     55   

 

i


V. ORDERING PARAGRAPHS

     63   

A. APPROVAL

     63   

B. TRANSITION CHARGES

     66   

C. TRANSITION BONDS

     68   

D. SERVICING

     72   

E. RETAIL ELECTRIC PROVIDERS

     75   

F. STRUCTURE OF THE SECURITIZATION

     77   

G. USE OF PROCEEDS

     77   

H. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

     78   

Appendix A     Form of Issuance Advice Letter

Appendix B     Form of Tariff (Schedule TC5)

Appendix C     Projected Ongoing Qualified Costs

 

ii


PUC DOCKET NO. 39809

 

APPLICATION OF CENTERPOINT

ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC,

LLC FOR FINANCING ORDER

   §
§
§
   PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION

OF TEXAS

FINANCING ORDER

This Financing Order addresses the application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC (CenterPoint) under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of the Public Utility Regulatory Act1 (PURA): (1) to securitize the Securitizable Balance (as that term is defined in Ordering Paragraph 2), (2) for approval of the proposed securitization financing structure, (3) for approval of transition charges sufficient to recover principal and interest on the transition bonds plus ongoing qualified costs, and (4) for approval of a tariff to implement the transition charges.

CenterPoint filed its original true-up application with the Commission in March 2004 requesting recovery of $3.7 billion, excluding interest. In December 2004, the Commission issued its true-up order allowing CenterPoint to recover a true-up balance of approximately $2.3 billion, which included interest through August 31, 2004, and provided for certain other adjustments. CenterPoint and a number of other parties appealed the Commission’s decision to a district court in Travis County, Texas (the District Court), the Texas Third Court of Appeals (the Court of Appeals) and, ultimately, to the Texas Supreme Court (the Supreme Court).

On March 18, 2011, the Texas Supreme Court issued its ruling (the Opinion) on the appeal of the final order issued by the Commission in 2004. The Supreme Court affirmed in part and reversed in part the decision of the Commission and remanded the matter to the Commission for further proceedings.

On August 25, 2011, based on the final rulings of the Texas Supreme Court and the final, unappealable rulings of the Court of Appeals, CenterPoint filed a request in Docket No. 39504 seeking to recover an additional $2,040,148,139. On September 6, 2011, CenterPoint amended its application to seek recovery of $2,314,163,161. Various parties in Docket No. 39504 disputed CenterPoint’s right to recover the full amount it sought on remand. On October 5, 2011, the parties submitted for Commission approval a stipulation (the Stipulation) resolving all issues in Docket No. 39504 and providing for CenterPoint to securitize $1,695,000,000 under a form of financing order attached to the Stipulation.

 

1 

TEX. UTIL. CODE ANN. §§ 11.001-66.017 (Vernon 2007), as amended.


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On October 7, 2011, CenterPoint filed in this docket an application for a financing order under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA in which CenterPoint seeks to securitize the Securitizable Balance of $1,695,000,000. As discussed in this Financing Order, the Commission finds that CenterPoint’s application, as modified by this Financing Order, should be approved. The Commission also finds that the securitization approved in this Financing Order meets all applicable requirements of PURA. Accordingly, the Commission (1) approves the securitization of the Securitizable Balance; (2) authorizes, subject to the terms of this Financing Order, the issuance of transition bonds in one or more series in an aggregate amount not to exceed the Securitizable Balance; (3) approves the structure of the proposed securitization financing; (4) approves transition charges in an amount to be calculated as provided in this Financing Order; (5) approves the form of tariff, as provided in this Financing Order, to implement those transition charges; and (6) finds that the potential benefits of (a) floating rate notes and interest rate swaps within the bond structure, (b) the issuance of transition bonds denominated in foreign currencies, and (c) the use of interest rate hedges will not outweigh the costs and the incremental risks to customers; therefore, the Commission concludes that floating-rate notes and interest-rate swaps should not be utilized within the transition bond structure and that CenterPoint should not be authorized to issue transition bonds denominated in a foreign currency or use interest rate hedges.

In order to approve the securitization of the regulatory assets and other true-up amounts, the Commission must consider whether the proposed securitization meets the financial tests set out in PURA Chapter 39, Subchapter G. The three financial tests require that (1) the total revenues collected under the financing order are less than the revenues collected using conventional financing methods (total revenues test),2 (2) the securitization of the regulatory assets and other true-up amounts provides greater tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers than would have been achieved without the issuance of the transition bonds (tangible and quantifiable benefits test),3 and (3) the amount securitized does not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement over the life of the proposed transition bonds associated with the regulatory assets or other true-up amounts sought to be securitized (present value test).4

 

2 

PURA § 39.303.

3 

PURA § 39.301.

4 

PURA § 39.301.


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CenterPoint submitted evidence that the proposed securitization meets each of the financial tests set out in Subchapter G of PURA. The calculations performed by CenterPoint demonstrated that the transaction would pass these tests. Additionally, by authorizing the Securitizable Balance now, the Commission minimizes the risk that incremental costs are imposed on ratepayers as a result of currently pending Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) regulations.

Considering the magnitude of the benefits provided, the Commission declines to determine a particular number for each benefit conferred by the securitization. Accordingly, in quantifying the benefit to ratepayers as a result of this securitization, the Commission refers to the ranges of benefits calculated under CenterPoint’s expected case scenario, in which the transition bonds bear 2.50% weighted-average interest, and its sensitivity scenario, in which the transition bonds are subject to a 7.50% weighted-average interest rate.

CenterPoint’s evidence showed that as a result of the securitization approved by this Financing Order, consumers in CenterPoint’s service area will realize benefits currently estimated to be approximately $647.9 million on a present value basis, using the expected weighted average interest rate, and approximately $5.5 million if interest rates rise to 7.50%.5 In addition, with interest rates increased to 7.50%, the securitization approved by this Financing Order will result in a reduction in the amount of revenues collected by CenterPoint of approximately $9.1 million, on a nominal basis, when compared to the amount that would have been collected under CTCs which reflects the conventional financing methods that would otherwise be used to recover the costs.6 In the expected case, the securitization will result in a reduction in the amount of revenues collected by CenterPoint of approximately $775.6 million.7

 

5 

See id. at Schedule 1B.

6 

See id. at Schedule 1B.

7 

See id. at Schedule 1A.


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The Commission concludes that the benefits for consumers set forth in CenterPoint’s evidence are fully indicative of the benefits that consumers will realize from the securitization approved in this Financing Order; however, in the issuance advice letter, CenterPoint will be required to update the benefit analysis to verify that the final structure of the securitization satisfies the statutory financial tests.8

CenterPoint provided a general description of the proposed transaction structure in its application and in the testimony and exhibits submitted in support of its application. The proposed transaction structure does not contain every relevant detail and, in certain places, uses only approximations of certain costs and requirements. The final transaction structure will depend, in part, upon the requirements of the nationally-recognized credit rating agencies that are asked to rate the transition bonds and, in part, upon the market conditions that exist at the time the transition bonds are taken to the market.

While the Commission recognizes the need for some degree of flexibility with regard to the final details of the securitization transaction approved in this Financing Order, its primary focus is on the statutory requirements—the most important of which is to ensure that securitization results in tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers—that must be met prior to issuing a financing order.

In view of these obligations, the Commission has established certain criteria in this Financing Order that must be met in order for the approvals and authorizations granted in this Financing Order to become effective. This Financing Order grants authority to issue transition bonds and to impose, collect, and receive transition charges only if the final structure of the securitization transaction complies in all material respects with these criteria. The authority and approval granted in this Financing Order is effective only upon CenterPoint filing with the Commission an issuance advice letter demonstrating compliance with the provisions of this Financing Order. If market conditions make it desirable to issue the transition bonds in more than one series, then the authority and approval granted in this Financing Order is effective as to each issuance upon, but only upon, CenterPoint filing with the Commission a separate issuance advice letter for that issuance demonstrating compliance of that issuance with the provisions of the Financing Order.

 

8 

The foregoing quantifications of economic benefits reflect a capital contribution in the amount of 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds, and assume that no risk retention by CenterPoint is mandated by currently pending SEC regulations when finalized. The authorizations included in CenterPoint’s application and addressed herein do reflect the potential for a 5% investment by CenterPoint if so mandated by the SEC pursuant to regulations effective prior to the issuance of the transition bonds. By authorizing the Securitizable Balance now, the Commission minimizes this potential, because the pending proposals are currently not expected to be effective prior to the issuance of the transition bonds.


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I. Discussion and Statutory Overview

The Texas Legislature amended PURA in 1999 to provide for competition in the provision of retail electric service.9 To facilitate the transition to a competitive environment, electric utilities are authorized to undertake securitization financing of qualified costs.10 The Legislature provided this option for recovering qualified costs based on the conclusion that securitized financing will result in lower carrying costs for utility assets relative to the costs that would be incurred using conventional utility financing methods. As a precondition to the use of securitization, the Legislature required that the utility demonstrate that ratepayers would receive tangible and quantifiable benefits as a result of securitization and that this Commission make a specific finding that such benefits exist before issuing a financing order. Consequently, a basic purpose of securitization financing—the recovery of an electric utility’s qualified costs—is conditioned upon the other basic purpose—providing economic benefits to consumers of electricity in this state.11

To securitize an electric utility’s qualified costs, the Commission may authorize the issuance of securities known as transition bonds. Transition bonds are evidences of indebtedness or ownership that are issued under a financing order, are limited to a term of not longer than 15 years, and are secured by or payable from transition property.12 The net proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds must be used to reduce the amount of a utility’s recoverable regulatory assets or other true-up amounts through the refinancing or retirement of the utility’s debt or equity. If transition bonds are approved and issued, retail electric consumers must pay the principal, interest, and related charges of the transition bonds through transition charges. Transition charges are nonbypassable charges that will be paid as a component of the monthly charge for electric service. Transition charges must be approved by the Commission pursuant to a financing order.13

 

9 

See Act of May 27, 1999, 76th Leg., R.S., ch. 405, 1999 TEX. GEN. LAWS 2543 (codified primarily at TEX. UTIL. CODE Chapters 39, 40, and 41).

10 

See PURA §§ 39.201, 39.301-39.303.

11 

Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for Financing Order, Docket No. 34448, Financing Order at 5 (Sept. 18, 2007).

12 

See PURA § 39.302(6).

13 

See PURA § 39.302(7).


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The Commission may adopt a financing order only if it finds that the total amount of revenues to be collected under the financing order is less than the revenue requirement that would be recovered using conventional financing methods and that the financing order is consistent with the standards of PURA § 39.301. The Commission must ensure that the net proceeds of transition bonds may be used only for the purpose of reducing the amount of recoverable costs through the refinancing or retirement of utility debt or equity. In addition, the Commission must ensure that (1) securitization provides tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers greater than would have been achieved absent the issuance of the transition bonds, and (2) the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of a financing order. Finally, the amount securitized may not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement over the life of the proposed transition bonds associated with the amounts sought to be securitized, and the present value calculation must use a discount rate equal to the proposed interest rate on the transition bonds. These statutory requirements are designed to ensure that securitization will provide real benefits to consumers.14

The essential finding by the Commission that is needed to issue a financing order is that ratepayers will receive tangible and quantifiable benefits as a result of securitization. This finding can only be made upon a showing of economic benefits to ratepayers through an economic analysis. An economic analysis is necessary to recognize the time value of money in evaluating whether and the extent to which benefits accrue from securitization. Moreover, an economic analysis recognizes the concept that the timing of a payment can be as important as the magnitude of a payment in determining the value of the payment. Thus, an analysis showing an economic benefit is necessary to quantify a tangible benefit to ratepayers.

 

14 

See PURA § 39.301.


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Economic benefits also depend upon a favorable financial market—one in which transition bonds may be sold at an interest rate lower than the carrying costs of the assets being securitized. The precise interest rate at which transition bonds can be sold in a future market, however, is not known today. Nevertheless, benefits can be calculated based upon certain known facts (e.g. the amount of assets to be securitized and the cost of the alternative to securitization) and assumptions (e.g. the interest rate of the transition bonds, the term of the transition bonds and the amount of other qualified costs). By analyzing the proposed securitization based upon those facts and assumptions, a determination can be made as to whether tangible and quantifiable benefits result. To ensure that benefits are realized, the securitization transaction must conform to the structure ordered by the Commission and an issuance advice letter must be presented to the Commission immediately prior to issuance of the transition bonds demonstrating that the actual structure and costs of the transition bonds will provide tangible and quantifiable benefits. The cost-benefit analysis contained in the issuance advice letter must reflect the actual structure of the transition bonds.

CenterPoint’s financial analysis shows that securitizing the Securitizable Balance will produce an economic benefit to ratepayers of approximately $647.9 million on a present value basis using a 2.50% weighted average interest rate.15 CenterPoint’s sensitivity analysis shows economic benefits even if the bond market is unfavorable and fourteen year transition bonds are issued at a weighted-average interest rate of 7.50%, which is the maximum weighted-average interest rate allowed by this Financing Order. Assuming that the transition bonds are, as CenterPoint projected in its financial analysis, subject to a 7.50% weighted-average annual interest rate, the benefit will be approximately $5.5 million on a present-value basis.16 The economic benefit to ratepayers will be even larger if a more favorable market allows the transition bonds to be issued at a lower interest rate.

To issue a financing order, PURA also requires that the Commission find that the total amount of revenues collected under the financing order will be less than would otherwise have been collected under conventional financing methods. The analysis in the application demonstrates that revenues will be reduced by approximately $9.1 million on a nominal basis

 

15 

CenterPoint’s financial analysis and the associated numbers set forth in this Financing Order assume that only one series of transition bonds are issued.

16 

See id. at Schedule 1A.


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under this Financing Order compared to the amount that would be recovered under conventional financing methods, assuming fourteen year transition bonds are issued at a 7.50% weighted-average interest rate.17 Under the expected scenario in which fourteen year transition bonds are issued at a 2.50% weighted-average annual interest rate, securitization saves ratepayers approximately $775.6 million in nominal revenue.18 If transition bonds are issued in a more favorable market, or transition bonds with a maximum expected life less than fourteen years are issued, this reduction in revenues will be even larger.

Before the transition bonds may be issued, CenterPoint must submit to the Commission an issuance advice letter in which it demonstrates, based upon the actual market conditions at the time of pricing, that the proposed structure and pricing of the transition bonds will provide real economic benefits to retail consumers and comply with the statutory financial tests and terms of this Financing Order. As part of this submission, CenterPoint must also certify to the Commission that the structure and pricing of the transition bonds results in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions at the time of pricing and the terms of this Financing Order. The form of certification that must be submitted by CenterPoint is set out in Appendix A to this Financing Order. The Commission, by order, may stop the issuance of the transition bonds authorized by this Financing Order if CenterPoint fails to make this demonstration or certification. Should CenterPoint issue more than one series of transition bonds, CenterPoint shall demonstrate in the issuance advice letter for each series that the securitization will still provide real economic benefits to retail consumers and comply with the statutory financial tests and terms of this Financing Order.

PURA requires that transition charges be charged for the use or availability of electric services to recover all qualified costs.19 Transition charges can be recovered over a period that does not exceed 15 years.20 The Commission concludes that this prevents the collection of transition charges from retail consumers for services rendered after the 15-year period but does not prohibit recovery of transition charges for service rendered during the 15-year period but not actually collected until after the 15-year period.

 

 

17 

See id. at Schedule 1B.

18 

See id. at Schedule 1A.

19 

See PURA § 39.302(7).

20 

See PURA § 39.303(b).


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Transition charges will be collected by an electric utility, its successors, an assignee, or other collection agents as provided for in this Financing Order to recover associated qualified costs for which transition bonds are issued and costs resulting from such issuance.21 The rights to impose, collect, and receive transition charges (including all other rights of an electric utility under the financing order) are only contract rights until such rights (which may relate to all or, if more than one series of transition bonds are issued due to market conditions, a portion of the Securitizable Balance) are first transferred to an assignee or pledged in connection with the issuance of transition bonds. Upon the transfer or pledge of those rights, they become transition property and, as such, are afforded certain statutory protections to ensure that the charges are available for bond retirement.22

This Financing Order contains terms, as permitted under PURA § 39.306, ensuring that the imposition and collection of transition charges authorized herein will be nonbypassable.23 It also includes a mechanism requiring that transition charges be reviewed and adjusted at least annually, within 45 days of the anniversary date of the issuance of the transition bonds, to correct any overcollections or undercollections during the preceding 12 months and to ensure the expected recovery of amounts sufficient to timely provide all payments of debt service and other required amounts and charges in connection with the transition bonds.24 In addition to the required annual reviews, more frequent reviews are allowed to ensure that the amount of the transition charges matches the funding requirements approved in this Financing Order. These provisions will help to ensure that the amount of transition charges paid by retail consumers is equal to, but does not exceed, the amount necessary to cover the costs of this securitization. The Financing Order also reflects other statutory benefits and assurances that are necessary for securitization.

The State of Texas has pledged, for the benefit and protection of financing parties and electric utilities, that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of transition property, or, except for the true-up expressly allowed by law, reduce, alter, or impair the transition charges to be imposed, collected and remitted to financing parties, until the principal, interest and premium, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the related transition bonds have been paid and performed in full.25

 

21 

See PURA § 39.302(7).

22 

See PURA § 39.304(b).

23 

See PURA § 39.306.

24 

See PURA § 39.307.

25 

See PURA § 39.310.


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Transition property (whether associated with a single bond series covering the entire Securitizable Balance or with one of multiple bond series covering only a portion of the Securitizable Balance) constitutes a present property right for purposes of contracts concerning the sale or pledge of property and the property will continue to exist for the duration of the pledge of the State of Texas as described in the preceding paragraph.26 In addition, the interests of an assignee or pledgee in transition property (as well as the revenues and collections arising from the property) are not subject to setoff, counterclaim, surcharge, or defense by the electric utility or any other person or in connection with the bankruptcy of the electric utility or any other entity.27 Further, transactions involving the transfer and ownership of transition property and the receipt of transition charges are exempt from state and local income, sales, franchise, gross receipts, and other taxes or similar charges.28 The creation, granting, perfection, and enforcement of liens and security interests in transition property are governed by PURA § 39.309 and not by the Texas Business and Commerce Code.29

The Commission may, at the request of an electric utility, adopt a financing order providing for the retiring and refunding of transition bonds only upon making a finding that the future transition charges required to service the new transition bonds, including transaction costs, will be less than the future transition charges required to service the transition bonds being retired or refunded.30 CenterPoint has not requested, and this Financing Order does not grant, any authority to refinance transition bonds authorized by this Financing Order. This Financing Order does not preclude CenterPoint from filing a request for a financing order to retire or refund transition bonds approved in this Financing Order upon a showing that the statutory criteria in PURA § 39.303(g) are met.31

 

26 

See PURA § 39.304(b).

27 

See PURA § 39.305.

28 

See PURA § 39.311.

29 

See PURA § 39.309(a).

30 

See PURA § 39.303(g).

31 

See PURA § 39.303(g).


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To facilitate compliance and consistency with applicable statutory provisions, this Financing Order adopts the definitions in PURA § 39.302.

II. Description of Proposed Transaction

A description of the transaction proposed by CenterPoint is contained in its application and the filing package submitted as part of the application. A brief summary of the proposed transaction is provided in this section. A more detailed description is included in the Findings of Fact, Section III.C, titled “Structure of the Proposed Securitization” and in the application and filing package submitted as part of the application.

To facilitate the proposed securitization, CenterPoint proposed that (depending on whether more than one series of transition bonds are issued) one or more special purpose entity transition bond companies (each referred to as BondCo) be created to which will be transferred the rights to impose, collect, and receive transition charges along with the other rights arising pursuant to this Financing Order, in each case allocable to a series of transition bonds it would issue. Upon transfer (in connection with the issuance of the particular series of transition bonds), these rights will become transition property as provided by PURA § 39.304. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then the transition property transferred as a result of each issuance shall be only those rights associated with that portion of the Securitizable Balance securitized by such issuance. The rights to impose, collect and receive transition charges along with the other rights arising pursuant to this Financing Order as they relate to any portion of the Securitizable Balance that remains unsecuritized shall remain with CenterPoint and shall not become transition property until transferred to a BondCo in connection with a subsequent issuance of transition bonds.

CenterPoint would create a separate BondCo for the issuance of a particular series of the transition bonds; and the rights, obligations, structure and restrictions described in this Financing Order with respect to “BondCo” would be applicable to each such purchaser of transition


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property to the extent of the transition property transferred and sold to it and the transition bonds issued by it. BondCo will issue transition bonds and will transfer the net proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds to CenterPoint in consideration for the transfer of the corresponding transition property. BondCo will be organized and managed in a manner designed to achieve the objective of maintaining BondCo as a bankruptcy-remote entity that would not be affected by the bankruptcy of CenterPoint or any other affiliates of CenterPoint or any of their respective successors. In addition, BondCo will have at least one independent manager whose approval will be required for certain major actions or organizational changes by BondCo.

The transition bonds will be issued pursuant to an indenture and administered by an indenture trustee.32 The transition bonds will be secured by and payable solely out of the corresponding transition property created pursuant to this Financing Order and other collateral described in CenterPoint’s application. That collateral will be pledged to the indenture trustee for the benefit of the holders of the transition bonds and to secure payment of certain qualified costs.

The servicer of the transition bonds will collect the transition charges and remit those amounts to the indenture trustee on behalf of BondCo. The servicer will be responsible for filing any required or allowed true-ups of the transition charges. If the servicer defaults on its obligations under the servicing agreement, the indenture trustee may appoint a successor servicer. CenterPoint will act as the initial servicer for the transition bonds.

Retail electric providers (REPs) will be required to meet certain financial standards to collect transition charges under this Financing Order. These standards are identical to those applicable to REPs collecting transition charges under CenterPoint’s prior securitizations. If a REP qualifies to collect transition charges, the servicer will bill to and collect from the REP the transition charges attributable to the REP’s customers. The REP in turn will bill to and collect from its retail customers the transition charges attributable to them. If any REP fails to qualify to collect transition charges or defaults in the remittance of those charges to the servicer of the transition bonds, another entity can assume responsibility for collection of the transition charges from the REP’s retail customers.

 

32 

If more than one series of transition bonds is issued, each series will be issued pursuant to a separate indenture and be subject to its own set of basic agreements (e.g., Transition Property Sale Agreement, Transition Property Servicing Agreement, Administration Agreement). For purposes of this Financing Order the description of the transition bonds would apply to each series of transition bonds.


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Transition charges will be calculated to ensure the collection of an amount sufficient to service the principal, interest, and related charges for the transition bonds and in a manner that allocates this amount to the various classes of retail consumers as provided in PURA and Commission orders. The transition charges will be calculated pursuant to the method described in Schedule TC5, a pro forma copy of which is contained in Appendix B.33 In addition to the annual true-up required by PURA § 39.307, periodic true-ups may be performed as necessary to ensure that the amount collected from transition charges is sufficient to service the transition bonds. In addition, an adjustment to the transition charge class allocations will be allowed under certain circumstances. The methodology for making true-ups and allocation adjustments and the circumstances under which each shall be made are described in pro-forma Schedule TC5, attached to this Financing Order as Appendix B. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then each series will be subject to a separate true up pursuant to PURA and this Financing Order, provided, however, that more than one series may be trued-up in a single proceeding.

The Commission determines that CenterPoint’s proposed level transition charge structure should be utilized. This structure, which was used in each of CenterPoint’s prior securitizations, is designed to produce essentially level residential rates over the recovery period if (1) the actual year-to-year changes in customers’ loads match the changes forecasted at the time the transition bonds are structured and (2) annual loads and costs match those used to develop each transition charge true-up. If the transition bonds are issued in more than one series, the transition charges for each series must provide a level transition charge structure.

All of the bonds issued in prior Texas securitizations have been issued with a fixed interest rate. A fixed interest rate is necessary to assure that consumers benefit from the securitization. The benefits of fixed rates can be achieved through a combination of floating rate bonds and interest rate swaps. Although use of floating rate bonds and interest rate swaps were actively considered in prior transactions, no floating rate bonds have ever been issued in Texas. Based on the Commission’s experience in prior securitizations, while there are some potential

 

33 

If more than one series of transition bonds is issued, each series will have a separately numbered Schedule, but each will be in the form of Schedule TC5 with such changes as are necessary to reflect the fact that the transition bonds will be issued in more than one series.


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purchasers of transition bonds that are primarily interested in holding floating rate obligations, it is not necessary to issue floating rate bonds to attract those purchasers. CenterPoint’s own experience with prior securitizations was that, for investors seeking floating rate bonds, it was more efficient to issue fixed rate bonds and allow the purchaser of the bonds to convert them to floating rates through swaps entered into by the purchaser outside the transaction. Such a conversion, in fact, was done by at least one large purchaser of bonds in two prior securitizations.

In the Commission’s last five financing orders, the Commission concluded that the possible benefit of floating rate bonds did not outweigh the cost of preparing for and executing swaps and the potential risks swaps would impose on consumers.34 As a result, the financing orders in those proceedings prohibited use of swaps and thus, effectively, issuance of floating rate bonds. We reach the same conclusion in this proceeding and will prohibit CenterPoint from issuing floating rate bonds and employing related swaps.

In the 2005 CenterPoint securitization additional costs were incurred to facilitate the issuance of transition bonds denominated in foreign currencies. Ultimately, CenterPoint and the Commission’s financial advisor concluded that CenterPoint should not issue any transition bonds denominated in foreign currencies. Denominating bonds in foreign currency would create currency risks for consumers. While those risks can be reduced through use of derivatives, the derivatives will themselves create risk for consumers.

Interest rate hedges can also be used to lock in interest rates or limit the variability of interest rates prior to issuance of the transition bonds; however, such hedges constitute a bet on the direction of future market changes, which is neither necessary nor appropriate. Hedges also create additional costs and risks if, for any reason, the transition bonds are not issued or the amount issued is different from the principal amount hedged. As a result, this financing order prohibits CenterPoint from issuing transition bonds denominated in foreign currencies and from entering into interest rate hedges.

 

34 

Application of AEP Texas Central Company for a Financing Order, Docket No. 32475 Financing Order at 14-15 (Jun. 21, 2006); Application of Entergy Gulf States, Inc. for a Financing Order, Docket No. 33586 Financing Order at 2 (Apr. 2, 2007); Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for Financing Order, Docket No. 34448, Financing Order at 2 (Sept. 18, 2007); Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for a Financing Order, Docket No. 37200, Financing Order at 2 (Aug. 27, 2009); Application of Entergy Texas, Inc. for Financing Order, Docket No. 37247, Financing Order at 2 (Sept. 11, 2009).


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CenterPoint requested approval of transition charges sufficient to recover the principal and interest on the transition bonds plus ongoing qualified costs as described in this Financing Order and Appendix C attached hereto. CenterPoint requests that the transition charges be recovered from REPs and through them from retail consumers and that the amount of the transition charges be calculated based upon the allocation methodology and billing determinants specified in Schedule TC5. CenterPoint also requests that certain standards related to the billing and collection of transition charges be applied to REPs, as specified in Schedule TC5. To implement the transition charges and billing and collection requirements, CenterPoint requests approval of Schedule TC5.

CenterPoint requested authority to securitize and to cause the issuance of one or more series of transition bonds in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed the Securitizable Balance. Pursuant to the Stipulation, CenterPoint will be responsible for costs incurred in issuing the transition bonds, including without limitation, underwriting discount. The costs of issuance may be paid out of the proceeds from the transition bonds. CenterPoint requested in its application that its ongoing costs of maintaining the transition bonds be recovered respectively through the transition bonds and transition charges approved in this proceeding. CenterPoint estimated that its ongoing qualified costs of servicing the transition bonds would total approximately $1.2 million per year for each year of the term of the transition bonds if CenterPoint was the servicer and up to approximately $10.5 million per year if a third party was the servicer.35 The estimates are based on assumptions regarding a number of variables that will directly affect the level of ongoing qualified costs including (1) only one series of transition bonds will be issued and (2) the financing order will not permit use of interest rate or foreign currency hedges, floating rate bonds, or transition bonds denominated in foreign currencies.

The Commission’s analysis of CenterPoint’s request begins with the finding that certain of the ongoing costs that CenterPoint proposes to recover directly through transition charges should be capped. This finding accords with CenterPoint’s prior securitizations, and other securitization proceedings in this state. CenterPoint’s case does not present sufficient distinctions to merit deviating from this practice.

 

35 

Direct Testimony of Walter L. Fitzgerald at 18 (October 7, 2011); Figures WLF-1, Schedule 5.


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While PURA includes any costs of retiring and refunding the electric utility’s existing debt and equity securities in connection with the issuance of transition bonds as “qualified costs,” CenterPoint is not seeking to include any such costs as qualified costs covered by this Financing Order. However, any costs associated with retiring or refunding existing debt securities of CenterPoint with the proceeds from the issuance of the transition bonds shall be treated as a regulatory asset earning interest at the same rate as the weighted average interest rate on the transition bonds (and if more than one series of transition bonds is issued, then the weighted average interest rate of the transition bonds of all series authorized by this Financing Order) and be considered for recovery in CenterPoint’s next regular rate proceeding.

As long as CenterPoint serves as the servicer or administrator, respectively, CenterPoint is authorized to recover, directly through the transition charges, annual servicing fees equal to 0.05% of the initial principal amount of each series of transition bonds issued pursuant to this Financing Order and annual administrative fees of $100,000 for each BondCo plus reimbursable third party costs incurred by it in its role as administrator. Ongoing qualified costs include an annual return at CenterPoint’s then-authorized equity return on the amount, if any, of invested capital in excess of 0.5% of the principal amount of each series of transition bonds as discussed in Findings of Fact 30 and 60. Ongoing qualified costs, other than the servicer and administrative fees charged by CenterPoint when it is the servicer and administrator, are not capped. They are, however, estimated on Appendix C. The estimated ongoing qualified costs should be updated in the issuance advice letter to reflect more current information then available to CenterPoint. In accordance with the terms of this Financing Order and subject to the approval of the indenture trustee, the Commission will permit a successor servicer to CenterPoint to recover a higher servicer fee if CenterPoint ceases to service the transition property.

III. Findings of Fact

A. Identification and Procedure

1. Identification of Applicant and Application

 

1. CenterPoint is a transmission and distribution utility which owns and operates for compensation an extensive transmission and distribution network to provide electric service in the portion of this state which is included in ERCOT. CenterPoint is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of CenterPoint Energy, Inc. (CenterPoint Energy).


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2. On March 31, 2004, in Docket No. 29526, CenterPoint, Texas Genco, LP and Reliant Energy Retail Services, LLC (RERS) jointly filed an application to determine the true-up balance CenterPoint is entitled to recover in connection with the transition from a regulated to a competitive electricity market in ERCOT as required under PURA § 39.262. After contested hearings, in an order issued on November 23, 2004, the Commission determined that CenterPoint was entitled to recover an aggregate balance of $2,300,888,665 plus the excess mitigation credits provided and interest accrued after August 31, 2004.

 

3. On March 16, 2005, the Commission issued a financing order in Docket No. 30485 authorizing CenterPoint to securitize a portion of the balance determined in Docket No. 29526. CenterPoint completed that securitization on December 16, 2005.

 

4. On July 14, 2005, the Commission issued its final order on Docket No. 30706 authorizing CenterPoint to implement CTCs to recover the portion of the Docket No. 29526 balance that was not securitized. CenterPoint implemented the CTC effective August 1, 2005.

 

5.

During the 2007 legislative session, the legislature amended PURA to permit securitization of the entire true-up balance.36 As a result, and pursuant to the Commission’s September 18, 2007 financing order in Docket No. 34448, CenterPoint securitized the approximately $500 million portion of the true up balance initially being recovered through CTCs.

 

6. CenterPoint originally filed its true-up application with the Commission requesting recovery of $3.7 billion, excluding interest. Following the December 2004 Commission order allowing CenterPoint to recover a true-up balance of approximately $2.3 billion, CenterPoint and a number of other parties appealed the Commission’s decision to the District Court, to the Court of Appeals and, ultimately, to the Supreme Court. On March

 

 

36 

Act of May 29, 2007, H.B. 624 §§ 2-4, 80th Leg., R.S. (to be codified as an amendment to TEX. UTIL. CODE. ANN. §§ 39.301-39.303).


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18, 2011, the Supreme Court issued its ruling on the appeal of the true-up order issued in 2004. The Supreme Court affirmed in part and reversed in part the Commission’s decision and remanded the matter to the Commission for further proceedings. On October 5, 2011, in the Docket No. 39504 remand proceeding, certain parties submitted for Commission approval the Stipulation resolving all issues on remand and providing for CenterPoint to securitize $1,695,000,000 under the form of financing order attached to the Stipulation. The Commission subsequently approved the Stipulation.

2. Procedural History

 

7. On October 7, 2011, CenterPoint filed in this docket an application for a financing order under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA in which CenterPoint seeks to securitize the Securitizable Balance of $1,695,000,000. CenterPoint provided a general description of the proposed transaction structure in its application and in the testimony and exhibits submitted in support of its application.

 

8. The following parties intervened in this proceeding and were granted party status: [TO COME].

 

9. CenterPoint’s application in this proceeding is consistent with the Stipulation approved by the Commission in Docket No. 39504.

 

10. No party opposes CenterPoint’s application in this docket for a financing order.

 

11. [Reserved.]

 

12. [Reserved.]

3. Notice of Application

 

13. Notice of CenterPoint’s application was provided through publication once a week for two consecutive weeks in newspapers having general circulation in CenterPoint’s service area, contemporaneously with the filing of the application. In addition, CenterPoint provided individual notice to the governing bodies of all Texas incorporated municipalities that have retained original jurisdiction over CenterPoint and to each retail electric provider listed on the Commission website. Notice was also provided to all parties in Docket Nos. 29526, 30485, 30706, 34448, and 39504. Proof of publication was submitted in the form of publishers’ affidavits and verification of the mailing of individual notices and of the provision of notice to the municipalities.


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B. Qualified Costs and Amount to be Securitized

1. Identification and Amounts

 

14.

Qualified costs are defined in PURA to include 100% of an electric utility’s regulatory assets and 75% of its recoverable costs determined by the Commission under PURA § 39.201 and any remaining amounts determined under PURA § 39.262 together with the costs of issuing, supporting, and servicing transition bonds and any costs of retiring and refunding the electric utility’s existing debt and equity securities in connection with the issuance of transition bonds. Qualified costs also include the costs to the Commission of acquiring professional services for the purpose of evaluating proposed securitization transactions.37

 

     Other qualified costs include the costs of issuing, supporting, and servicing the transition bonds and any costs associated with retiring and refunding existing debt and equity securities with the proceeds from the transition bonds. Certain ongoing costs relating to the transition bonds may not be known until such costs are incurred. CenterPoint shall demonstrate in the issuance advice letter for each series of transition bonds that the securitization will still provide real economic benefits to retail consumers and comply with the statutory financial tests and terms of this Financing Order.

 

15. While PURA includes any costs of retiring and refunding the electric utility’s existing debt and equity securities in connection with the issuance of transition bonds as “qualified costs”, CenterPoint is not seeking to include any such costs as qualified costs covered by this Financing Order. However, any costs associated with retiring or refunding existing debt securities of CenterPoint with the proceeds from the issuance of the transition bonds shall be treated as a regulatory asset earning interest at the same rate as the weighted average interest rate on the transition bonds (and if more than one series of transition bonds is issued, then the weighted average interest rate of the transition bonds of all series authorized by this Financing Order) and be considered for recovery in CenterPoint’s next regular rate proceeding.

 

 

37 

See PURA § 39.302(4).


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16. [Reserved.]

2. Balance to be Securitized

 

17. CenterPoint should be authorized to cause transition bonds to be issued in one or more series in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed the Securitizable Balance. Pursuant to the Stipulation, CenterPoint will be responsible for costs of issuance, which may be paid out of proceeds of the transition bonds. It is appropriate to recover the annual ongoing servicing fees and the annual fixed operating costs directly through transition charges. It is also appropriate to impose additional limits to ensure that the ongoing annual servicing fees incurred when CenterPoint serves as servicer do not exceed 0.05% of the initial principal balance of the transition bonds and that administrative fees incurred when CenterPoint is the administrator do not exceed $100,000 per year for each BondCo plus reimbursable third party costs as shown in Appendix C. Consistent with CenterPoint’s prior securitizations, the annual servicing fee payable to any other servicer not affiliated with CenterPoint will not exceed 0.6% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds unless such higher rate is approved by the Commission. Ongoing costs other than the servicer and administrative fees charged by CenterPoint when it serves as servicer and administrator will not be capped but are estimated in Appendix C to this Financing Order. The servicing and administrative fees collected by CenterPoint, or any affiliate of CenterPoint, acting as either servicer or administrator under the servicing agreement or administration agreement, shall be included as a revenue credit and reduce revenue requirements in each subsequent CenterPoint base rate case. The expenses incurred by CenterPoint or such affiliate to perform obligations under the servicing agreement and administration agreement should be included as a cost of service in each CenterPoint base rate case.


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18. The proposed recovery of the sum described in Finding of Fact 17 through issuance of transition bonds as provided in this Financing Order should be approved because ratepayers will receive tangible and quantifiable benefits as a result of the securitization.

3. Issuance Advice Letter

 

19. Because the actual structure and pricing of the transition bonds will not be known at the time this Financing Order is issued, following determination of the final terms of the transition bonds and prior to issuance of the transition bonds, CenterPoint will file with the Commission for each series of transition bonds issued, and no later than the end of the first business day after the pricing date for that series of transition bonds, an issuance advice letter. The issuance advice letter for each series of transition bonds will report the actual dollar amount of the initial transition charges and other information specific to the transition bonds to be issued. CenterPoint’s issuance advice letter for each series of transition bonds shall update the benefit analysis to verify that the final amount securitized by that series satisfies the statutory financial tests. All amounts that require computation will be computed using the mathematical formulas contained in the form of the issuance advice letter in Appendix A to this Financing Order and Schedule TC5. The initial transition charges and the final terms of the transition bonds set forth in the issuance advice letter shall become effective on the date of issuance of the applicable series of transition bonds unless prior to noon on the fourth business day after pricing the Commission issues an order finding that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of PURA and this Financing Order.

 

20. CenterPoint will submit a draft issuance advice letter to the Commission Staff for review not later than two weeks prior to the expected date of commencement of marketing a series of the transition bonds. Within one week after receipt of the draft issuance advice letter, Commission Staff will provide CenterPoint comments and recommendations regarding the adequacy of the information provided.

 

21.

The issuance advice letter for a series of transition bonds shall be submitted to the Commission not later than the end of the first business day after the pricing of such series of transition bonds. Commission Staff may request such revisions of the issuance advice


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letter as may be necessary to assure the accuracy of the calculations and that the requirements of PURA and of this Financing Order have been met. The initial transition charges and the final terms of the transition bonds set forth in the issuance advice letter shall become effective on the date of issuance of the transition bonds (which shall not occur prior to the fifth business day after pricing) unless prior to noon on the fourth business day after pricing the Commission issues an order finding that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of PURA and the Financing Order.

 

22. The completion and filing of an issuance advice letter in the form of the issuance advice letter attached as Appendix A, including the certification from CenterPoint discussed in Findings of Fact 23 and 102, is necessary to ensure that any securitization actually undertaken by CenterPoint complies with the terms of this Financing Order.

 

23. The certification statement contained in CenterPoint’s certification letter shall be worded precisely as the statement in the form of the issuance advice letter approved by the Commission. Other aspects of the certification letter may be modified to describe the particulars of the transition bonds and the actions that were taken during the transaction.

4. Tangible and Quantifiable Benefit

 

24. The statutory requirement in PURA § 39.301 that directs the Commission to ensure that securitization provides tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers greater than would be achieved absent the issuance of transition bonds can only be determined using an economic analysis to account for the time value of money. An analysis that compares in the aggregate over the expected life of the transition bonds the present value of the revenue requirement associated with recovery of the Securitizable Balance through application of competition transition charges, which is the method that would be used to recover any portion of the balance not securitized and is reflective of conventional utility financing, with the present value of the revenue required under securitization is an appropriate economic analysis to demonstrate whether securitization provides economic benefits to ratepayers.


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25. The financial analysis presented by CenterPoint indicates that securitization of the Securitizable Balance and other qualified costs as requested by CenterPoint is expected to result in approximately $5.5 million of tangible and quantifiable economic benefits to ratepayers on a present-value basis if the transition bonds are issued at the maximum weighted-average interest rate of 7.50% allowed by this Financing Order and with a fourteen-year expected life. Using the projected weighted-average interest rate of 2.50% and a fourteen-year expected life, the benefits of securitization would be approximately $647.9 million. These estimates assume that actual ongoing qualified costs will be as shown on Appendix C to this Financing Order. The benefits for consumers set forth in CenterPoint’s evidence are fully indicative of the benefits consumers will realize from the securitization approved in this Financing Order; however, the actual benefit to ratepayers will depend upon market conditions on the date of pricing of the transition bonds and the actual scheduled maturity of the transition bonds. CenterPoint will be required to provide an updated tangible and quantifiable benefit analysis in its issuance advice letter to verify that this statutory test is met.

5. Present Value Cap

 

26.

The amount securitized may not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement over the life of the proposed transition bonds associated with conventional (i.e., non-securitized) recovery of the authorized amounts where the present value analysis uses a discount rate equal to the proposed interest rate on the transition bonds.38 The analysis presented by CenterPoint demonstrates that the amount CenterPoint seeks to securitize does not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement associated with the securitized amount over the expected life of the transition bonds. The present value of the revenue requirement (calculated using a weighted average rate of 7.50% and an expected life of fourteen years which is consistent with prior CenterPoint securitizations) is approximately $5.5 million. Using the projected weighted average interest rate of 2.50%, the benefits of securitization would be even larger. Using a 2.50% weighted average interest rate, the present value of the revenue requirements would be approximately $647.9 million. These estimates assume the transition bonds will be issued with maximum expected lives of fourteen years and that actual ongoing qualified costs will be as estimated on Appendix C to this Financing Order. The benefits for consumers set forth in CenterPoint’s evidence are fully indicative of the benefits consumers will realize from the securitization approved in this Financing Order; however, CenterPoint will be required to provide an updated present value analysis in its issuance advice letter to verify that this statutory test is met.

 

38 

See PURA § 39.301.


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27. The amount of qualified costs to be securitized does not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement over the maximum expected life of the transition bonds associated with the amount approved to be securitized in this Financing Order. The present value analysis uses a discount rate equal to the maximum allowed weighted average interest rate on the transition bonds on an annual basis.

6. Total Amount of Revenue to be Recovered

 

28.

The Commission is required to find that the total amount of revenues to be collected under this Financing Order will be less than the revenue requirement that would be recovered over the remaining life of the amounts that are securitized under this Financing Order, using conventional financing methods.39 The appropriate conventional financing method with which to make this comparison is the recovery of the amount through collection of CTCs. If fourteen-year transition bonds are issued at a 7.50% weighted-average interest rate, CenterPoint’s financial analysis indicates that the total amount of revenues to be collected under this Financing Order is expected to be approximately $9.1 million less than the revenue requirement that would be recovered using conventional utility financing methods over the period under which they would be recovered through CTCs. Using the projected weighted-average interest rate of 2.50%, the benefits of securitization would be approximately $775.6 million. These estimates assume the transition bonds will be issued with a maximum expected life of fourteen years, and that actual ongoing qualified costs will be as estimated on Appendix C to this Financing Order. The benefits for consumers set forth in CenterPoint’s evidence are fully indicative of the benefits consumers will realize from the securitization approved in this Financing Order; however, CenterPoint will be required to provide an updated total revenue analysis in its issuance advice letter to verify that this statutory test is met.

 

39 

See PURA § 39.303(a).


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C. Structure of the Proposed Securitization

1. BondCo

 

29.

For purposes of this securitization, CenterPoint will create one or more special purpose entities (each referred to as BondCo), each of which will be a Delaware limited liability company with CenterPoint as its sole member. CenterPoint would create a separate BondCo for the issuance of a particular series of transition bonds and the rights, structure and restrictions described in this Financing Order with respect to BondCo would be applicable to each such purchaser of transition property to the extent of the transition property sold to it and the transition bonds issued by it. BondCo will be formed for the limited purpose of acquiring transition property, issuing transition bonds in one or more tranches or classes40 for each series, and performing other activities relating thereto or otherwise authorized by this Financing Order. BondCo will not be permitted to engage in any other activities and will have no assets other than transition property and related assets to support its obligations under the transition bonds. Obligations relating to the transition bonds will be BondCo’s only significant liabilities. These restrictions on the activities of BondCo and restrictions on the ability of CenterPoint to take action on BondCo’s behalf are imposed to achieve the objective that BondCo will be bankruptcy remote and not affected by a bankruptcy of CenterPoint. BondCo will be managed by a board of managers with rights and duties similar to those of a board of directors of a corporation. As long as the transition bonds remain outstanding, BondCo will have at least one independent manager with no organizational affiliation with CenterPoint other than acting as an independent manager for one or more other bankruptcy-remote subsidiaries of CenterPoint or its affiliates. BondCo will not be permitted to amend the provisions of the organizational documents that relate to bankruptcy-remoteness of BondCo without the consent of the independent manager. Similarly, BondCo will not be permitted to institute bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings or to consent to the institution of bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings against it, or to dissolve, liquidate, consolidate, convert, or merge without the consent of the independent manager. Other restrictions to facilitate bankruptcy-remoteness may also be included in the organizational documents of BondCo as required by the rating agencies.

 

40 

Some prior Texas securitizations have used “tranches” while others have used “classes” to describe the bonds being issued. We use the terms interchangeably in this Financing Order.


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30. The initial capital of BondCo is expected to be not less than 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds issued by BondCo. Funding of BondCo at this level is intended to protect the bankruptcy remoteness of BondCo. A sufficient level of capital is necessary to minimize this risk and, therefore, assist in achieving the lowest transition bond charges possible. Section 15G of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Section 15G), as added by section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, requires various federal agencies including the SEC and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (the OCC) to adopt rules to implement the credit risk retention requirements of Section 15G. Such regulations could affect the level of capital which must be invested in BondCo or otherwise invested by CenterPoint in connection with the transition bonds, or other costs of issuing, supporting, and servicing the transition bonds. If CenterPoint is required to invest directly or indirectly more than 0.5% of the original principal amount of each series of transition bonds, it should be permitted to earn an annual return on such additional investment at CenterPoint’s then-authorized rate of return on equity. The required revenue, if any, to provide an annual return on any such additional capital at CenterPoint’s then-authorized rate of return on equity is an ongoing qualified cost.

 

31. BondCo will issue transition bonds in one or more series, and in one or more tranches for each series, in an aggregate amount not to exceed the principal amount approved by this Financing Order and will pledge to the indenture trustee, as collateral for payment of the transition bonds, the transition property, including BondCo’s right to receive the transition charges as and when collected, and certain other collateral described in CenterPoint’s application.

 

32. The expected final maturity of the last tranche of transition bonds will not exceed fourteen years (although the legal final maturity of the transition bonds may extend to 15 years), which is consistent with CenterPoint’s prior securitizations.


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33. Concurrent with the issuance of any of the transition bonds, CenterPoint will transfer to BondCo all of CenterPoint’s rights under this Financing Order related to the amount of transition bonds BondCo is issuing, including rights to impose, collect, and receive transition charges approved in this Financing Order. This transfer will be structured so that it will qualify as a true sale within the meaning of PURA § 39.308. By virtue of the transfer, BondCo will acquire all of the right, title, and interest of CenterPoint in the portion of the transition property arising under this Financing Order that is related to the amount of transition bonds BondCo is issuing.

 

34. The use and proposed structure of BondCo and the limitations related to its organization and management are necessary to minimize risks related to the proposed securitization transactions and to minimize the transition charges. Therefore, the use and proposed structure of BondCo should be approved.

2. Credit Enhancement and Arrangements to Reduce Interest Rate Risk or Enhance Marketability

 

35. CenterPoint requested approval to use additional forms of credit enhancement (including letters of credit, reserve accounts, surety bonds, or guarantees) and other mechanisms designed to promote the credit quality and marketability of the transition bonds if the benefits of such arrangements exceed their cost. CenterPoint also asked that the costs of any credit enhancements as well as the costs of arrangements to enhance marketability be included in the amount of qualified costs to be securitized. CenterPoint should be permitted to recover the ongoing costs of credit enhancements and arrangements to enhance marketability, provided that the Commission’s designated representative and CenterPoint agree in advance that such enhancements and arrangements provide benefits greater than their tangible and intangible costs. If the use of original issue discount, credit enhancements, or other arrangements is proposed by CenterPoint, CenterPoint shall provide the Commission’s designated representative copies of all cost/benefit analyses performed by or for CenterPoint that support the request to use such arrangements. This finding does not apply to the collection account or its subaccounts approved in this Financing Order.


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36. CenterPoint’s proposed use of credit enhancements and arrangements to enhance marketability is reasonable and should be approved, provided that CenterPoint certifies that the enhancements or arrangements provide benefits greater than their cost and that such certifications are agreed with by the Commission’s designated representative.

 

37. In the first two financing orders issued to CenterPoint and its predecessors, the Commission did not preclude CenterPoint from entering into floating rate or foreign currency denominated notes, interest rate hedges, or foreign currency hedges. None were utilized.

 

38.

In the Commission’s five most recent financing orders,41 the Commission determined that the costs and risks of swap transactions outweighed the expected benefits and prohibited the use of interest rate swaps.

 

39. The evidence submitted by CenterPoint in this proceeding established that use of floating rate notes, notes denominated in foreign currencies, interest rate hedges, or foreign currency hedges would not be expected to result in the lowest transition bond charges, and would necessarily expose ratepayers to higher risks and greater uncertainty about future costs. Accordingly, the Commission has determined that CenterPoint should not be permitted to use floating rate notes, notes denominated in foreign currencies, or hedges in this transaction.

3. Transition Property

 

40. Under PURA § 39.304(a), the rights and interests of an electric utility or successor under a financing order, including the right to impose, collect, and receive the transition charges authorized in the financing order, are only contract rights until they are first transferred to an assignee or pledged in connection with the issuance of transition bonds, at which time they will become transition property.

 

41 

Application of AEP Texas Central Company for a Financing Order, Docket No. 32475, Financing Order at 14-15 (Jun. 21, 2006); Application of Entergy Gulf States, Inc. for a Financing Order, Docket No. 33586, Financing Order at 2 (Apr. 2, 2007); Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for Financing Order, Docket No. 34448, Financing Order at 2 (Sept. 18, 2007); Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for a Financing Order, Docket No. 37200, Financing Order at 2 (Aug. 27, 2009); Application of Entergy Texas, Inc. for Financing Order, Docket No. 37247, Financing Order at 2 (Sept. 11, 2009).


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41. The rights to impose, collect, and receive the transition charges approved in this Financing Order along with the other rights arising pursuant to this Financing Order will become transition property upon the transfer of such rights by CenterPoint to BondCo pursuant to PURA § 39.304. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then the transition property transferred as a result of each issuance shall be only those rights associated with that portion of the Securitizable Balance securitized by such issuance. The rights to impose, collect and receive transition charges along with the other rights arising pursuant to this Financing Order as they relate to any portion of the Securitizable Balance that remains unsecuritized shall remain with CenterPoint and shall not become transition property until transferred to a BondCo in connection with a subsequent issuance of transition bonds.

 

42. Transition property and all other collateral will be held and administered by the indenture trustee pursuant to the indenture, as described in CenterPoint’s application. This proposal will help ensure the lowest transition bond charges and should be approved.

 

43. Under PURA § 39.304(b), transition property constitutes a present property right for purposes of contracts concerning the sale or pledge of property, even though the imposition and collection of transition charges depends on further acts of the utility or others that have not yet occurred.

4. Servicer and the Servicing Agreement

 

44.

CenterPoint will execute a servicing agreement with BondCo. The servicing agreement may be amended, renewed, or replaced by another servicing agreement. The entity responsible for carrying out the servicing obligations under any servicing agreement is the servicer. CenterPoint will be the initial servicer but may be succeeded as servicer by another entity under certain circumstances detailed in the servicing agreement and as authorized by the Commission. Pursuant to the servicing agreement, the servicer will be required, among other things, to impose and collect the applicable transition charges for the benefit and account of BondCo, to make the periodic true-up adjustments of transition charges required or allowed by this Financing Order, and to account for and remit the applicable transition charges to or for the account of BondCo in accordance with the


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remittance procedures contained in the servicing agreement without any charge, deduction or surcharge of any kind (other than the servicing fee specified in the servicing agreement). Under the terms of the servicing agreement, if any servicer fails to perform its servicing obligations in any material respect, the indenture trustee acting under the indenture to be entered into in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds, or the indenture trustee’s designee, may, or, upon the instruction of the requisite percentage of holders of the outstanding amount of transition bonds, shall, appoint an alternate party to replace the defaulting servicer, in which case the replacement servicer will perform the obligations of the servicer under the servicing agreement. The obligations of the servicer under the servicing agreement and the circumstances under which an alternate servicer may be appointed will be more fully described in the servicing agreement. The rights of BondCo under the servicing agreement will be included in the collateral pledged to the indenture trustee under the indenture for the benefit of holders of the transition bonds. CenterPoint currently serves as servicer of the transition charges related to the transition bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC in October 2001 pursuant to the financing order issued on June 1, 2000, in Docket No. 21665; CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC in December 2005 pursuant to the financing order issued on March 16, 2005, in Docket No. 30485; and CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC in February 2008 pursuant to the financing order issued on September 18, 2007, in Docket No. 34448. CenterPoint also currently serves as servicer of the system restoration charges related to the system restoration bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Restoration Bond Company, LLC in November 2009 pursuant to the financing order issued on August 27, 2009, in Docket No. 37200. Consequently, CenterPoint, as initial servicer of transition charges associated with transition bonds issued under this Financing Order will, and any successor servicer may, simultaneously be serving as servicer of separate transition or system restoration charges associated with transition or system restoration bonds for more than one issuer.

 

45. The servicing agreement shall contain a recital clause that the Commission, or its attorney, will enforce the servicing agreement for the benefit of Texas ratepayers to the extent permitted by law.


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46. The servicing agreement shall include a provision that CenterPoint shall indemnify the Commission (for the benefit of consumers) in connection with any increase in servicing fees that become payable as a result of a default resulting from CenterPoint’s willful misconduct, bad faith, or negligence in performance of its duties or observance of its covenants under the servicing agreement. The indemnity will be enforced by the Commission but will not be enforceable by any REP or consumer.

 

47. The obligations to continue to provide service and to collect and account for transition charges will be binding upon CenterPoint and any other entity that provides transmission and distribution services or direct wire services to a person that was a retail consumer located within the service area of CenterPoint’s predecessor, Houston Lighting & Power Company (HL&P), as it existed on May 1, 1999, or that became a retail consumer for electric services within such area after May 1, 1999, and is still located within such area. Further, and to the extent REPs are responsible for imposing and billing transition charges on behalf of BondCo, billing and credit standards approved in this Financing Order will be binding on all REPs that bill and collect transition charges from such retail consumers, together with their successors and assigns. The Commission will enforce the obligations imposed by this Financing Order, its applicable substantive rules, and statutory provisions.

 

48.

To the extent that any interest in the transition property created by this Financing Order is assigned, sold, or transferred to an assignee,42 CenterPoint will enter into a contract with that assignee that will require CenterPoint to continue to operate its transmission and distribution system in order to provide electric services to CenterPoint’s customers. This provision does not prohibit CenterPoint from selling, assigning or otherwise divesting its transmission and distribution system or any part thereof so long as the entity acquiring such facilities agrees to continue operating the facilities to provide electric services to CenterPoint’s customers.

 

42 

The term “assignee” means “any individual, corporation, or other legally recognized entity to which an interest in transition property is transferred, other than as security, including any assignee of that party.” PURA § 39.302(1).


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49. The proposals described in Findings of Fact 44 through 48 are reasonable, will reduce risk associated with the proposed securitization and will, therefore, result in lower transition bond charges and greater benefits to ratepayers and should be approved.

5. Retail Electric Providers

 

50. The servicer will bill the transition charges to each retail consumer’s REP and the REP will collect the transition charges from its retail customers.

 

51. Schedule TC5 sets forth minimum billing and collection standards to apply to REPs that collect transition charges approved by this Financing Order from retail electric consumers. The Commission finds that the REP standards set forth in Schedule TC5 are appropriate and should be adopted.

 

52. The REP standards set forth in Schedule TC5 relate only to the billing and collection of transition charges authorized under this Financing Order, and do not apply to collection of any other nonbypassable charges or other charges. The standards apply to all REPs other than REPs that have contracted with CenterPoint to have CenterPoint bill and collect transition charges from the REP’s retail consumers. REPs may contract with parties other than CenterPoint to bill and collect transition charges from retail consumers, but such parties shall remain subject to these standards. Upon adoption of any amendment to P.U.C. SUBST. R. 25.108, Commission Staff will open a proceeding to investigate the need to modify the standards in Schedule TC5 to conform to that rule, provided that such modifications may not be implemented absent prior written confirmation from each of the rating agencies from which CenterPoint has obtained a rating of the transition bonds that such modifications will not cause a suspension, withdrawal, or downgrade of the ratings on the transition bonds.

 

53. The REP standards are as follows:

(a) Rating, Deposit, and Related Requirements.

Each REP must (1) have a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service, respectively, or (2) provide to the indenture trustee (a) a deposit of two months’ maximum expected transition


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charge collections in the form of cash, (b) an affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit providing for payment of such amount of transition charge collections in the event that the REP defaults in its payment obligations, or (c) a combination of any of the foregoing. A REP that does not have or maintain the requisite long-term, unsecured credit rating may select which alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof it will utilize, in its sole discretion. The indenture trustee shall be a beneficiary of any affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit. The provider of any affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit must have and maintain a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service, respectively.

(b) Loss of Rating.

If the long-term, unsecured credit rating from either Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s Investors Service of a REP that did not previously provide the alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof or of any provider of an affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit is suspended, withdrawn, or downgraded below “BBB-” or “Baa3” (or the equivalent), the REP must provide the alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof, or new forms thereof, in each case from providers with the requisite ratings, within 10 business days following such suspension, withdrawal, or downgrade. A REP failing to make such provision must comply with the provisions set forth in Paragraph (e).

(c) Computation of Deposit, etc.

The computation of the size of a deposit required under Paragraph (a) shall be agreed upon by the servicer and the REP, and reviewed no more frequently than quarterly to ensure that the deposit accurately reflects two months’ maximum expected transition charge collections. Within 10 business days following such review, (1) the REP shall remit to the indenture trustee the amount of any shortfall in such required deposit or (2) the servicer shall instruct the indenture trustee to remit to the REP any amount in excess of such required deposit. A REP failing to so remit any such shortfall must comply with the provisions set forth in Paragraph (e). REP cash deposits shall be held by the indenture trustee, maintained in a segregated account, and invested in short-term high quality investments, as permitted by the rating agencies from which a rating of the transition bonds has been obtained by CenterPoint. Investment earnings on REP cash deposits shall be considered part of such cash deposits so long as they remain on deposit with the


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indenture trustee. At the instruction of the servicer, cash deposits will be remitted with investment earnings to the REP at the end of the term of the transition bonds unless otherwise utilized for the payment of the REP’s obligations for transition charges. Once the deposit is no longer required, the servicer shall promptly (but not later than 30 calendar days) instruct the indenture trustee to remit the amounts in the segregated accounts to the REP.

(d) Payment of Transition Charges.

Payments of transition charges are due 35 calendar days following each billing by the servicer to the REP, without regard to whether or when the REP receives payment from its retail customers. The servicer shall accept payment by electronic funds transfer, wire transfer, and/or check. Payment will be considered received the date the electronic funds transfer or wire transfer is received by the servicer, or the date the check clears. A 5% penalty is to be charged on amounts received after 35 calendar days; however, a 10 calendar-day grace period will be allowed before the REP is considered to be in default. A REP in default must comply with the provisions set forth in Paragraph (e). The 5% penalty will be a one-time assessment measured against the current amount overdue from the REP to the servicer. The “current amount” consists of the total unpaid transition charges existing on the 36th calendar day after billing by the servicer. Any and all such penalty payments will be made to the servicer to be applied against transition charge obligations. A REP shall not be obligated to pay the overdue transition charges of another REP. If a REP agrees to assume the responsibility for the payment of overdue transition charges as a condition of receiving the customers of another REP that has decided to terminate service to those customers for any reason, the new REP shall not be assessed the 5% penalty upon such transition charges; however, the prior REP shall not be relieved of the previously-assessed penalties.

(e) Remedies upon Default.

After the 10 calendar-day grace period (the 45th calendar day after the billing date) referred to in Paragraph (d), the servicer shall have the option to seek recourse against any cash deposit, affiliate guarantee, surety bond, letter of credit, or combination thereof provided by the REP, and avail itself of such legal remedies as may be appropriate to collect any remaining unpaid transition charges and associated penalties due the servicer after the application of the REP’s deposit or alternate form of credit support. In addition, a REP that is in default with respect to the requirements set forth in Paragraphs (b), (c), or (d) shall, subject to the limitations and requirements of applicable bankruptcy laws if the REP is a debtor in bankruptcy, select and implement one of the following options:


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(1) Allow the Provider of Last Resort (POLR) or a qualified REP of the consumer’s choosing to immediately assume the responsibility for the billing and collection of transition charges.

(2) Immediately implement other mutually suitable and agreeable arrangements with the servicer. It is expressly understood that the servicer’s ability to agree to any other arrangements will be limited by the terms of the servicing agreement and requirements of each of the rating agencies from which CenterPoint has obtained a rating of the transition bonds necessary to avoid a suspension, withdrawal, or downgrade of the ratings on the transition bonds.

(3) Arrange that all amounts owed by retail consumers for services rendered be timely billed and immediately paid directly into a lock-box controlled by the servicer with such amounts to be applied first to pay transition charges before the remaining amounts are released to the REP. All costs associated with this mechanism will be borne solely by the REP.

If a REP that is in default fails to immediately select and implement one of the foregoing options or, after so selecting one of the foregoing options, fails to adequately meet its responsibilities thereunder, then the servicer shall immediately implement option (1), subject to the limitations and requirements of applicable bankruptcy laws if the REP is a debtor in bankruptcy. Upon re-establishment of compliance with the requirements set forth in Paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) and the payment of all past-due amounts and associated penalties, the REP will no longer be required to comply with this paragraph.

(f) Interest of REPs (Including the POLR) in Funds Held by Servicer.

Any interest that a REP (including the POLR) may have in any funds in the hands of the servicer shall be junior and subordinate to any and all rights of the indenture trustee or BondCo to such funds.


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(g) Billing by Providers of Last Resort, etc.

The POLR appointed by the Commission must meet the minimum credit rating or deposit/credit support requirements described in Paragraph (a) in addition to any other standards that may be adopted by the Commission. If the POLR defaults or is not eligible to provide such services, responsibility for billing and collection of transition charges will immediately be transferred to and assumed by the servicer until a new POLR can be named by the Commission or the consumer requests the services of a certified REP. Retail consumers may never be re-billed by the successor REP, the POLR, or the servicer for any amount of transition charges they have paid their REP (although future transition charges shall reflect REP and other system-wide charge-offs). Additionally, if the amount of the penalty detailed in Paragraph (d) is the sole remaining past-due amount after the 45th calendar day, the REP shall not be required to comply with clauses (1), (2), or (3) of Paragraph (e), unless the penalty is not paid within an additional 30 calendar days.

(h) Disputes.

In the event that a REP disputes any amount of billed transition charges, the REP shall pay the disputed amount under protest according to the timelines detailed in Paragraph (d). The REP and servicer shall first attempt to informally resolve the dispute, but if they fail to do so within 30 calendar days, either party may file a complaint with the Commission. If the REP is successful in the dispute process (informal or formal), the REP shall be entitled to interest on the disputed amount paid to the servicer at the Commission-approved interest rate. Disputes about the date of receipt of transition charge payments (and penalties arising thereon) or the size of a required REP deposit will be handled in a like manner. It is expressly intended that any interest paid by the servicer on disputed amounts shall not be recovered through transition charges if it is determined that the servicer’s claim to the funds is clearly unfounded. No interest shall be paid by the servicer if it is determined that the servicer has received inaccurate metering data from another entity providing competitive metering services pursuant to PURA § 39.107.

(i) Metering Data.

If the servicer is providing the metering, metering data will be provided to the REP at the same time as the billing. If the servicer is not providing the metering, the entity providing the metering services will be responsible for complying with Commission rules and ensuring that the servicer and the REP receive timely and accurate metering data in order for the servicer to meet its obligations under the servicing agreement and this Financing Order with respect to billing and true ups.


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(j) Charge-Off Allowance.

The REP will be allowed to hold back an allowance for charge-offs in its payments to the servicer. Such charge-off rate will be recalculated each year in connection with the annual true-up procedure. In the initial year, REPs will be allowed to remit payments based on the same charge-off percentage then being used by the REP to remit payments to the servicer in connection with the then most recently established transition charges related to (i) the transition bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company, LLC on October 24, 2001, (ii) the transition bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company II, LLC on December 16, 2005, or (iii) the transition bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC on February 12, 2008. On an annual basis in connection with the true-up process, the REP and the servicer will be responsible for reconciling the amounts held back with amounts actually written off as uncollectible in accordance with the terms agreed to by the REP and the servicer, provided that:

(1) The REP’s right to reconciliation for write-offs will be limited to customers whose service has been permanently terminated and whose entire accounts (i.e., all amounts due the REP for its own account as well as the portion representing transition charges) have been written off.

(2) The REP’s recourse will be limited to a credit against future transition charge payments unless the REP and the servicer agree to alternative arrangements, but in no event will the REP have recourse to the indenture trustee, BondCo or BondCo’s funds for such payments.

(3) The REP shall provide information on a timely basis to the servicer so that the servicer can include the REP’s default experience and any subsequent credits into its calculation of the adjusted transition-charge rates for the next transition-charge billing period and the REP’s rights to credits will not take effect until after such adjusted transition charges have been implemented.


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(k) Service Termination.

In the event that the servicer is billing consumers for transition charges, the servicer shall have the right to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use consumer for non-payment by the end-use consumer pursuant to applicable Commission rules. In the event that a REP or the POLR is billing consumers for transition charges, the REP or POLR shall have the right to transfer customers to the POLR (or to another certified REP) or to direct the servicer to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use consumer for non-payment in accordance with the applicable Commission rules.

 

54. The proposed billing and collection standards are the same as those adopted in Docket Nos. 21665, 30485, 34448, and 37200 and currently applied by CenterPoint in its capacity as servicer under the transition and system restoration bonds issued pursuant to the financing orders in those dockets.

 

55. The proposed billing and collection standards for REPs and the applicability of those standards are appropriate for the collection of transition charges resulting from this Financing Order, are reasonable and will lower risks associated with the collection of transition charges and will result in lower transition bond charges and greater benefits to ratepayers. In addition, adoption of these standards will provide uniformity of standards for the billing and collection of transition charges for which CenterPoint acts as servicer. Therefore, the proposed billing and collection standards for REPs and the applicability of those standards described in Findings of Fact 52 and 53 should be approved.

6. Transition Bonds

 

56.

Transition bonds will be issued in one or more series, and each series may be issued in one or more tranches. The legal final maturity date of any series of transition bonds will not exceed 15 years from the date of issuance of such series. The legal final maturity date of each series and tranche within a series and amounts in each series will be finally determined by CenterPoint and the Commission’s designated representative, consistent with market conditions and indications of the rating agencies, at the time the transition bonds are priced, but subject to ultimate Commission review through the issuance advice letter process. CenterPoint will retain sole discretion regarding whether or when to


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assign, sell, or otherwise transfer any rights concerning transition property arising under this Financing Order, or to cause the issuance of any transition bonds authorized in this Financing Order, subject to the right of the Commission to find that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of PURA and this Financing Order. BondCo will issue the transition bonds on or after the fifth business day after pricing of the transition bonds unless, prior to noon on the fourth business day following pricing of the bonds, the Commission issues an order finding that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of PURA and this Financing Order.

 

57. The Commission finds that the proposed structure, providing annual transition charges to residential customers that would be essentially level over the term of the transition bonds if the actual year-to-year changes in residential load match the changes forecast at the time the transition bonds are structured, is in the public interest and should be used. The approved structure is reasonable and should be approved, provided that the issuance advice letter demonstrates that all of the statutory financial requirements are met. This restriction is necessary to ensure that the stated economic benefits to ratepayers materialize.

7. Security for Transition Bonds

 

58. The payment of the transition bonds and related charges authorized by this Financing Order is to be secured by the transition property created by this Financing Order and by certain other collateral as described in the application. Each series of the transition bonds will be issued pursuant to an indenture administered by the indenture trustee (any such indenture, “the indenture,” and the trustee under an indenture, “the indenture trustee”). The indenture will include provisions for a collection account for the series and subaccounts for the collection and administration of the transition charges and payment or funding of the principal and interest on the transition bonds and other costs, including fees and expenses, in connection with the transition bonds, as described in CenterPoint’s application. Pursuant to the indenture, BondCo will establish a collection account as a trust account to be held by the indenture trustee as collateral to ensure the payment of the principal, interest, and other costs approved in this Financing Order related to the transition bonds in full and on a timely basis. The collection account will include the general subaccount, the capital subaccount, and the excess funds subaccount, and may include other subaccounts.


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a. The General Subaccount

 

59. The indenture trustee will deposit the transition charge remittances that the servicer remits to the indenture trustee for the account of BondCo into the general subaccount. The indenture trustee will on a periodic basis allocate or use all amounts in this subaccount to pay expenses of BondCo, to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds, and to meet the funding requirements of the other subaccounts. The funds in the general subaccount will be invested by the indenture trustee in short-term high-quality investments, and such funds (including, to the extent necessary, investment earnings) will be applied by the indenture trustee to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds and all other components of the Periodic Payment Requirement (as defined in Finding of Fact 83), and otherwise in accordance with the terms of the indenture.

b. The Capital Subaccount

 

60.

When a series of transition bonds is issued, CenterPoint will make a capital contribution to BondCo for that series, which BondCo will deposit into the capital subaccount. The amount of the capital contribution is expected to be not less than 0.5% of the original principal amount of each series of transition bonds, although the actual amount will depend on tax and rating agency requirements and possible regulatory changes resulting from regulations under Section 15G. The capital subaccount will serve as collateral to ensure timely payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds and all other components of the Periodic Payment Requirement. Any funds drawn from the capital subaccount to pay these amounts due to a shortfall in the transition charge remittances will be replenished through future transition charge remittances. The funds in this subaccount will be invested by the indenture trustee in short-term high-quality investments, and such funds (including investment earnings) will be available to be used by the indenture trustee to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds and all other components of the Periodic Payment Requirement. If CenterPoint is required to make a capital contribution in excess of 0.5% of the original principal amount of each series of


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transition bonds, CenterPoint will be authorized to receive an aggregate amount equal to the sum of (i) the actual amounts earned by the trustee from investment of the capital contribution (up to 0.5% of the original principal amount of each series) and (ii) an annual return on the remainder of the capital contribution at CenterPoint’s then-authorized rate of return on equity. The required revenue, if any, to provide an annual return on any such additional capital at CenterPoint’s then-authorized rate of return on equity is an ongoing qualified cost. Upon payment of the principal amount of all transition bonds and the discharge of all obligations that may be paid by use of transition charges, all amounts in the capital subaccount, including any investment earnings, will be released to BondCo for payment to CenterPoint. Investment earnings in this subaccount may be released earlier in accordance with the indenture.

 

61. The capital contribution to BondCo will be funded by CenterPoint. To ensure that ratepayers receive the appropriate benefit from the securitization approved in this Financing Order, the proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds should not be applied towards this capital contribution. Because CenterPoint funds the capital subaccount, CenterPoint should receive the investment earnings on that capital, and if CenterPoint is required to make a capital contribution in excess of 0.5% of the original transition bonds, CenterPoint should receive the annual return on any such additional capital contribution, from time to time, and should receive a return of all capital contributions after all transition bonds have been paid. So long as no event of default under the indenture has occurred and is continuing, and the Periodic Payment Requirement is satisfied, such earnings and return on amounts in the capital subaccount shall be released to CenterPoint as provided in the indenture.

c. The Excess Funds Subaccount

 

62. The excess funds subaccount will hold any transition charge remittances and investment earnings on the collection account (other than earnings attributable to the capital subaccount and released under the terms of the indenture) in excess of the amounts needed to pay current principal and interest on the transition bonds and to pay ongoing costs related to the transition bonds (including, but not limited to, replenishing the capital subaccount). Any balance in or allocated to the excess funds subaccount on a true-up


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adjustment date will be subtracted from the Periodic Payment Requirement for purposes of the true-up adjustment. The funds in this subaccount will be invested by the indenture trustee in short-term high-quality investments, and such funds (including investment earnings thereon) will be available to be used by the indenture trustee to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds and other ongoing costs relating to the transition bonds.

d. Other Subaccounts

 

63. Other credit enhancements in the form of subaccounts may be utilized for the transaction provided that the Commission’s designated representative and CenterPoint agree in advance that such enhancements provide benefits greater than their tangible and intangible costs. For example, CenterPoint does not propose use of an overcollateralization subaccount as was approved in Docket Nos. 21665 and 30485 in connection with CenterPoint’s first two securitizations. As described in CenterPoint’s application, under Rev. Proc. 2002-49, as clarified by Rev. Proc. 2005-61 and 2005-62 issued by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the use of an overcollateralization subaccount is no longer necessary to obtain the tax treatment described in Finding of Fact 99(e) nor does it appear to be necessary to obtain AAA ratings for the proposed transition bonds. However, if the Commission’s designated representative and CenterPoint subsequently agree that use of an overcollateralization subaccount or other subaccount is necessary to obtain such tax treatment or AAA ratings or will otherwise increase the tangible and quantifiable benefits of the securitization, CenterPoint may implement such subaccounts in order to reduce transition charges.

8. General Provisions

 

64.

The collection account and the subaccounts described above are intended to provide for full and timely payment of scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds and all other components of the Periodic Payment Requirement. If the amount of transition charges remitted to the general subaccount is insufficient to make all scheduled payments of principal and interest on the transition bonds and to make payment on all of the other components of the Periodic Payment Requirement, the excess funds subaccount, and the


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capital subaccount will be drawn down, in that order, to make those payments. Any deficiency in the capital subaccount due to such withdrawals must be replenished on a periodic basis through the true-up process. In addition to the foregoing, there may be such additional accounts and subaccounts as are necessary to segregate amounts received from various sources (i.e., amounts received from REPs), or to be used for specified purposes. Such accounts will be administered and utilized as set forth in the servicing agreement and the indenture. Upon the maturity of the transition bonds and the discharge of all obligations in respect thereof, remaining amounts in the collection account, other than amounts that were in the capital subaccount, will be released to BondCo and equivalent amounts will be credited by CenterPoint to customers consistent with PURA § 39.262(g). The servicer, on behalf of BondCo, will distribute to REPs and other entities responsible for collection of transition charges from retail consumers, the final balance of the general subaccount, excess funds subaccount, and all other subaccounts (except the capital subaccount), whether such balance is attributable to amounts deposited in such subaccounts or to interest thereon, remaining after all other qualified costs have been paid. The amounts will be distributed to each REP and other entity that paid Schedule TC5 transition charges during the last 12 months that the Schedule TC5 transition charges were in effect. The amount paid to each REP or other entity will be determined by multiplying the total amount available for distribution by a fraction, the numerator of which is the total Schedule TC5 transition charges paid by the REP or other entity during the last 12 months Schedule TC5 transition charges were in effect and the denominator of which is the total Schedule TC5 transition charges paid by all REPs and other entities responsible for collection of transition charges from ratepayers during the last 12 months the Schedule TC5 transition charges were in effect.

 

65. The use of a collection account and its subaccounts in the manner proposed by CenterPoint is reasonable, will lower risks associated with the securitization and thus lower the costs to ratepayers, and should, therefore, be approved.

9. Transition Charges—Imposition and Collection, Nonbypassability, and Self-Generation

 

66. CenterPoint seeks authorization to impose on and collect from REPs, and from other entities which are required to pay transition charges under this Financing Order or Schedule TC5, transition charges in an amount sufficient to provide for the timely recovery of its qualified costs approved in this Financing Order (including payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds and ongoing costs related to the transition bonds).


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67. Transition charges will be separately identified on bills presented to REPs.

 

68. If a REP or other entity does not pay the full amount it has been billed, the amount paid by the REP or such other entity will first be apportioned between the transition charges and other fees and charges (including amounts billed and due in respect of transition charges associated with transition bonds issued under other financing orders), other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the payment will be allocated to late fees. This allocation will facilitate a proper balance between the competing claims to this source of revenue in an equitable manner.

 

69. The transition bonds will have a scheduled final maturity of not longer than fourteen years. However, amounts may still need to be recovered after the scheduled final maturity. CenterPoint proposed that the transition charges related to a series of transition bonds will be recovered over a period of not more than 15 years from the date of issuance of that series of transition bonds but that amounts due at or before the end of that period for services rendered during the 15-year period may be collected after the conclusion of the 15-year period.

 

70. PURA § 39.303(b) prohibits the recovery of transition charges for a period of time that exceeds 15 years. Transition charges related to a series of transition bonds may not be collected after 15 years from the date of issuance of that series of bonds. This restriction does not, however, prevent the recovery of amounts due at the end of such 15-year period for services rendered during such 15-year period.

 

71.

CenterPoint, acting as servicer, and any subsequent servicer, will collect transition charges from all REPs serving existing and future retail consumers located within HL&P’s service area as it existed on May 1, 1999, and from all other entities which are required to pay transition charges under Schedule TC5, except as provided in Finding of


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Fact 72. In accordance with PURA § 39.252(c), a retail consumer within such area may not avoid transition charges by switching to another electric utility, electric cooperative or municipally-owned utility after May 1, 1999. However, a consumer in a multiply-certificated service area that requested to switch providers on or before May 1, 1999, or was not taking service from HL&P on May 1, 1999, and does not do so after that date, will not be responsible for paying transition charges.

 

72. Except as provided by PURA §§ 39.262(k) and 39.252, as implemented by P.U.C. SUBST. R. 25.345 a retail consumer may not avoid the payment of transition charges by switching to new on-site generation as defined in PURA § 39.252(b). Pursuant to PURA § 39.252(b)(2), if a consumer commences taking energy from new on-site generation that materially reduces the consumer’s use of energy delivered through CenterPoint’s facilities, the consumer will pay an amount each month computed by multiplying the output of the on-site generation utilized to meet the internal electrical requirements of the consumer by the applicable transition charges in effect for that month. Any reduction equivalent to more than 12.5% of the consumer’s annual average use of energy delivered through CenterPoint’s facilities will be considered material for this purpose. Payments of the transition charges owed by such consumers under PURA § 39.252(b)(2) will be made to the servicer and will be collected in addition to any other charges applicable to services provided to the consumer through CenterPoint’s facilities and any other charges applicable to self-generation under PURA § 39.252.

 

73. CenterPoint’s proposal related to imposition and collection of transition charges is reasonable and is necessary to ensure collection of transition charges sufficient to support recovery of the qualified costs approved in this Financing Order and should be approved. It is reasonable to approve the form of CenterPoint’s Schedule TC5 in this Financing Order and require that these tariff provisions be filed before any transition bonds are issued pursuant to this Financing Order.

10. Allocation of Qualified Costs among Texas Retail Consumers

 

74. [Reserved.]


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75. CenterPoint proposed that a single allocation percentage be developed for each transition charge class and that such percentage and the procedures for adjusting such percentage be set forth in Schedule TC5. The proposed single allocation percentage, referred to as the periodic billing requirement allocation factor (PBRAF), reflects the allocation factors agreed to in the Stipulation.

 

76. Schedule TC5 contains a series of formulas to adjust the class allocation factors if load losses within a given class or group of classes exceed specified thresholds or if there are additional load losses attributable to eligible generation as defined in P.U.C. SUBST. R. 25.345(c)(2). Schedule TC5 contains procedures for further adjusting the allocation percentages if there is a change in the amount of statewide retail stranded costs in excess of $5 billion and the securitized amount includes stranded costs.

 

77. TNMP, a previous wholesale customer of CenterPoint, exited CenterPoint’s system in 2001 before the start of retail competition. In Docket No. 34448, the true-up balances allocable to TNMP were excluded from the amounts to be recovered through the CTC and from the components used to calculate the securitizable balance in that docket, which did not include any costs allocable to TNMP. Similarly, in this proceeding, CenterPoint will not include in the Securitizable Balance any qualified costs which are either directly applicable to TNMP or are allocable to TNMP based on the time period during which TNMP was CenterPoint’s customer.

 

78. The methodology for allocating qualified costs and developing the initial PBRAFs as described above is reasonable and appropriate and should be approved. That methodology will not be changed except in the limited circumstance where, on a statewide basis, there is a subsequent reallocation of total retail stranded costs in excess of $5 billion. The methodology for adjusting the PBRAFs in such circumstances are described in Part D of Section 6 of Schedule TC5.

 

79. The initial PBRAF for each transition charge class shall be as set out in the Schedule TC5 filed with CenterPoint’s issuance advice letter.


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80. New consumers will be assigned to the transition charge classes listed in Schedule TC5 based on the definitions and procedures described in Schedule TC5.

 

81. The initial PBRAFs will remain in effect throughout the life of the transition bonds unless a modification is required to comply with Finding of Fact 78 or is made pursuant to the allocation factor adjustment provisions in Section 6 of Schedule TC5.

 

82. The method of calculating and adjusting PBRAFs as set forth in CenterPoint’s Application and Schedule TC5 comply with the requirements of PURA § 39.253 and should be approved.

11. True-Up of Transition Charges

 

83. Pursuant to PURA § 39.307, the servicer of the transition bonds will make annual adjustments to the transition charges to:

(a) correct any undercollection or overcollection of transition charges, including without limitation any caused by REP defaults, during the preceding 12 months; and

(b) ensure the billing of transition charges necessary to generate the collection of amounts sufficient to timely provide all scheduled payments of principal and interest and any other amounts due in connection with the transition bonds (including, but not limited to, ongoing fees and expenses; amounts required to be deposited in or allocated to any collection account or subaccount; indenture trustee indemnities; payments due in connection with any expenses incurred by the indenture trustee or the servicer to enforce bondholder rights; and all other payments that may be required pursuant to the waterfall of payments set forth in the indenture) during the period for which such adjusted transition charges are to be in effect.

Such amounts are referred to as the “Periodic Payment Requirement” and the amounts necessary to be billed to collect such Periodic Payment Requirement are referred to as the “Periodic Billing Requirement.” With respect to any series of transition bonds, the servicer will make true-up adjustment filings with the Commission at least annually, within 45 days of the anniversary of the date of the original issuance of the transition bonds of that series.

 

84.

True-up filings will be based on the cumulative differences, regardless of the reason, between the Periodic Payment Requirement (including scheduled principal and interest payments on the transition bonds) and the amount of transition charge remittances to the


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indenture trustee. True-up procedures are necessary to ensure full recovery of amounts sufficient to meet the Periodic Payment Requirements over the expected life of the transition bonds. In order to assure adequate transition charge revenues to fund the Periodic Payment Requirement and to avoid large overcollections and undercollections over time, the servicer will reconcile the transition charges using CenterPoint’s most recent forecast of electricity deliveries (i.e., forecasted billing units) and estimates of transaction-related expenses. The calculation of the transition charges will also reflect both a projection of uncollectible transition charges and a projection of payment lags between the billing and collection of transition charges based upon CenterPoint’s and the REPs’ most recent experience regarding collection of transition charges.

 

85. The servicer will make true-up adjustments in the manner described in Section 8 of Schedule TC5. For the residential consumer class it will:

(a) allocate the upcoming period’s Periodic Billing Requirement, including any undercollection or overcollection of transition charges, including, without limitation, any caused by REP defaults, from the preceding period, based on the PBRAFs determined in accordance with Schedule TC5 approved in this Financing Order; and

(b) divide the amount assigned to the residential consumer class in step (a) above by the appropriate forecasted billing units to determine the transition charge rate by class for the upcoming period.

For each of the Commercial and Industrial TC Groups as defined in Schedule TC5, an adjustment factor will be computed by dividing (1) the amount assigned to the group in step (a) above by (2) the sum of the existing rates times the forecasted billing determinants for each class in the group. For each class in a group, the transition charge for the upcoming period will be the product of the existing transition charge times the adjustment factor for the group in which that class resides.

12. Interim True-Up

 

86. In addition to annual true-up adjustments, true-up adjustments may be made by the servicer more frequently at any time during the term of the transition bonds to correct any undercollection or overcollection, as provided for in this Financing Order, in order to assure timely payment of transition bonds based on rating agency and bondholder considerations. In addition to the foregoing, either of the following two conditions may result in an interim true-up adjustment:


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(a) the servicer determines that expected collection of transition charges for the upcoming payment date would result in a difference that is greater than 5% in absolute value, between (i) the actual outstanding principal balances of the transition bonds plus amounts on deposit in the excess funds subaccount and (ii) the outstanding principal balances anticipated in the target amortization schedule; or

(b) to meet a rating agency requirement that any tranche of transition bonds be paid in full by its scheduled final maturity date.

 

87. In the event an interim true-up is necessary, the interim true-up adjustment should be filed on the fifteenth day of the current month for implementation in the first billing cycle of the following month. In no event would such interim true-up adjustments occur more frequently than every three months if quarterly transition bond payments are required or every six months if semi-annual transition bond payments are required; provided, however, that interim true-up adjustments for any transition bonds remaining outstanding during the fourteenth and fifteenth year after the bonds are issued may occur quarterly. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then each series will be subject to separate true-up adjustments pursuant to PURA and this Financing Order, provided, however, that more than one series may be trued-up in a single proceeding.

13. Adjustment to PBRAFs

 

88. Schedule TC5 contains detailed procedures for adjustment of PBRAFs to reflect load losses a transition charge class or group of transition charge classes may suffer and certain changes that may be ordered by the Commission.

 

89. A proceeding for the purpose of approving an allocation factor adjustment should be conducted in the following manner:

(a) Any allocation factor adjustment will be made in conjunction with a standard, annual true up. Any such adjustment will be filed with the Commission at least 90 days before the date the proposed adjustment will become effective. The filing will contain the proposed changes to the transition charge rates, justification for such changes as necessary to specifically address the cause(s) of the adjustment and a statement of the proposed adjustment date.


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(b) Concurrently with the filing with the Commission, the servicer will notify all parties to this docket of the filing of the proposed adjustment.

(c) The servicer will issue appropriate notice and the Commission will conduct a contested case proceeding on the allocation adjustment pursuant to PURA § 39.003.

The scope of the proceeding will be limited to determining whether the proposed adjustment complies with this Financing Order. In any true-up proceeding that involves the adjustment of the PBRAFs, all parties in the proceeding shall have the right to challenge the reasonableness of the forecasts of billing determinants proposed as a basis for adjusting the PBRAFs. The Commission will issue a final order by the proposed adjustment date stated in the filing. In the event that the Commission cannot issue an order by that date, the servicer will be permitted to implement its proposed changes. Any modifications subsequently ordered by the Commission will be made by the servicer in the next true-up filing.

 

90. Schedule TC5 provides for an additional true-up provision and adjustment to PBRAFs for the Industrial TC group which resulted from the Stipulation Regarding Industrial Intra-Class Allocations approved in Docket No. 30485. Under this provision, the first 10% of load loss within an Industrial TC class is borne by that class, with the excess of load loss over 10% allocated to the remaining Industrial TC classes.

 

91. The allocation adjustment procedures contained in Schedule TC5 are necessary to avoid inequities, are reasonable, and should be adopted.

14. Additional True-Up Provisions

 

92. The true-up adjustment filing will set forth the servicer’s calculation of the true-up adjustment to the transition charges. Except for the allocation adjustment described in Findings of Fact 88 through 90, the Commission will have 15 days after the date of a true-up adjustment filing in which to confirm the mathematical accuracy of the servicer’s adjustment. Except for the allocation adjustment described above, any true-up adjustment filed with the Commission should be effective on its proposed effective date, which shall be not less than 15 days after filing. Any necessary corrections to the true-up adjustment, due to mathematical errors in the calculation of such adjustment or otherwise, will be made in future true-up adjustment filings.


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93. The true-up procedures contained in Schedule TC5 are reasonable and will reduce risks related to the transition bonds, resulting in lower transition bond charges and greater benefits to ratepayers and should be approved.

 

94. The broad-base nature of the true-up mechanism and the pledge of the State of Texas, along with the bankruptcy remoteness of the special purpose entity and the collection account, will serve to minimize, if not effectively eliminate, for all practical purposes and circumstances, any credit risk.

15. Designated Representative

 

95. In order to ensure, as required by PURA § 39.301, that the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order, the Commission finds that it is necessary for the Commission or its designated representative to have a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint with respect to the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds and that all matters related to the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds shall be determined through a joint decision of CenterPoint and the Commission or its designated representative. The Commission’s primary goal is to ensure that the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order.

 

96. The Commission or its designated representative must have an opportunity to participate fully and in advance in all plans and decisions relating to the structuring, marketing, and pricing of the transition bonds and must be provided timely information as necessary to allow it to participate in a timely manner (including, but not limited to, information prepared for the benefit of rating agencies and information prepared for use in marketing the transition bonds to investors).

 

97. The Commission or its designated representative shall require a certificate from the bookrunning underwriter(s) confirming that the structuring, marketing, and pricing of the transition bonds resulted in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order.


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98. CenterPoint stated that it expected the following transaction documents to be executed in connection with each series of transition bonds issued pursuant to this Financing Order and that it expected the form of each document to be consistent with those used in its most recent securitization: Administration Agreement, Indenture, Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement, Transition Property Servicing Agreement, Transition Property Sale Agreement, and Bill of Sale. The Commission’s designated representative shall be afforded an opportunity to review and comment on these documents before they are finalized. Consistent with its most recent securitization, CenterPoint requested the right to amend the terms of these transaction documents; provided, however, that no amendment to any such agreement shall increase ongoing qualified costs without the approval of the Commission.

16. Lowest Transition Bond Charges

 

99. CenterPoint has proposed a transaction structure that is expected to include (but is not limited to):

(a) the use of BondCo as issuer of the transition bonds, limiting the risks to transition bondholders of any adverse impact resulting from a bankruptcy proceeding of its parent or any affiliate;

(b) the right to impose and collect transition charges that are nonbypassable and which must be trued-up at least annually, but may be trued-up more frequently under certain circumstances, in order to assure the timely payment of the debt service and other ongoing transaction costs;

(c) additional collateral in the form of a collection account which includes a capital subaccount funded in cash in an amount not less than 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds and other subaccounts resulting in greater certainty of timely payment of interest and principal to investors and that are consistent with (i) the IRS requirements that must be met to receive the desired federal income tax treatment for the transition bond transaction and (ii) any applicable regulations under Section 15G;

(d) protection of transition bondholders against potential defaults by a servicer or REPs that are responsible for billing and collecting the transition charges from existing or future retail consumers;


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(e) certain federal income tax treatment including: (i) the transfer of the rights under this Financing Order to BondCo not resulting in gross income to CenterPoint Energy and the future revenues under the transition charges being included in CenterPoint Energy’s gross income under its normal method of accounting; (ii) the issuance of the transition bonds and the transfer of the proceeds of the transition bonds to CenterPoint not resulting in gross income to CenterPoint Energy; and (iii) the transition bonds constituting obligations of CenterPoint Energy;

(f) the transition bonds will be marketed using proven underwriting and marketing processes, through which market conditions and investors’ preferences, with regard to the timing of the issuance, the terms and conditions, expected and legal final maturities, and other aspects of the structuring and pricing will be determined, evaluated, and factored into the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds; and

(g) furnishing timely information to the Commission’s designated representative, to allow the Commission, through the issuance advice letter process, to ensure that the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order.

 

100. CenterPoint’s proposed transaction structure is necessary to enable the transition bonds to obtain the highest possible bond credit rating, ensures that the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds will result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order, ensures the greatest benefit to ratepayers consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order, and protects the competitiveness of the retail electric market.

 

101. To ensure that ratepayers receive the tangible and quantifiable economic benefits due from the proposed securitization and so that the proposed transition bond transaction will be consistent with the standards set forth in PURA §§ 39.301 and 39.303, it is necessary that (i) the issuance advice letter demonstrates that the transaction is expected to provide benefits to customers on both the total revenue (i.e. nominal) and net present value bases when compared to collection of the Securitizable Balance through CTCs, (ii) the expected final maturity of the last tranche of transition bonds does not exceed fourteen years (although the legal final maturity of the transition bonds may extend to 15 years), (iii) the amortization of the transition bonds is structured to produce level residential rates over the term of the bonds, and (iv) CenterPoint otherwise satisfies the requirements of this Financing Order.


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102. To allow the Commission to fulfill its obligations under PURA related to the securitization approved in this Financing Order, it is necessary for CenterPoint, for each series of transition bonds issued, to certify to the Commission that the structure and pricing of that series results in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions at the time that the transition bonds are priced and the terms (including the specified amortization pattern) of this Financing Order and, if additional credit enhancements or arrangements to enhance marketability or reduce interest rate risks were used, to certify that they are expected to provide benefits in excess of their cost as required by Findings of Fact 35 and 36 of this Financing Order.

D. Use of Proceeds

 

103. Upon the issuance of transition bonds, BondCo will use the net proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds (after payment of transaction costs) to pay to CenterPoint the purchase price of the transition property.

 

104. The net proceeds from the sale of the transition property (after payment of transaction costs) will be applied to reduce the debt and/or common equity on the regulatory books of CenterPoint.

 

105. Through the steps described in Findings of Fact 103 and 104, the net proceeds from the sale of transition bonds will be used solely to retire existing debt and/or common equity of CenterPoint and will result in a reduction in CenterPoint’s recoverable transition costs as determined in Docket No. 29526.

E. Waiver of P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.35(b)

 

106. Pursuant to P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.5(b), good cause existed to waive the requirements of P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.35(b), to permit consideration of CenterPoint’s application in this docket for a financing order at the Commission’s Open Meeting on October 27, 2011, so that consumers could obtain the earliest and greatest possible benefit from the Docket No. 39504 Stipulation and the proposed securitization of the competition transition charges.


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IV. Conclusions of Law

 

1. CenterPoint is a public utility, as defined in PURA § 11.004, and an electric utility, as defined in PURA § 31.002(6).

 

2. CenterPoint is entitled to file an application for a financing order under PURA § 39.301.

 

3. The Commission has jurisdiction and authority over CenterPoint’s application pursuant to PURA §§ 14.001, 32.001, 39.201 and 39.301-39.313.

 

4. The Commission has authority to issue this Financing Order under Subchapters E, F, and G of Chapter 39 of PURA.

 

5.

Notice of CenterPoint’s application was provided in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act43 and P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.54 and 22.55.

 

6. This application does not constitute a major rate proceeding as defined by P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.2.

 

7. CenterPoint’s application, as modified by this Financing Order, is in the public interest and complies with Commission rules.

 

8. Only the retail portion of regulatory assets may be recovered through a transition charge assessed against retail consumers.

 

9. Amended PURA § 39.301 allows a utility to securitize its regulatory assets and other amounts determined under Section 39.201 or 39.262.

 

10. BondCo will be an assignee as defined in PURA § 39.302(1) when an interest in transition property is transferred, other than as security, to BondCo.

 

11. The holders of the transition bonds and the indenture trustee will each be a financing party as defined in PURA § 39.302(3).

 

 

43 

TEX. GOVT CODE ANN. §§ 2001.001-2001.902 (Vernon 2000 & Supp. 2006).


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12. CenterPoint may use one or more BondCos to issue one or more series of transition bonds in accordance with this Financing Order.

 

13. The securitization approved in this Financing Order satisfies the requirement of PURA § 39.301 dictating that the proceeds of the transition bonds shall be used solely for the purposes of reducing the amount of recoverable regulatory assets and other amounts determined pursuant to PURA §§ 39.201 and 39.262 through the refinancing or retirement of utility debt and/or equity.

 

14. The securitization approved in this Financing Order satisfies the requirement of PURA § 39.301 mandating that the securitization provides tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers greater than would have been achieved absent the issuance of transition bonds. Consistent with fundamental financial principles, this requirement in PURA § 39.301 can only be determined using an economic analysis to account for the time value of money. An analysis that compares in the aggregate over the expected life of the transition bonds the present value of the revenue requirement associated with continued use of CTCs (which is the method under which these costs would otherwise be recovered and reflects conventional utility financing) with the present value of the revenue required under securitization is an appropriate economic analysis to demonstrate whether securitization provides economic benefits to ratepayers.

 

15. BondCo’s issuance of the transition bonds approved in this Financing Order in compliance with the criteria established by this Financing Order satisfies the requirement of PURA § 39.301 prescribing that the structuring and pricing of the transition bonds will result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the terms of this Financing Order.

 

16. The amount approved in this Financing Order for securitization does not exceed the present value of the revenue requirement over the life of the transition bonds approved in this Financing Order that are associated with the costs sought to be securitized, as required by PURA § 39.301.


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17. The securitization approved in this Financing Order satisfies the requirements of PURA § 39.303(a) directing that the total amount of revenues to be collected under this Financing Order be less than the revenue requirement that would be recovered using conventional financing methods (which, in the case of the balance at issue in this proceeding, would be a CTC) and that this Financing Order be consistent with the standards of PURA § 39.301.

 

18. Under PURA §§ 39.301 and 39.303, the Commission has the ability to prohibit different financial options relating to the transition bonds if the evidence supports the finding that the financial option will not or is unlikely to result in the lowest transition bonds charges consistent with market conditions.

 

19. This Financing Order adequately details the amount to be recovered and the period over which CenterPoint will be permitted to recover nonbypassable transition charges in accordance with the requirements of PURA § 39.303(b). Transition charges related to a series of transition bonds may not be collected after 15 years from the date of issuance of that series of transition bonds. This provision does not preclude the servicer from recovering transition charges attributable to service rendered during the 15-year period but remaining unpaid at the end of the 15-year period.

 

20. The method approved in this Financing Order for collecting and allocating the transition charges satisfies the requirements of PURA §§ 39.303(c) and 39.253.

 

21. As provided in PURA § 39.303(d), this Financing Order, together with the transition charges authorized by this Financing Order, is irrevocable and not subject to reduction, impairment, or adjustment by further act of the Commission, except for the true-up procedures approved in this Financing Order, as required by PURA § 39.307; provided, however, that such irrevocability shall not preclude the Commission from extending the deadline for issuance of transition bonds if requested to do so by CenterPoint.

 

22. As provided in PURA § 39.304(a), the rights and interests of CenterPoint or its successor under this Financing Order, including the right to impose, collect and receive the transition charges authorized in this Financing Order, are assignable and shall become transition property when they are first transferred to BondCo.


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23. The rights, interests and property conveyed to each BondCo in a Transition Property Sale Agreement and the related Bill of Sale, including the irrevocable right to impose, collect and receive transition charges and the revenues and collections from transition charges are “transition property” within the meaning of PURA §§ 39.302(8) and 39.304.

 

24. Transition property will constitute a present property right for purposes of contracts concerning the sale or pledge of property, even though the imposition and collection of the transition charges depend on further acts by CenterPoint or others that have not yet occurred, as provided by PURA § 39.304(b).

 

25. All revenues and collections resulting from the transition charges will constitute proceeds only of the transition property arising from this Financing Order, as provided by PURA § 39.304(c).

 

26. Upon the transfer by CenterPoint of the transition property to BondCo, BondCo will have all of the rights, title and interest of CenterPoint in the portion of the transition property arising under this Financing Order that is related to the amount of transition bonds BondCo is issuing, including the right to impose, collect and receive the transition charges authorized by the Financing Order.

 

27. The transition bonds issued pursuant to this Financing Order will be “transition bonds” within the meaning of PURA § 39.302(6) and the transition bonds and holders thereof are entitled to all of the protections provided under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA.

 

28. The transition charges paid by the REPs to the servicer as transition charges pursuant to this Financing Order are “transition charges” as defined in PURA § 39.302(7).

 

29. The amounts collected from retail consumers who purchase electricity from a REP are “transition charges” as defined in PURA § 39.302(7), to the extent that such amounts are attributable to transition charges billed to the REPs by the servicer, whether or not such charges are set out as a separate line-item on the retail consumer’s bill.


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30. Any payment of transition charges by a retail consumer to its REP or directly to the servicer will discharge the retail consumer’s obligations in respect of that payment, but will not discharge the obligations of any REP to remit such payments to the servicer of the transition bonds on behalf of BondCo or an assignee or its obligations to pay amounts determined through subsequent true-up adjustments.

 

31. As provided in PURA § 39.305, the interests of an assignee, the holders of transition bonds, and the indenture trustee in transition property and in the revenues and collections arising from that property are not subject to setoff, counterclaim, surcharge, or defense by CenterPoint or any other person or in connection with the bankruptcy of CenterPoint or any other entity.

 

32. The methodology approved in this Financing Order to true-up the transition charges satisfies the requirements of PURA § 39.307.

 

33. If and when CenterPoint transfers to BondCo the right to impose, collect, and receive transition charges and to issue transition bonds, the servicer will be able to recover the transition charges associated with such transition property only for the benefit of BondCo and the holders of the transition bonds in accordance with the servicing agreement.

 

34. If and when CenterPoint transfers its rights under this Financing Order to BondCo under an agreement that expressly states that the transfer is a sale or other absolute transfer in accordance with the true-sale provisions of PURA § 39.308, then, pursuant to that statutory provision, that transfer will be a true sale of an interest in transition property and not a secured transaction or other financing arrangement and title, legal and equitable, to the transition property will pass to BondCo. As provided by PURA § 39.308, this true sale shall apply regardless of whether the purchaser has any recourse against the seller, or any other term of the parties’ agreement, including the seller’s retention of an equity interest in the transition property, CenterPoint’s role as the collector of transition charges relating to the transition property, or the treatment of the transfer as a financing for tax, financial reporting, or other purposes.


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35. As provided in PURA § 39.309(b), a valid and enforceable lien and security interest in the transition property in favor of the holders of the transition bonds or a trustee on their behalf will be created by this Financing Order and the execution and delivery of a security agreement with the holders of the transition bonds or a trustee on their behalf in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds. The lien and security interest will attach automatically from the time that value is received for the transition bonds and, on perfection through the filing of notice with the Secretary of State in accordance with the rules prescribed by the Secretary of State under PURA § 39.309(d), will be a continuously perfected lien and security interest in the transition property and all proceeds of the transition property, whether accrued or not, will have priority in the order of filing and will take precedence over any subsequent judicial or other lien creditor.

 

36. As provided in PURA § 39.309(c), the transfer of an interest in transition property to an assignee will be perfected against all third parties, including subsequent judicial or other lien creditors, when this Financing Order becomes effective, transfer documents have been delivered to that assignee, and a notice of that transfer has been filed in accordance with the rules prescribed by the Secretary of State under PURA § 39.309(d); provided, however, that if notice of the transfer has not been filed in accordance with this process within 10 days after the delivery of transfer documentation, the transfer of the interest will not be perfected against third parties until the notice is filed. The transfer to BondCo of CenterPoint’s rights under this Financing Order will be a transfer of an interest in transition property for purposes of PURA § 39.309(c).

 

37. As provided in PURA § 39.309(e), the priority of a lien and security interest perfected in accordance with PURA § 39.309 will not be impaired by any later change in the transition charges pursuant to PURA § 39.307 or by the commingling of funds arising from transition charges with other funds, and any other security interest that may apply to those funds will be terminated when they are transferred to a segregated account for an assignee or a financing party. To the extent that transition charges are not collected separately from other funds owed by REPs, the amounts to be remitted to such segregated account for an assignee or a financing party may be determined according to system-wide charge off percentages, collection curves or such other reasonable methods of estimation, as are set forth in the servicing agreement.


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38. As provided in PURA § 39.309(e), if transition property is transferred to an assignee, any proceeds of the transition property will be treated as held in trust for the assignee.

 

39. As provided in PURA § 39.309(f), if a default or termination occurs under the transition bonds, the financing parties or their representatives may foreclose on or otherwise enforce their lien and security interest in the relevant transition property as if they were secured parties under Chapter 9, Texas Business and Commerce Code, and, upon application by or on behalf of the financing parties, the Commission may order that amounts arising from the related transition charges be transferred to a separate account for the financing parties’ benefit, to which their lien and security interest may apply.

 

40. As provided in PURA § 39.309(f), if a default or termination occurs under the transition bonds, on application by or on behalf of the financing parties, a district court of Travis County, Texas shall order the sequestration and payment to those parties of revenues arising from the related transition charges.

 

41. As provided by PURA § 39.310, the transition bonds authorized by this Financing Order are not a debt or obligation of the State of Texas and are not a charge on its full faith and credit or taxing power.

 

42. Pursuant to PURA § 39.310, the State of Texas has pledged for the benefit and protection of all financing parties and CenterPoint, that it will not take or permit any action that would impair the value of the transition property, or, except as permitted by PURA § 39.307, reduce, alter, or impair the transition charges to be imposed, collected, and remitted to any financing parties, until the principal, interest, and any other charges incurred and contracts to be performed in connection with the transition bonds have been paid and performed in full. BondCo, in issuing transition bonds, is authorized pursuant to PURA § 39.310 and this Financing Order to include this pledge in any documentation relating to the transition bonds.


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43. As provided in PURA § 39.311, transactions involving the transfer and ownership of the transition property and the receipt of transition charges are exempt from state and local income, sales, franchise, gross receipts, and other taxes or similar charges.

 

44. This Financing Order will remain in full force and effect and unabated notwithstanding the bankruptcy of CenterPoint, its successors, or assignees.

 

45. CenterPoint retains sole discretion regarding whether or when to assign, sell, or otherwise transfer the rights and interests created by this Financing Order or any interest therein, or to cause the issuance of any transition bonds authorized by this Financing Order, subject to the right of the Commission or its designated representative to have a decision-making role co-equal with CenterPoint to approve or disapprove the proposed pricing, marketing, and structuring of the transition bonds as set out in this Financing Order, and the Commission’s authority through the issuance advice letter process to find that the proposed issuance does not comply with the requirements of PURA and this Financing Order.

 

46. This Financing Order is final, is not subject to rehearing by this Commission, and is not subject to review or appeal except as expressly provided in PURA § 39.303(f). The finality of this Financing Order is not impaired in any manner by the participation of the Commission through its designated representative in any decisions related to issuance of the transition bonds or by the Commission’s review of or issuance of an order related to the issuance advice letter required to be filed with the Commission by this Financing Order.

 

47. This Financing Order meets the requirements for a financing order under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA.

 

48. The true-up mechanism and all other obligations of the State of Texas and the Commission set forth in this Financing Order are direct, explicit, irrevocable and unconditional upon issuance of the transition bonds and are legally enforceable against the State of Texas and the Commission.

 

49. [Reserved]


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50. The requirements for informal disposition pursuant to P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.35 have been met in this proceeding except for subsection (b)(2) that requires the proposed order to be served on all parties no less than 20 days before the Commission is scheduled to consider the application in an open meeting. Under P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.5(b), good cause exists to waive the requirements of P.U.C. PROC. R. 22.35(b), to permit consideration of this proceeding at the Commission’s next regularly scheduled Open Meeting on October 27, 2011, so that consumers may obtain the earliest and greatest possible benefit from the Docket No. 39504 Stipulation and the proposed securitization of the competition transition charges.

V. Ordering Paragraphs

Based upon the record, the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law set forth herein, and for the reasons stated above, this Commission orders:

A. Approval

 

1. Approval of Application. The application of CenterPoint for the issuance of a financing order under PURA § 39.303, is approved, as provided in this Financing Order. CenterPoint’s application and accompanying testimony and schedules, and proof of publication are incorporated into the record pursuant to this Financing Order.

 

2. Authority to Securitize. CenterPoint is authorized in accordance with this Financing Order to securitize and to cause the issuance of transition bonds in one or more series with an aggregate principal amount equal to $1,695,000,000 (the Securitizable Balance).

 

3. Recovery of Transition Charges. CenterPoint shall impose on, and the servicer shall collect from, all REPs serving existing or future retail consumers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999, and other entities which, under the terms of this Financing Order or Schedule TC5 are required to pay or collect transition charges, as provided in this Financing Order, transition charges in an amount sufficient to provide for the timely recovery of its aggregate qualified costs detailed in this Financing Order (including payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds). REPs shall pay the transition charges billed to them whether or not they collect the transition charges from their customers.


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4. Provision of Information. CenterPoint shall take all necessary steps to ensure that the Commission or its designated representative is provided sufficient and timely information to allow the Commission or its designated representative to fully participate in and exercise its decision making authority over the proposed securitization as provided in this Financing Order.

 

5.

Issuance Advice Letter. For each series of transition bonds issued, CenterPoint shall submit a draft issuance advice letter to the Commission Staff for review not later than two weeks prior to the expected date of commencement of marketing of the transition bonds. Within one week after receipt of the draft issuance advice letter, Commission Staff shall provide CenterPoint comments and recommendations regarding the adequacy of the information provided. Not later than the end of the first business day after pricing of the transition bonds and prior to issuance of the transition bonds, CenterPoint, in consultation with the Commission acting through its designated representative, shall file with the Commission an issuance advice letter in substantially the form of the issuance advice letter attached as Appendix A to this Financing Order. As part of the issuance advice letter, an officer of CenterPoint shall provide a certification worded precisely as the statement in the form of issuance advice letter approved by the Commission. The issuance advice letter shall be completed, shall evidence the actual dollar amount of the initial transition charges and other information specific to the transition bonds to be issued, and shall certify to the Commission that the structure and pricing of that series results in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions at the time that the transition bonds are priced, and the terms set out in this Financing Order. In addition, if original issue discount, additional credit enhancements, or arrangements to reduce interest rate risks or enhance marketability are used, the issuance advice letter shall include certification that the original issue discount, additional credit enhancements, or other arrangements are reasonably expected to provide benefits as required by this Financing Order. All amounts that require computation shall be computed using the mathematical formulas contained in the form of the issuance advice letter in Appendix A


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to this Financing Order and Schedule TC5 approved in this Financing Order. Electronic spreadsheets with the formulas supporting the schedules contained in the issuance advice letter shall be included with such letter. The Commission’s review of the issuance advice letter shall be limited to the arithmetic accuracy of the calculations and to compliance with PURA, this Financing Order, and the requirements that are contained in the issuance advice letter. The initial transition charges and the final terms of the transition bonds set forth in the issuance advice letter shall become effective on the date of issuance of the transition bonds (which shall not occur prior to the fifth business day after pricing) unless prior to noon on the fourth business day after pricing the Commission issues an order finding that the proposed issuance does not comply with PURA and this Financing Order.

 

6. Approval of Tariff. The form of the Schedule TC5 tariff attached as Appendix B to this Financing Order is approved. Prior to the issuance of any transition bonds under this Financing Order, CenterPoint shall file a tariff that conforms to the form of the Schedule TC5 tariff attached to this Financing Order. CenterPoint will begin billing the Schedule TC5 transition charges on the first meter reading day after the issuance of the transition bonds. For example, if the transition bonds are issued on a Wednesday, then the meters read on the next day, Thursday, will be billed for one day of transition charges; meters read two days later, Friday, will be billed for two days of transition charges, etc. This billing amount will be calculated by using the customer’s billing determinant for that month (i.e., kVA or kWh) and multiplying it by the appropriate Schedule TC5 transition charges. The resulting dollar amount will then be multiplied by a proration factor. The proration factor will be calculated by dividing the number of days the meter reading occurs past the transition bond issuance date by the total number of days in the customer’s billing cycle. For example, if the meter was read nine days after the transition bond issuance date and the billing cycle was thirty days long, the proration factor would be 30% (9/30 = .30, or 30%). All transition charges will be prorated in this manner until all days in the billing cycle occur after the transition bond issuance date, after which transition charges will apply to all usage. In a similar fashion, Schedule TC5 will be prorated commensurate with any subsequent periodic adjustments or annual reconciliations.


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B. Transition Charges

 

7. Imposition and Collection. CenterPoint is authorized to impose on, and the servicer is authorized to collect from, REPs serving all existing and future retail consumers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999, and other entities which, under the terms of this Financing Order or Schedule TC5 are required to pay or collect transition charges, transition charges in an amount sufficient to provide for the timely recovery of the aggregate Periodic Payment Requirement (including payment of principal and interest on the transition bonds), as approved in this Financing Order. If there is a shortfall in payment of an amount billed, the amount paid shall first be apportioned between the transition charges and other fees and charges (including transition charges or system restoration charges, as the case may be, attributable to the transition bonds issued in October 2001 pursuant to the financing order in Docket No. 21665; the transition bonds issued in December 2005 pursuant to the financing order in Docket No. 30485; the transition bonds issued in February 2008 pursuant to the financing order in Docket No. 34448; and the system restoration bonds issued in November 2009 pursuant to the financing order in Docket No. 37200), other than late fees, and second, any remaining portion of the payment shall be allocated to late fees.

 

8. BondCo’s Rights and Remedies. Upon the transfer by CenterPoint of the transition property to BondCo, BondCo shall have all of the rights, title, and interest of CenterPoint with respect to such transition property, including, without limitation, the right to exercise any and all rights and remedies with respect thereto, including the right to authorize disconnection of electric service and to assess and collect any amounts payable by any retail consumer in respect of the transition property. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then the transition property transferred as a result of each issuance shall be only those rights associated with that portion of the Securitizable Balance securitized by such issuance. The rights to impose, collect and receive transition charges along with the other rights arising pursuant to this Financing Order as they relate to any portion of the Securitizable Balance that remains unsecuritized shall remain with CenterPoint and shall not become transition property until transferred to a BondCo in connection with a subsequent issuance of transition bonds.


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9. Collector of Transition Charges. CenterPoint or any subsequent servicer of the transition bonds shall bill a consumer’s REP for the transition charges attributable to that consumer and the REP shall pay to the servicer of the transition bonds the amount billed for transition charges less the applicable charge-off allowance as provided in Finding of Fact 53(j) whether or not the REP has collected the transition charges from its customers.

 

10. Collection Period. The transition charges related to a series of transition bonds shall be designed to be collected over the expected life of the transition bonds. However, to the extent that any amounts are not recovered at the end of this period, CenterPoint may continue to recover them over a period ending not more than 15 years from the date of issuance of that series of transition bonds. Amounts remaining unpaid after this 15-year period may be recovered but only to the extent that the charges are attributable to services rendered during the 15-year period.

 

11. Allocation. CenterPoint shall allocate the transition charges among consumer classes in the manner described in this Financing Order and Schedule TC5.

 

12. Nonbypassability. CenterPoint and any other entity providing electric transmission or distribution services and any REP providing services to any retail consumer within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999, are entitled to collect and must remit, consistent with this Financing Order, the transition charges from such retail consumers and, except as provided under PURA §§ 39.252(b) and 39.262(k), as implemented by P.U.C. SUBST. R. 25.345, from retail consumers that switch to new on-site generation, and such retail consumers are required to pay such transition charges. The Commission will ensure that such obligations are undertaken and performed by CenterPoint, any other entity providing electric transmission or distribution services within HL&P’s certificated service area as of May 1, 1999, and any REP providing services to any retail consumer within such certificated service area.

 

13. True-Ups. True-ups of the transition charges, including any required adjustments to PBRAFs, shall be undertaken and conducted as described in Schedule TC5. The servicer shall file the true-up in a compliance docket and shall give notice of the filing to all parties in this docket. If transition bonds are issued in more than one series, then each series will be subject to separate true-up adjustments pursuant to PURA and this Financing Order, provided, however, that more than one series may be trued-up in a single proceeding.


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14. Ownership Notification. Any entity that bills transition charges to retail consumers shall, at least annually, provide written notification to each retail consumer for which the entity bills transition charges that the transition charges are the property of BondCo and not of the entity issuing such bill. In addition, the entity that bills transition charges to retail consumers shall include on its invoices a statement that all or part of the receivable reflected on the invoice has been or may be assigned.

C. Transition Bonds

 

15. Issuance. CenterPoint is authorized, through one or more BondCos, to issue one or more series of transition bonds as specified in this Financing Order. The ongoing qualified costs described in Appendix C may be recovered directly through the transition charges. The transition bonds shall be denominated in U.S. Dollars.

 

16. [Reserved.]

 

17. Ongoing Qualified Costs. CenterPoint may recover its actual ongoing qualified costs (including amounts required to provide a return on the portion, if any, of capital contributions or other required investment by CenterPoint in excess of 0.5% of the original principal amount of each series of transition bonds, as described in Findings of Fact 30 and 60) through its transition charges subject, with respect to servicing and administrative fees, to the cap on the servicing and administrative fees (which is applicable as long as CenterPoint serves as servicer and administrator) as set forth in Finding of Fact 17 and Appendix C to this Financing Order. Ongoing costs other than the servicing and administration fees of CenterPoint as servicer and administrator are not capped by this Financing Order. The amount of ongoing qualified costs is subject to updating in the issuance advice letter to reflect a change in the size of the transition bond issuance and any decision to issue the transition bonds in more than one series and other information available at the time of submission of the issuance advice letter. As provided in Ordering Paragraph 28, a servicer other than CenterPoint may collect a higher servicing fee than that set forth in Appendix C to this Financing Order if such higher fee is approved by the Commission and the indenture trustee.


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18. Refinancing. CenterPoint or any assignee may apply for one or more new financing orders pursuant to PURA § 39.303(g).

 

19. Collateral. All transition property and other collateral shall be held and administered by the indenture trustee pursuant to the indenture as described in CenterPoint’s application. BondCo shall establish a collection account with the indenture trustee as described in Findings of Fact 58-63. Upon payment of the principal amount of all transition bonds issued pursuant to this Financing Order and the discharge of all obligations in respect thereof, all amounts in the collection account, other than amounts in the capital subaccount (including investment earnings therein), and any amounts required to replenish the capital subaccount to the level of CenterPoint’s capital contribution and pay the authorized return on any capital contributions in excess of 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds, if any, shall be released by the indenture trustee to the servicer. CenterPoint shall notify the Commission within 30 days after the date that these funds are eligible to be released of the amount of such funds available for crediting to the benefit of ratepayers as set forth in Ordering Paragraph 20.

 

20.

Distribution Following Repayment. Following repayment of the transition bonds authorized in this Financing Order and release of the funds held by the indenture trustee, the servicer, on behalf of BondCo, shall distribute to REPs and other entities responsible for collection of transition charges from retail consumers, the final balance of the general subaccount, excess funds subaccount and all other subaccounts (except the capital subaccount), whether such balance is attributable to amounts deposited in such subaccounts or to interest thereon, remaining after all other qualified costs have been paid. The amounts shall be distributed to each REP and other entity that paid Schedule TC5 transition charges during the last 12 months that the Schedule TC5 transition charges were in effect. The amount paid to each REP or other entity shall be determined by multiplying the total amount available for distribution by a fraction, the numerator of


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which is the total Schedule TC5 transition charges paid by the REP or other entity during the last 12 months Schedule TC5 charges were in effect and the denominator of which is the total Schedule TC5 transition charges paid by all REPs and other entities responsible for collection of transition charges from retail ratepayers during the last 12 months the Schedule TC5 transition charges were in effect.

 

21. Funding of Capital Subaccount. The capital contribution by CenterPoint to BondCo to be deposited into the capital subaccount shall, with respect to each series of transition bonds, be funded by CenterPoint and not from the proceeds of the sale of transition bonds. Upon payment of the principal amount of all transition bonds and the discharge of all obligations in respect thereof, all amounts in the capital subaccount, including investment earnings, and any amounts required to replenish the capital subaccount to the level of CenterPoint’s capital contribution and any unpaid authorized return on capital contributions in excess of 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds, if any, shall be released to BondCo for payment to CenterPoint. Investment earnings in this subaccount and authorized return on capital contributions in excess of 0.5% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds, if any, may be released earlier in accordance with the indenture.

 

22.

Original Issue Discount and Credit Enhancement. CenterPoint may provide original issue discount or provide for various forms of credit enhancement including letters of credit, reserve accounts, overcollateralization account, surety bonds, and other mechanisms designed to promote the credit quality or marketability of the transition bonds to the extent not prohibited by this Financing Order. The decision to use such arrangements to enhance credit or promote marketability shall be made in conjunction with the Commission acting through its designated representative. CenterPoint may not enter into an interest-rate swap, currency hedge, or other hedging arrangement. CenterPoint may include the costs of original issue discount, credit enhancements, or other arrangements to promote credit quality or marketability as qualified costs only if CenterPoint certifies that such arrangements are reasonably expected to provide benefits greater than their cost and such certifications are agreed with by the Commission’s designated representative. CenterPoint shall not be required to enter any arrangements to


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promote credit quality or marketability unless all related costs and liabilities can be included in qualified costs. CenterPoint and the Commission’s designated representative shall evaluate the relative benefits of the arrangements in the same way that benefits are quantified under the quantifiable benefits test. This ordering paragraph does not apply to the collection account or its subaccounts approved in this Financing Order.

 

23. Annual Weighted Average Interest Rate of Bonds. The effective annual weighted average interest rate of the transition bonds, excluding ongoing qualified costs, shall not exceed 7.50% on an annual basis.

 

24. Life of Bonds. The expected final maturity of the transition bonds authorized by this Financing Order shall not exceed fourteen years.

 

25. Amortization Schedule. The Commission approves, and the transition bonds shall be structured to provide, transition charges that are designed to produce essentially level residential rates over the period of recovery if the actual year-to-year changes in residential load match the changes forecast at the time the bonds are structured. If the transition bonds are issued in more than one series each series must meet the levelized charge requirement.

 

26.

Commission Participation in Bond Issuance. The Commission, acting through its designated representative, shall participate directly with CenterPoint in negotiations regarding the structuring, marketing, and pricing of the transition bonds, and shall have equal rights with CenterPoint to approve or disapprove the proposed pricing, marketing, and structuring of the transition bonds. The Commission’s designated representative shall have the right to participate fully and in advance regarding all aspects of the structuring, marketing, and pricing of the transition bonds (and all parties shall be notified of the designated representative’s role) and shall be provided timely information that is necessary to fulfill its obligation to the Commission. The Commission expects its designated representative to advise the Commission of any proposal that does not comply in any material respect with the criteria established in this Financing Order and to promptly inform CenterPoint and the Commission of any items that, in the designated representative’s opinion, are not reasonable. Although this Financing Order is written in


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the context of an underwritten offering, nothing herein shall be construed to preclude issuance of the transition bonds through a competitive bid offering or private placement if CenterPoint and the Commission’s designated representative agree that CenterPoint should do so. The Commission’s designated representative shall notify CenterPoint and the Commission no later than 12:00 p.m. CST on the second business day after the Commission’s receipt of the issuance advice letter for each series of transition bonds whether the structuring, marketing, and pricing of that series of transition bonds comply with the criteria established in this Financing Order.

 

27. Use of BondCo. CenterPoint shall use BondCo, a special purpose entity as proposed in its application, in conjunction with the issuance of any transition bonds authorized under this Financing Order. BondCo shall be funded with an amount of capital that is sufficient for BondCo to carry out its intended functions and to avoid the possibility that CenterPoint would have to extend funds to BondCo in a manner that could jeopardize the bankruptcy remoteness of BondCo. CenterPoint may create more than one BondCo in which event the rights, structure and restrictions described in this Financing Order with respect to BondCo would be applicable to each such purchaser of transition property to the extent of the transition property sold to it and the transition bonds issued by it.

D. Servicing

 

28.

Servicing Agreement. The Commission authorizes CenterPoint to enter into a servicing agreement with each BondCo and to perform the servicing duties approved in this Financing Order. Without limiting the foregoing, in its capacity as initial servicer of the transition property, CenterPoint is authorized to calculate, bill and collect for the account of BondCo, the transition charges initially authorized in this Financing Order, as adjusted from time to time to meet the Periodic Payment Requirements as provided in this Financing Order; and to make such filings and take such other actions as are required or permitted by this Financing Order in connection with the periodic true-ups described in this Financing Order. The servicer shall be entitled to collect servicing fees in accordance with the provisions of the servicing agreement, provided that, as set forth in Appendix C, (i) the annual servicing fee payable to CenterPoint while it is serving as


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servicer (or to any other servicer affiliated with CenterPoint) shall not at any time exceed 0.05% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds. The annual servicing fee payable to any other servicer not affiliated with CenterPoint shall not at any time exceed 0.6% of the original principal amount of the transition bonds unless such higher rate is approved by the Commission pursuant to Ordering Paragraph 31. The servicing agreement shall contain a recital clause that the Commission, or its attorney, will enforce the servicing agreement for the benefit of Texas ratepayers to the extent permitted by law. The servicing agreement shall also include a provision that CenterPoint shall indemnify the Commission (for the benefit of retail consumers) in connection with any increase in servicing fees that become payable as a result of a default resulting from CenterPoint’s willful misconduct, bad faith, or negligence in performance of its duties or observance of its covenants under the servicing agreement. The indemnity will be enforced by the Commission but will not be enforceable by any REP or retail consumer.

 

29. Administration Agreement. The Commission authorizes CenterPoint to enter into an administration agreement with each BondCo to provide the services covered by the administration agreements in CenterPoint’s prior securitization transactions. The fee charged by CenterPoint as administrator under that agreement shall not exceed $100,000 per annum per BondCo plus reimbursable third party costs.

 

30. Servicing and Administration Agreement Revenues. The servicing and administrative fees collected by CenterPoint, or any affiliate of CenterPoint, acting as either the servicer or the administrator under the servicing agreement or administration agreement, shall be included as a revenue credit and reduce revenue requirements in each CenterPoint base rate case. The expenses incurred by CenterPoint or such affiliate to perform obligations under the servicing agreement and the administration agreement shall likewise be included as a cost of service in each CenterPoint base rate case.

 

31.

Replacement of CenterPoint as Servicer. Upon the occurrence of an event of default under the servicing agreement relating to CenterPoint’s performance of its servicing functions with respect to the transition charges, the financing parties may replace CenterPoint as the servicer in accordance with the terms of the servicing agreement. If


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the servicing fee of the replacement servicer will exceed the applicable maximum servicing fee specified in Ordering Paragraph 28, the replacement servicer shall not begin providing service until (i) the date the Commission approves the appointment of such replacement servicer or (ii) if the Commission does not act to either approve or disapprove the appointment, the date which is 45 days after notice of appointment of the replacement servicer is provided to the Commission. No entity may replace CenterPoint as the servicer in any of its servicing functions with respect to the transition charges and the transition property authorized by this Financing Order, if the replacement would cause any of the then current credit ratings of the transition bonds to be suspended, withdrawn or downgraded.

 

32. Amendment of Agreements. The parties to the servicing agreement, indenture, administration agreement, and sale agreement may amend the terms of such agreements; provided, however, that no amendment to any such agreement shall increase the ongoing qualified costs without the approval of the Commission. Any amendment that does not increase the ongoing qualified costs shall be effective without prior Commission approval. Any amendment to any such agreement that may have the effect of increasing ongoing qualified costs shall be provided by BondCo to the Commission along with a statement as to the possible effect of the amendment on the ongoing qualified costs. The amendment shall become effective on the later of (i) the date proposed by the parties to the amendment or (ii) 31 days after such submission to the Commission unless the Commission issues an order disapproving the amendment within a 30-day period.

 

33. Collection Terms. The servicer shall remit collections of the transition charges to BondCo or the indenture trustee for BondCo’s account in accordance with the terms of the servicing agreement.

 

34. Contract to Provide Service. To the extent that any interest in the transition property created by this Financing Order is assigned, sold, or transferred to an assignee, CenterPoint shall enter into a contract with that assignee that requires CenterPoint to continue to operate its transmission and distribution system in order to provide electric services to CenterPoint’s customers; provided, however, that this provision shall not prohibit CenterPoint from selling, assigning, or otherwise divesting its transmission and distribution systems or any part thereof so long as the entity or entities acquiring such system agree to continue operating the facilities to provide electric service to CenterPoint’s customers.


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35. SEC Requirements. Each REP or other entity responsible for collecting transition charges from retail consumers shall furnish to BondCo or CenterPoint or to any successor servicer information and documents necessary to enable BondCo or CenterPoint or any successor to comply with their respective disclosure and reporting requirements, if any, with respect to the transition bonds under federal securities laws.

E. Retail Electric Providers

 

36. REP Billing and Credit Standards. The Commission approves the REP standards detailed in Findings of Fact 51 through 53. These proposed REP standards relate only to the billing and collection of transition charges authorized under this Financing Order, and do not apply to collection of any other nonbypassable charges or other charges. The standards apply to all REPs other than REPs that have contracted with CenterPoint to have CenterPoint bill and collect transition charges from retail consumers. REPs may contract with parties other than CenterPoint to bill and collect transition charges from retail consumers, but such REPs shall remain subject to these standards. Upon adoption of any amendment to the rules governing REP standards as set out in P.U.C. SUBST. R. 25.108, Commission Staff shall initiate a proceeding to investigate the need to modify the standards adopted in this Financing Order to conform to that rule and to address whether each of the rating agencies from which a rating has been obtained by CenterPoint will determine that such modifications will not cause a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the ratings on the transition bonds. Modifications to the REP standards adopted in this Financing Order may not be implemented absent prior written confirmation from each such rating agency that such modifications will not cause a suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of its ratings on the transition bonds. The servicer of the transition bonds shall also comply with the provisions of the REP standards adopted by this Financing Order that are applicable to the servicer.


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37. Transition Charge Remittance Procedures. Transition charges shall be billed and collected in accordance with the REP standards adopted by this Financing Order. REPs shall be subject to penalties as provided in these standards. A REP shall not be obligated to pay the overdue transition charges of another REP whose customers it agrees to serve.

 

38. Remedies upon REP Default. A servicer of transition bonds shall have the remedies provided in the REP standards adopted by this Financing Order. If a REP that is in default fails to immediately select and implement one of the options provided in the REP standards or, after making its selection, fails to adequately meet its responsibilities under the selected option, then, subject to the limitations and requirements of the bankruptcy code if the REP is a debtor in bankruptcy, the REP shall allow the POLR or a qualified REP of the consumer’s choosing to assume immediately the responsibility for the billing and collection of transition charges in the manner and for the time provided in the REP standards.

 

39. Billing by POLRs. Every POLR appointed by the Commission shall comply with the minimum credit rating or deposit/credit support requirements described in the REP standards in addition to any other standard that may be adopted by the Commission. If the POLR defaults or is not eligible to provide billing and collection services, the servicer shall immediately assume responsibility for billing and collection of transition charges and continue to meet this obligation until a new POLR can be named by the Commission or the consumer requests the services of a REP in good standing. Retail consumers may never be directly re-billed by the successor REP, the POLR, or the servicer for any amount of transition charges the consumers have previously paid to their REP.

 

40. Disputes. Disputes between a REP and a servicer regarding any amount of billed transition charges shall be resolved in the manner provided by the REP standards adopted by this Financing Order.

 

41. Metering Data. If the servicer is providing metering services to a REP’s retail consumers, then metering data shall be provided to the REP at the same time as the billing. If the servicer is not providing metering services, the entity providing metering services shall comply with Commission rules and ensure that the servicer and the REP receive timely and accurate metering data in order for the servicer to meet its obligations under the servicing agreement and this Financing Order.


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42. Charge-Off Allowance. The REP may retain an allowance for charge-offs from its payments to the servicer as provided in the REP standards adopted by this Financing Order.

 

43. Service Termination. In the event that the servicer is billing consumers for transition charges, the servicer shall have the right to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use consumer for non-payment by the end-use consumer pursuant to applicable Commission rules. In the event that a REP or the POLR is billing consumers for transition charges, the REP or POLR shall have the right to transfer the consumer to the POLR or to another certified REP or to direct the servicer to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use consumer for non-payment by the end-use consumer to the extent permitted by and pursuant to terms and limitations of the applicable Commission rules.

F. Structure of the Securitization

 

44. Structure. CenterPoint shall structure the securitization as proposed in CenterPoint’s application. This structure shall be consistent with Findings of Fact 95 through 98.

G. Use of Proceeds

 

45.

Use of Proceeds. Upon the issuance of transition bonds, BondCo shall pay the net proceeds from the sale of the transition bonds (after payment of transaction costs) to CenterPoint for the purchase price of the transition property. CenterPoint will apply these net proceeds to reduce the debt and/or common equity on its regulatory books. While PURA includes any costs of retiring and refunding the electric utility’s existing debt and equity securities in connection with the issuance of transition bonds as “qualified costs”, CenterPoint is not seeking to include any such costs as qualified costs covered by this Financing Order. However, any costs associated with retiring or refunding existing debt securities of CenterPoint with the proceeds from the issuance of


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the transition bonds shall be treated as a regulatory asset earning interest at the same rate as the weighted average interest rate on the transition bonds (and if more than one series of transition bonds is issued, then the weighted average interest rate of the transition bonds of all series authorized by this Financing Order) and be considered for recovery in CenterPoint’s next regular rate proceeding, subject to a showing that such costs were prudently incurred and are reasonable and necessary.

H. Miscellaneous Provisions

 

46. Continuing Issuance Right. CenterPoint has the continuing irrevocable right to cause the issuance of transition bonds in one or more series in accordance with this Financing Order for a period commencing with the date of this Financing Order and extending 24 months following the later of (i) the date on which this Financing Order becomes final and no longer subject to any appeal; or (ii) the date on which any other regulatory approvals necessary to issue the transition bonds are obtained and no longer subject to any appeal. If at any time during the effective period of this Financing Order there is a severe disruption in the financial markets of the United States, the effective period shall automatically be extended to a date which is not less than 90 days after the date such disruption ends.

 

47. Internal Revenue Service Private Letter or Other Rulings. CenterPoint is not required by this Financing Order to obtain a ruling from the IRS; however, if it elects to do so, then upon receipt, CenterPoint shall promptly deliver to the Commission a copy of each private letter or other ruling issued by the IRS with respect to the proposed transaction, the transition bonds, or any other matter related thereto. CenterPoint shall also include a copy of every such ruling by the IRS it has received as an attachment to each issuance advice letter required to be filed by this Financing Order. CenterPoint may cause transition bonds to be issued without a private letter ruling if it obtains an opinion of tax counsel sufficient to support the issuance of the bonds.

 

48.

Binding on Successors. This Financing Order, together with the transition charges authorized in it, shall be binding on CenterPoint and any successor to CenterPoint that provides transmission and distribution service directly to retail consumers in HL&P’s


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certificated service area as of May 1, 1999, and any other entity that provides transmission or distribution services to retail consumers within that service area. This Financing Order is also binding on each REP, and any successor, that sells electric energy to retail consumers located within that service area, any other entity responsible for billing and collecting transition charges on behalf of BondCo, and any successor to the Commission. In this paragraph, a “successor” means any entity that succeeds by any means whatsoever to any interest or obligation of its predecessor, including by way of bankruptcy, reorganization or other insolvency proceeding, merger, consolidation, conversion, assignment, pledge or other security, by operation of law or otherwise.

 

49. Flexibility. Subject to compliance with the requirements of this Financing Order, CenterPoint and BondCo shall be afforded flexibility in establishing the terms and conditions of the transition bonds, including the final structure of BondCo, repayment schedules, term, payment dates, collateral, credit enhancement, required debt service, reserves, interest rates, use of original issue discount, other financing costs, and the ability of CenterPoint, at its option, to cause one or more series of transition bonds to be issued or to create more than one BondCo for purposes of issuing such transition bonds.

 

50. Effectiveness of Order. This Financing Order is effective upon issuance and is not subject to rehearing by the Commission. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no transition property shall be created hereunder, and CenterPoint shall not be authorized to impose, collect, and receive transition charges, until CenterPoint’s rights and interests under this Financing Order with respect to such transition property have been transferred to an assignee or pledged in connection with the issuance of the transition bonds.

 

51. Regulatory Approvals. All regulatory approvals within the jurisdiction of the Commission that are necessary for the securitization of the transition charges associated with the costs that are the subject of the application, and all related transactions contemplated in the application, are granted.

 

52. Payment of Commission’s Costs for Professional Services. In accordance with PURA § 39.302(4), CenterPoint shall pay the costs to the Commission of acquiring professional services for the purpose of evaluating CenterPoint’s proposed transaction, including, but not limited to, the Commission’s outside attorneys’ fees no later than 30 days after the issuance of any transition bonds.


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53. [Reserved.]

 

54. Effect. This Financing Order constitutes a legal financing order for CenterPoint under Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA. The Commission finds this Financing Order complies with the provisions of Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA. A financing order gives rise to rights, interests, obligations, and duties as expressed in Subchapter G of Chapter 39 of PURA. It is the Commission’s express intent to give rise to those rights, interests, obligations, and duties by issuing this Financing Order. CenterPoint and the servicer are directed to take all actions as are required to effectuate the transactions approved in this Financing Order, subject to compliance with the criteria established in this Financing Order.

 

55. Further Commission Action. The Commission guarantees that it will act pursuant to this Financing Order as expressly authorized by PURA to ensure that expected transition charge revenues are sufficient to pay on a timely basis scheduled principal and interest on the transition bonds issued pursuant to this Financing Order and other costs, including fees and expenses, in connection with the transition bonds.

 

56. All Other Motions Denied. All motions, requests for entry of specific findings of fact and conclusions of law, and any other requests for general or specific relief not expressly granted herein, are denied for want of merit.


PUC Docket No. 39809   Financing Order   Page  81  of 81

 

SIGNED AT AUSTIN, TEXAS the 27th day of October 2011.

PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF TEXAS
  /s/ Donna L. Nelson
  DONNA L. NELSON, CHAIRMAN
  /s/ Kenneth W. Anderson, Jr.
  KENNETH W. ANDERSON, JR., COMMISSIONER


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 1 of 17

FORM OF ISSUANCE ADVICE LETTER

            day,                      , 2012

ADVICE             

THE PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF TEXAS

SUBJECT: ISSUANCE ADVICE LETTER FOR TRANSITION BONDS

Pursuant to the Financing Order adopted in Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for a Financing Order, Docket No.              (the “Financing Order”), CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC, (“Applicant”) hereby submits, no later than the second business day after the pricing date of this series of Transition Bonds, the information referenced below. This Issuance Advice Letter is for the [BondCo] Transition Bonds series             , classes             . Any capitalized terms not defined in this letter shall have the meanings ascribed to them in the Financing Order.

PURPOSE

This filing establishes the following:

 

(a) the total amount of Qualified Costs being securitized;

 

(b) confirmation of compliance with issuance standards;

 

(c) the actual terms and structure of the Transition Bonds being issued;

 

(d) the initial Transition Charge for retail users; and

 

(e) the identification of the SPE.

QUALIFIED COSTS BEING SECURITIZED

The total amount of Qualified Costs being securitized (the “Securitized Qualified Costs”) is presented in Attachment 1.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 2 of 17

 

COMPLIANCE WITH ISSUANCE STANDARDS

The Financing Order requires Applicant to confirm, using the methodology approved therein, that the actual terms of the Transition Bonds result in compliance with the standards set forth in the Financing Order. These standards are:

 

  1. The securitization of Qualified Costs will provide tangible and quantifiable benefits to ratepayers, greater than would be achieved absent the issuance of Transition Bonds (See Attachment 2);

 

  2. The amount securitized will not exceed the present value of the conventional financing revenue requirement over the life of the proposed Transition Bonds associated with the Securitized Qualified Costs when the present value calculation is made using a discount rate equal to the proposed interest rate on the Transition Bonds (See Attachment 2);

 

  3. The total amount of revenues to be collected under the Financing Order is less than the revenue requirement that would be recovered using conventional financing methods (See Attachment 2);

 

  4. The Transition Bonds will be issued in one or more series comprised of one or more classes having target final maturities of 1_ years and legal final maturities not exceeding 15 years from the date of issuance of such series (See Attachment 3);

 

  5. The amortization of the Transition Bonds shall be as described in Appendix E to the Financing Order (See Attachment 3); and

 

  6. The structuring and pricing of the Transition Bonds is certified by the Applicant to result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the general parameters (including the amortization structure) set out in the Financing Order (See Attachment 4).


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 3 of 17

 

ACTUAL TERMS OF ISSUANCE

Transition Bond Series:             

Transition Bond Issuer: [BondCo]

Trustee:

Closing Date:                      , 2012

Bond Ratings: S&P AAA, Fitch AAA, Moody’s Aaa

Amount Issued: $                        

Transition Bond Issuance Costs: See Attachment 1, Schedule B.

Transition Bond Support and Servicing: See Attachment 2, Schedule B.

 

Tranche

   Coupon Rate     Scheduled
Final
Payment
Dates
     Legal
Final Maturity
 

A-1

     _____     __/__/____         __/__/____   

A-2

     _____     __/__/____         __/__/____   

A-3

     _____     __/__/____         __/__/____   

A-4

     _____     __/__/____         __/__/____   

A-5

     _____     __/__/____         __/__/____   

 

Effective Annual Weighted Average Interest Rate of the Transition Bonds:

   _____%

Life of Series:

   __ years

Weighted Average Life of Series:

   __ years

Call provisions (including premium, if any):

  

Amortization Schedule

   Attachment 2, Schedule A

Schedule Final Payment Date:

   Attachment 2, Schedule A

Legal Final Maturity Dates:

   Attachment 2, Schedule A

Annual Overcollateralization Funding Requirements:

   Attachment 2, Schedule C

Payments to Investors:

   Semiannually Beginning _________ __, 2012

Initial annual Servicing Fee as a percent of original Transition Bond principal balance:

   ____%


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 4 of 17

 

INITIAL TRANSITION CHARGE

Table I below shows the current assumptions for each of the variables used in the calculation of the initial Transition Charges.

 

TABLE I
Input Values For Initial Transition Charges

Applicable period: from                          ,             to                      ,         

  

Forecasted retail billing determinants for the applicable period:

   ____________

Transition Bond debt service for the applicable period:

   $ ___________

Percent of billed amounts expected to be charged-off:

  

____% (Residential)

____% (Non-Residential

Forecasted % of Billings Paid in the Applicable Period:

   _____%

Forecasted retail billing determinants collected for the applicable period:

   ___________

Forecasted annual ongoing transaction expenses (Excluding Transition Bond principal and interest):

   $ ______.__

Current Transition Bond outstanding balance:

   $ __________

Target Transition Bond outstanding balance as of __/__/__:

   $ __________

Total Periodic Billing Requirement for applicable period:

   $ __________

Allocation of the PBR among customer classes: See Attachment 3.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 5 of 17

 

Based on the foregoing, the initial Transition Charges calculated for retail users are as follows:

 

TABLE II

Rate Class

  

Initial Transition Charge

Residential

   0.______ $/kWh

MGS

   0.______ $/kW
   0.______ $/kWh

LGS

   0.______ $/kVa
   0.______ $/kW

LOS-A

   0.______ $/kW

LOS-B

   0.______ $/kW

Non-Metered Lighting

   0.______ $/kWh

Standby Electric Service – Distribution

   0.______ $/kW

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Distribution

   0.______ $/kW

Interruptible Service – Thirty Minute Notice

   0.______ $/kW

Interruptible Service – Ten Minute Notice

   0.______ $/kW

Interruptible Service – Instantaneous

   0.______ $/kW

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Transmission

   0.______ $/kW

Standby Electric Service – Transmission

   0.______ $/kW

Standby Interruptible Service

   0.______ $/kW

SCP

   0.______ $/kW

IDENTIFICATION OF SPE

The owner of the Transition Property (the “SPE”) will be: [BondCo].

EFFECTIVE DATE

In accordance with the Financing Order, the Transition Charge shall be automatically effective upon the Applicant’s receipt of payment in the amount of $                 from [BondCo], following Applicant’s execution and delivery to [BondCo] of the Bill of Sale transferring Applicant’s rights and interests under the Financing Order and other rights and interests that will become Transition Property upon transfer to [BondCo] as described in the Financing Order.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 6 of 17

 

NOTICE

Copies of this filing are being furnished to the parties on the attached service list. Notice to the public is hereby given by filing and keeping this filing open for public inspection at Applicant’s corporate headquarters.

AUTHORIZED OFFICER

The undersigned is an officer of Applicant and authorized to deliver this Issuance Advice Letter on behalf of Applicant.

 

Respectfully submitted,
CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC
By:    
Name:    
Title:    


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 7 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 1

SCHEDULE A

CALCULATION OF SECURITIZED QUALIFIED COSTS1

 

True-up Balance

   $ ______   

Interest through [Transition Bond issuance date]

     ______   

Up-front Qualified Costs (Attachment 1, Schedule B)

     ______   

Rate Case Expenses

     ______   

Less: ADFIT benefit on applicable assets

     ______   

Less: Amount recovered through CTCs, if any

     ______   

Less: Amount Allocated to Texas New Mexico Power

     ______   

TOTAL SECURITIZED QUALIFIED COSTS

   $ ______   

 

 

1 

Refer to the attached workpapers.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 8 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 1

SCHEDULE B

ESTIMATED UP-FRONT QUALIFIED COSTS

 

CAPPED UP-FRONT QUALIFIED COSTS:

  

Legal Fees and Expenses for Company’s/Issuer’s Counsel

   $

Legal Fees and Expenses for Underwriters’ Counsel

   $

Legal Fees and Expenses for Trustee’s Counsel

   $

Legal Fees and Expenses for Commission’s Counsel

   $

Accountant’s/Auditor’s Fees

   $

Fee for Company’s Structuring Advisor

   $

Up-front Trustee Payments

   $

Servicer Set-up Costs

   $

Printing and Filing Costs

   $

Miscellaneous Administrative Costs

   $

SUBTOTAL CAPPED UP-FRONT QUALIFIED COSTS:

   $

UNCAPPED UP-FRONT QUALIFIED COSTS:

  

Original Issue Discount

   $

Underwriting Costs

   $

Rating Agency Fees

   $

Debt/Equity Retirement Transaction Costs

   $

SEC Registration Fees

   $

Commission’s Financial Advisor Fees

   $

SUBTOTAL UNCAPPED UP-FRONT QUALIFIED COST:

   $

TOTAL UP-FRONT COSTS SECURITIZED

   $ __________

Note: Any difference between the Estimated Up-front Qualified Costs securitized and the actual up-front costs incurred will be resolved through the true-up process described in the Financing Order.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 9 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 2

SCHEDULE A

TRANSITION BOND REVENUE REQUIREMENT INFORMATION

 

          TRANCHE A-1          

Payment

Date

  

Principal

Balance

   Interest    Principal    Total Payment
   $    $    $    $

 

          TRANCHE A-2          

Payment

Date

  

Principal

Balance

   Interest    Principal    Total Payment
   $    $    $    $

 

          TRANCHE A-3          

Payment

Date

  

Principal

Balance

   Interest    Principal    Total Payment
   $    $    $    $


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 10 of 17

 

          TRANCHE A-4          

Payment

Date

  

Principal

Balance

   Interest    Principal    Total Payment
   $    $    $    $


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 11 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 2

SCHEDULE B

ONGOING QUALIFIED COSTS

 

     ANNUAL AMOUNT

Servicing Fee (0.05% of Transition Bonds principal amount)

   $

Administration Fees and Expenses

   $

Trustee Fees and Expenses

   $

Legal Fees

   $

Accounting Fees

   $

Ongoing Costs of Credit Enhancement (other than Collection Account)

   $

Ongoing Costs of Swaps and Hedges

   $

Independent Managers’ Fees

   $

Rating Agency Fees

   $

Printing and Filing Fees

   $

Miscellaneous

   $

TOTAL ONGOING QUALIFIED COSTS

   $

Note: The amounts shown for each category of operating expense on this attachment are the expected expenses for the first year of the transition bonds. Transition charges will be adjusted at least annually to reflect any changes in Ongoing Qualified Costs through the true-up process described in the Financing Order.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 12 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 2

SCHEDULE C

CALCULATION OF TRANSITION CHARGES

 

Year    Transition Bond
Payments2
   Ongoing Costs3    Overcollateralization
Account Funding4
   Total Nominal
Transition Charge
Requirement5
   Present Value of
Transition Charges6

1

   $    $    $    $   

2

              

3

              

4

              

5

              

6

              

7

              

8

              

9

              

10

              

11

              

12

              

13

              

14

              

Total

              
           

 

  

 

 

 

2 

From Attachment 2, Schedule A.

3 

From Attachment 2, Schedule B.

4 

From Attachment 2, Schedule C.

5 

Sum of transition bond payments, ongoing costs and required overcollateralization account funding.

6 

The discount rate used is the weighted average effective annual interest rate of the transition bonds.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 13 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 2

SCHEDULE D

COMPLIANCE WITH SUBCHAPTER G OF THE UTILITIES CODE

TANGIBLE & QUANTIFIABLE BENEFITS AND REVENUE REQUIREMENTS TESTS:7

 

     Conventional Financing Through
Competition Transition Charge
(CTC)8
   Securitization Financing9      Savings/(Cost) of Securitization
Financing
 
Nominal    $      $         $   

Present Value

   $      $         $   

 

 

7 

Calculated in accordance with the methodology used in Appendix D to the Financing Order.

8 

CTC carrying cost at             % and CTC term of              years as provided in Financing Order. The discount rate used is the weighted average effective annual interest rate of the transition bonds.

9 

From Attachment 2, Schedule D.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 14 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 3

INITIAL ALLOCATION OF COSTS TO TC5 CLASSES

 

(1)    (2)     (3)     (4)     (5)      (6)      (7)    (8)  

TC2 Class

   PBRAF     Subgroups     Allocation
Factor
After Intra-
Industrial
Adjustment
    Periodic
Billing
Requirement
     Billing
Requirement per
TC5 Class

(4) * (5)
     Forecasted
Billing
Determinant
   Transition
Charge

(6) / (7)
 

Residential

                       $         $                          $/kWh   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  
                       $         $                          $/kW   
    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

MGS

                              $         $                          $/kWh   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  
                       $         $                          $/kVa   
    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

LGS

                              $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

LOS-A

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

LOS-B

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Non-Metered Lighting

                       $         $                          $/kWh   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Standby Electric Svc. – Distribution

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Interruptible Svc. Supplemental – Dist.

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Interruptible Svc. – 30 Minute Notice

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Interruptible Svc. – 10 Minute Notice

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Interruptible Svc. – Instantaneous

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Interruptible Svc. Supplemental – Trans.

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Standby Electric Svc. – Transmission

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Standby Interruptible Svc.

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Special Contract Pricing

                       $         $                          $/kW   
  

 

 

     

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

  

Total

     100.0000       100.0000      $           
           

 

 

    

 

  


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 15 of 17

 

ATTACHMENT 4

FORM OF APPLICANT’S CERTIFICATION

[CenterPoint Letterhead]

Date:                  , 2012

Public Utility Commission of Texas

1701 N. Congress Ave.

P.O. Box 13362

Austin, TX 78711-3326

[Commission’s Financial Advisor]

Re: Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for a Financing Order, Docket No.             

CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC (the “Applicant”) submits this Certification pursuant to Ordering Paragraph No. [5] of the Financing Order in Application of CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC for a Financing Order, Docket No.              (the “Financing Order”). All capitalized terms not defined in this letter shall have the meanings ascribed to them in the Financing Order.

In its issuance advice letter dated                  , 2012, the Applicant has set forth the following particulars of the Transition Bonds:

 

Name of Transition Bonds:                             

SPE: [BondCo]

Closing Date:             , 2012

Amount Issued: $            

Expected Amortization Schedule: See Attachment 2, Schedule A to the Issuance Advice Letter

Distributions to Investors (quarterly or semi-annually): Semi-annually

Weighted Average Coupon Rate:             %

Weighted Average Yield:             %

The following actions were taken in connection with the design, structuring and pricing of the bonds:

 

   

Included credit enhancement in the form of the true-up mechanism, a 0.50% capital subaccount and a 0.50% overcollateralization subaccount. (Subject to a minimum balance on the day before the next scheduled payment date of 10% of the scheduled payment on such payment date.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 16 of 17

 

   

Registered the transition bonds with the Securities and Exchange Commission to facilitate greater liquidity.

 

   

Achieved AAA/AAA/Aaa ratings from all three of the major rating agencies.

 

   

Worked with the Commission’s designated representative or financial advisor to select underwriters that have experience related to transition bond offerings as well as other ABS offerings.

 

   

Provided the preliminary prospectus by e-mail and hard copy to prospective investors.

 

   

Allowed sufficient time for investors to review the preliminary prospectus and to ask questions regarding the transaction.

 

   

Held one-on-one and group conference calls with investors, along with meetings in to describe the legislative, political and regulatory framework and the bond structure.

 

   

Arranged rating agency conference calls and issuance of pre-sale reports during the marketing period to specifically address investor questions.

 

   

During the period that the bonds were marketed, held daily market update discussions with the underwriting team to develop recommendations for pricing and Commission’s [designated representative or financial advisor].

 

   

Had multiple conversations with all of the members of the underwriting team during the marketing phase in which we stressed the requirements of the Financing Order.

 

   

Implemented a marketing plan designed to encourage each of the co-managers to aggressively market the bonds to their customers and to reach out to a broad base of potential investors.

 

   

Provided potential investors with access to a Bloomberg roadshow and an internet roadshow for viewing on repeated occasions at investors’ convenience. Hard copies were presented in one-on-one and group meetings with investors (but were reclaimed at the conclusion of the meetings).

 

   

Adapted the transition bond offering to market conditions and investor demand at the time of pricing within the constraints set by the Financing Order. Variables impacting the final structure of the transaction, including the relative benefit of a fixed versus floating rate issue, the length of average lives and maturity of the bonds, and interest rate requirements at the time of pricing, were evaluated to ensure that the structure of the transaction would correspond to investor preferences and rating agency requirements for AAA ratings.


APPENDIX A

FINANCING ORDER

Page 17 of 17

 

   

Worked with the Commission’s financial advisor to develop bond allocations, underwriter compensation, and preliminary price guidance designed to achieve the lowest possible interest rates.

Based upon information reasonably available to the officers, agents, and employees of the Applicant, the Applicant hereby certifies that the structuring and pricing of the Transition Bonds, as described in the issuance advice letter, will result in the lowest transition bond charges consistent with market conditions and the general parameters set out in the Financing Order (including the amortization structure), all within the meaning of Section 39.301 of PURA.

Applicant further certifies that its use of credit enhancements and arrangements to reduce interest rate risk or enhance marketability is expected to provide benefits greater than its cost and that the Commission’s designated representative or financial advisor agrees with this certification.

The foregoing certifications do not mean that lower transition bond charges could not have been achieved under different market conditions, or that structuring and pricing the Transition Bonds under conditions not permitted by the Financing Order could not also have achieved lower transition bond charges.

The Applicant is delivering this Certification to the Commission and to the Commission’s financial advisor, solely to assist them in establishing compliance with the aforesaid Section 39.301, and to no other person. The Applicant specifically disclaims any responsibility to any other person for the contents of this Certification, whether such person claims rights directly or as third-party beneficiary.

 

CENTERPOINT ENERGY HOUSTON ELECTRIC, LLC
By:    
Name:    
Title:    


Chapter 6: Company Specific Items   Sheet No. 6.7.5
  Page 1 of 29

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Applicable: Entire Service Area

6.1.1.2.5 SCHEDULE TC5—TRANSITION CHARGES

SECTION 1: APPLICABILITY

This schedule sets out the rates and terms and conditions under which Transition Charges will be billed and collected by CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC (Company), any successor servicer(s) and any retail electric providers (REP) or collection agents billing or collecting Transition Charges on behalf of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC (SPE). The Transition Charges were authorized by the Financing Order approved by the Public Utility Commission of Texas (Commission) in Docket No.              on (date)             (Financing Order). Pursuant to terms of the Financing Order and the requirements of Section 39.301 et seq. of the Texas Utilities Code, all of the Company’s rights under the Financing Order, including the right to bill and collect Transition Charges and to adjust Transition Charges pursuant to this Schedule TC5, were transferred to the SPE in connection with the issuance of transition bonds. The rights transferred to the SPE are “transition property” of the SPE (as defined in Section 39.304 of the Utilities Code). On the effective date of this Schedule TC5 the Company will act as servicer on behalf of the SPE to bill, collect, receive and adjust Transition Charges imposed pursuant to this Schedule TC5. However, the SPE may select another party to serve as servicer or the Company may resign as servicer in accordance with the terms and subject to the conditions of the Servicing Agreement and the Financing Order. A successor servicer selected under these conditions will assume the obligations of the Company as servicer under this Schedule TC5. As used in this Schedule TC5, the term “Servicer” includes any successor servicer. All actions by the Company under this Schedule TC5, including collection of Transition Charges, will be undertaken solely in its role as servicer under the Servicing Agreement between the Company and the SPE dated as of (date)            .

This schedule is applicable to:

 

  1. Retail customers located within the certificated service area of Reliant Energy HL&P (HL&P) as such service area existed on May 1, 1999 who receive electric transmission and/or distribution service through a REP served by the Company and to the facilities, premises and loads of such retail customers;

 

  2. Retail customers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999 who are presently receiving transmission and/or distribution service either directly from another utility, electric cooperative or municipally owned utility (T or D Provider) or through a REP served by another T or D Provider, and whose request to change service to the other T or D Provider was made after May 1, 1999;

 

Revision Number:     Original   Effective: xx/xx/xx


Chapter 6: Company Specific Items  

Sheet No. 6.7.5

Page 2 of 29

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Applicable: Entire Service Area

 

  3. Retail customers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999 and who are served by New On-Site Generation. New On-Site Generation means “New On-Site Generation” as defined in Section 25.345(c)(1) of the Commission’s Substantive Rules.

 

  4. REPs that serve retail customers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999.

 

  5. Any other entity which, under the terms of the Financing Order or the Utilities Code, may be obligated to pay, bill, collect, or adjust the Transition Charges.

 

  6. This schedule is applicable to public retail customers located within HL&P’s certificated service area as it existed on May 1, 1999 who purchase power from the General Land Office as provided for in the Utilities Code, Section 35.102.

SECTION 2: CHARACTER OF TRANSITION CHARGES

Transition Charges are non-bypassable charges. All Transition Charges other than those applicable to New On-Site Generation are computed and paid on the basis of individual end-use retail customer consumption or demand. In accordance with Utilities Code Section 39.252(b) and Section 25.345(i)(3) of the Commission’s Substantive Rules, the Transition Charges applicable to use of New On-Site Generation that results in a “material reduction” of the customer’s use of energy delivered through the Company’s transmission and distribution facilities (as defined in Section 25.345(i)(4) of the Commission’s Substantive Rules) are computed and paid based on the output of the on-site generation used to meet the internal electric requirements of the customer. Customers with New On-Site Generation will also be required to pay the Transition Charges applicable to energy actually delivered to the Customer through the Company’s facilities. Individual end-use retail customers are responsible for paying Transition Charges billed to them in accordance with the terms of this Schedule TC5 whether the charges are billed directly by Servicer or are included in the bills submitted to the customer by a REP or another entity. Payment is to be made to the entity that bills the customer in accordance with the terms of the Servicing Agreement and the Financing Order. The billing entity may be the Company, a successor servicer, a REP or an entity designated to collect Transition Charges in place of the REP.

The Transition Charges are separate charges to be paid in addition to any other applicable charges for services received. Although the Transition Charges are separate charges, they may be included within other charges of the billing entity.

The REP or entity designated to collect Transition Charges in place of the REP will pay Transition Charges (less an allowance for charge-offs calculated pursuant to this Schedule TC5)

 

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to Servicer in accordance with the requirements of the Financing Order and this Schedule TC5 whether or not it has collected the Transition Charges from its customers. To the extent that the REP’s actual charge-offs differ from the charge-off allowance, adjustments will be made pursuant to this Schedule TC5. The REP will have no right to reimbursement other than as expressly set out in this Schedule TC5.

Servicer will remit collections to the SPE in accordance with the terms of the Servicing Agreement.

SECTION 3: TERM

This Schedule TC5 is effective beginning on the date the transition bonds are issued. Schedule TC5 will remain in effect as provided in the Financing Order until the Transition Charges collected and remitted to the SPE are sufficient to satisfy all obligations of the SPE to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds (as due over the 14-year term of the transition bonds) and to pay all other qualified costs as provided in the Financing Order. However, in no event will the Transition Charges be billed for service provided after 15 years from issuance of the transition bonds, or sooner if the transition bonds are paid in full at an earlier date. This Schedule TC5 is irrevocable.

SECTION 4: TRANSITION CHARGE CLASSES

Transition Charges are calculated and applied by Transition Charge Class. There are 15 Transition Charge Classes, nine of which are Capped Classes. Each Transition Charge Class is defined in terms of the base rate tariff classes that existed on HL&P’s system on September 1, 1999 (“pre-restructuring rate schedules”). The Transition Charge Classes are defined as follows:

Residential Class: The Residential Class is made up of (i) every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedule RS or RTD on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P under a pre-restructuring rate schedule, and (ii) each new customer that was not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule, but is the type of customer which, if it had been served by HL&P under pre-restructuring rate schedules would have qualified for service under HL&P’s rate schedules RS or RTD.

MGS Class: The MGS Class is made up of (i) every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedule MGS on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule, and (ii) each new customer that was not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule, but is the type of customer which, if it had been served by HL&P under a pre-restructuring rate schedule would have qualified for service under HL&P’s rate schedule MGS and whose demand is estimated by the Company to be less than 400 kVa. This class includes customers served under Rider GLTC. Customers served under rate schedules EIS, HVP and CSB are included in the MGS class if the customer’s contract for service from HL&P provided that the MGS rate was the basis for pricing.

 

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LGS Class: The LGS Class is made up of (i) every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedule LGS on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule, and (ii) each new customer that was not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule, but is the type of customer which, if it had been served by HL&P under a pre-restructuring rate schedule would have qualified for service under HL&P’s rate schedules LGS and whose demand as estimated by the Company, if served at less than 60,000 volts, is 400 kVa or greater; or if served at 60,000 volts or greater, is at least 400 kVa but less than 2,000 kVa. This class includes customers served under Rider SEI. Customers served under rate schedules EIS, HVP and CSB are included in the LGS class if the customer’s contract for service from HL&P provided that the LGS rate was the basis for pricing.

LOS-A Class: The LOS-A Class is made up of (i) every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedule LOS-A on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule, and (ii) each new customer that was not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule, but is the type of customer which, if it had been served by HL&P under a pre-restructuring rate schedule would have qualified for service under HL&P’s rate schedule LOS-A and has a demand as estimated by the Company of 2,000 kVa or greater. Customers served under rate schedules EIS and HVP are included in the LOS-A class if the customer’s contract for service from HL&P provided that the LOS-A rate was the basis for pricing.

LOS-B Class: The LOS-B Class is made up of every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedule LOS-B on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule. Customers that were not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule may not be included in this class.

Non-Metered Lighting Class: The Non-Metered Lighting Class is made up of (i) every customer that was served under HL&P rate schedules SPL, MLS or MTA on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule, and (ii) each new customer which was not served by HL&P under any pre-restructuring rate schedule, but is taking outdoor lighting services which are provided on an unmetered basis using lighting fixtures controlled by photo-electric devices which would have qualified for service under HL&P’s pre-restructuring rate schedules SPL, MLS and MTA.

In addition to the six Transition Charge Classes described above, there will be nine additional Transition Charge Classes, each of which is a capped class (“Capped Classes”). Each of the Capped Classes will be made up solely of customers that actually received service from HL&P during the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999 under the HL&P rate schedule related to the

 

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class and any SIP customers with a contract effective date after April 30, 1999 and before January 1, 2002. The nine Capped Classes, and the related rate schedule, are as follows:

 

Capped Class

   Related Rate Schedule
Standby Electric Service – Distribution    SES
Interruptible Service Supplemental – Distribution    ISS
Interruptible Service – 30 minute notice    IS-30
Interruptible Service – 10 minute notice    IS-10 & SIP
Interruptible Service – Instantaneous    IS-I
Interruptible Service Supplemental – Transmission    ISS
Standby Electric Service – Transmission    SES
Standby Interruptible Service    SBI
Special Contract Pricing    SCP

Each customer in one or more of the nine Capped Classes will be charged the Transition Charges for the applicable class only for service the customer actually receives during the billing period up to the Monthly Cap. The Monthly Cap for each customer will be based on the amount of service the customer received under the related rate schedule during the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999 or for any SIP customer, the Monthly Cap will be based on the customer’s average monthly interruptible demand corresponding to the initial MFC under the customer’s SIP contract effective after April 30, 1999 and before January 1, 2002, and calculated as follows:

(1) For customers which took stand alone standby service (SBI and/or SES without other service), the Monthly Cap for SBI and SES will be the highest demand under the respective rate, during the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999. If a customer began service under SES and/or SBI after April 30, 1999, the Monthly Cap for such customer’s will be the highest demand under rate SES or SBI, as applicable, during the period from April 30, 1999 to January 1, 2002, if the customer provides the Company adequate documentation that (i) the additional load served was on-site load normally served by the customer’s on-site generation and (ii) the customer’s on-site generation was out of service due to forced outage or maintenance. If the customer does not provide the required documentation, the additional load will be billed using the Transition Charges applicable to the LGS Class for distribution voltage customers or LOS-A Class for transmission voltage customers.

(2) For customers which took SBI and/or SES in combination with other services, the Transition Charge for additional load taken in excess of the Monthly Cap will be the Transition Charge for the LOS-A class restated and applied as a cents per KWh charge if the customer provides the Company adequate documentation that (i) the additional load was lawfully served without use of the Company’s transmission and distribution facilities and (ii) the customer’s on-site generation was out of service due to forced outage or maintenance. If the customer does not provide the required documentation, the additional load will be billed using the Transition Charges applicable to the LOS-A Class for transmission voltage customers applied on a kW basis.

 

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(3) For any SCP customer that also received service under a non-Capped Class, the SCP rate will have a Monthly Cap based on the amount of service the customer received under the SCP rate schedule during the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999. The Monthly Cap will be the customer’s monthly maximum hourly kW under the SCP rate schedule during the peak hours as defined herein, summed for the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999 and divided by the number of months during which the customer actually consumed power under the SCP rate schedule.

(4) For all other customers in Capped Classes, the Monthly Cap will be the customer’s monthly maximum hourly kW under the related rate schedule during the peak hours as defined herein, summed for the 12-month period ended April 30, 1999 or alternate period applicable to any SIP customer and divided by the number of months during which the customer actually consumed power under the rate schedule. For monthly service in excess of the Monthly Cap(s), the charge associated with customer’s non-capped Transition Charge Class will apply. If the customer is served at distribution voltage and did not have service associated with one of the six non-capped Transition Charge Classes, the customer will be required to pay the Transition Charges applicable to the LGS Class for all monthly service in excess of its Monthly Cap. If the customer is served at transmission voltage and did not have service associated with one of the six non-capped Transition Charge Classes, the customer will be required to pay the Transition Charges applicable to the LOS-A Class for all monthly service in excess of its Monthly Cap.

The categories of service historically provided by HL&P ceased to exist after electric business activities were unbundled pursuant to Section 39.051 of the Utilities Code. Similarly, since the advent of customer choice under Section 39.102 of the Utilities Code, retail customers receive service that may not only have different names, but may have different characteristics than the service historically provided by HL&P. The classifications set out in the preceding paragraphs will be applied to determine the Transition Charge applicable to each customer without regard to the descriptions that may be used to describe the services currently provided to retail customers.

SECTION 5: PERIODIC BILLING REQUIREMENT ALLOCATION FACTORS

The initial Periodic Billing Requirement Allocation Factors (“PBRAF”) for each Transition Charge Class are set out below. These initial PBRAFs will remain in effect throughout the life of the transition bonds unless a modification of the factors is made pursuant to the allocation factor adjustment provisions in Section 6 of this Schedule TC5:

 

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INITIAL PERIODIC BILLING REQUIREMENT ALLOCATION FACTORS

 

TRANSITION CHARGE
CLASS
   PBRAF

Residential

   40.6106%

MGS

   30.2232%

LGS

   16.7709%

LOS-A

   4.3673%

LOS-B

   2.5279%

Non-Metered Lighting

   0.6205%

CAPPED CLASSES

  

Standby Electric Service – Distribution

   0.0304%

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Distribution

   0.1053%

Interruptible Service – Thirty Minute Notice

   0.7007%

Interruptible Service – Ten Minute Notice

   1.1652%

Interruptible Service – Instantaneous

   0.1266%

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Transmission

   0.0560%

Standby Electric Service – Transmission

   0.2617%

Standby Interruptible Service

   0.1271%

Special Contract Pricing

   2.3066%

SECTION 6: ALLOCATION FACTOR ADJUSTMENTS

The PBRAFs will be subject to adjustment using the procedures in this Section 6. Any adjustment required under this Section 6 will be made effective on the date of an annual Standard True-up Adjustment. Required adjustments will be made in the following order: first, adjustments will be made under Part A; second, adjustments will be made under Part B; and third, adjustments will be made under Part C.

For purposes of determining whether an allocation adjustment is required under Parts B and C of this Section 6 and adjusting PBRAFs pursuant to those Parts, the Transition Charge Classes will be combined into three groups (TC Groups) as follows:

 

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TC GROUPS

 

TC GROUP

  

TRANSITION CHARGE

CLASSES

   INITIAL  GROUP
ALLOCATION
PERCENTAGE
 

Residential

   Residential      40.6106

Commercial

   MGS, LGS, Non-Metered Lighting      47.6146

Industrial

   All other Transition Charge Classes      11.7748

Part A: Adjustments Due to Load Loss Qualifying under Utilities Code Section 39.262(k)

The PBRAFs shall be adjusted consistent with the Utilities Code to reflect the loss of loads due to operations of facilities that are “Eligible Generation” as defined in PUC Subst. Rule 25.345 (c) (2) (“Eligible Generation”) except that this Part A shall not apply to, and the term “Eligible Generation” shall not include, load loss due to installation and operation of small power production facilities with a rated capacity of 10 megawatts or less. Any adjustments required under this Part A will be calculated as follows:

Step 1 – The Company will determine the amount of service provided during the twelve months ended April 30, 1999 that has been replaced by Eligible Generation (excluding amounts reflected in either the Initial PBRAFs or a prior adjustment under this Part A) and sum the losses by Transition Charge Class.

Step 2 – The Company will recalculate the PBRAFs for all Transition Charge Classes using the spreadsheet and data used to compute the initial PBRAFs but reducing the demand allocation factors for each Transition Charge Class to reflect the cumulative losses for that class as calculated under Step 1 (including losses for which PBRAF adjustments were made in prior years). No other changes to the spreadsheet or data used to compute the initial PBRAFs will be made. Appendix A to this Schedule TC5 contains the spreadsheet and data used to compute the initial PBRAFs.

Step 3 – An Adjusted Group Allocation Percentage for each TC Group shall then be calculated as the sum of the Adjusted PBRAFs (computed under Step 2) for all Transition Charge Classes within the TC Group.

Part B: Inter-Group Adjustments Due to Cumulative Load Loss Not Attributable to Eligible Generation

In connection with each annual Standard True-up Adjustment, the Company will compare the projected billing determinants being used to set Transition Charges for each Transition Charge

 

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Class during the ensuing year to the billing determinants in effect on the original effective date of Schedule TC5 (adjusted to exclude any billing determinants attributable to Eligible Generation if any adjustment was made under Part A after the original effective date) (such billing determinants as adjusted are hereafter referred to as the “Base Billing Determinants”). The PBRAFs of all Transition Charge Classes in all TC Groups will be adjusted if one or more TC Groups experience load loss (calculated excluding load loss attributable to Eligible Generation for which adjustments have been made under Part A but including load loss attributable to small power production facilities of 10 megawatts or less) aggregating 50% or more on a cumulative basis when measured against the Base Billing Determinants. The adjustments under this Part B will be made using the following procedures:

Step 1:

 

For each TC Group, if CTCOLG / PBRG ³ 0.50

   Then, no PBRAF adjustment will occur and any adjustment made in previous years under Part B shall be reversed

For each TC Group, if CTCOLG / PBRG < 0.50

   Then, a PBRAF adjustment will be calculated pursuant to Steps 2 through 5.

Where:

 

CTCOLG = cumulative test collections for group G = S CCc* FBUc for all classes (c) in Group (G)

 

FBUc = forecasted billing determinants for class c

 

CCc= cumulative test charge for class c = {PBRAFc*PBRT}/ BBDc

 

PBRAFc= the PBRAFs then in effect, or if an adjustment has been made under Part A, the adjusted PBRAFs from Part A

 

PBRT= total periodic billing requirement for upcoming period

 

BBDc= Base Billing Determinants for class c

 

PBRG= periodic billing requirement for group = S PBRAFc* PBRT for all classes in G

Step 2:

For each TC Group in Step 1 where CTCOLG / PBRG < 0.50, a reduction amount (REDG) will be calculated for group G where

REDG= 0.5 (PBRG—CTCOLG)

 

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Step 3:

For all TC Groups, a reallocation amount for that group (RAG) shall be calculated where:

RAG = GAPG * {S REDG} for all Groups

Where:

GAPG = Group Allocation Percentage = S PBRAFc for all classes in the group

Step 4:

For all TC groups a Group Allocation Percentage Adjustment (GAPAG) shall be calculated where:

GAPAG= (RAG-REDG) / PBRT

Where:

S GAPAG = 0 for all G

Step 5:

For all TC classes, the PBRAF adjustment for class c (PBRAFAc) will be calculated for use in calculating adjustments to the Transition Charges under Section 8, Part A where

PBRAFAc= GAPAG * (PBRAFc/GAPG)

 

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Part C: Inter-Group Adjustments Due to Year-Over-Year Load Loss Not Attributable to Eligible Generation

In connection with each annual Standard True-up Adjustment, the Company will compare the projected billing determinants being used to set Transition Charges for each Transition Charge Class during the ensuing year to the forecasted billing determinants used to develop the then currently effective Transition Charges for the class minus the Eligible Generation load loss for the class determined in Step 1 of Part A after the billing determinant for the currently effective Transition Charges was determined (such adjusted amount is hereinafter referred to as the “Prior Year Billing Determinant”). The PBRAFs of all Transition Charge Classes in all TC Groups will be adjusted if (i) one or more TC Groups experience load loss (calculated excluding load loss attributable to Eligible Generation for which adjustments have been made under Part A but including load loss attributable to small power production facilities of 10 megawatts or less) of 10% or greater on a year-over-year basis when compared to the Prior Year Billing Determinants or (ii) any TC Group for which an adjustment was made under this Part C in one or more prior years experiences load growth resulting in projected billing determinants for the current year at a level which, if they had existed in one or more of such prior year(s) would have resulted in no adjustment to PBRAFs in such prior year(s). No reduction in PBRAFs will be made under this Part C for any TC Group for which a reduction amount was computed under Step 5 of Part B. The adjustments under this Part C will be made using the following procedures:

Step 1:

For each TC Group not adjusted under Part B,

 

If YTCOLG / PBRG ³ 0.90

  Then, no PBRAF adjustment will occur.

If YTCOLG / PBRG > 1.00

  Then, no PBRAF adjustment will occur and any prior year adjustments made under C will be reversed pursuant to step 6.

If YTCOLG / PBRG < 0.90

  Then, a PBRAF adjustment will be calculated pursuant to Steps 2 through 5.

 

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Where:

YTCOLG = year-to-year test collections for group G = S YCc* FBUc for all classes (c) in Group (G)

FBUc = forecasted billing determinants for class c

YCc= year-to-year test charge for class c = {PBRAFc*PBRT}/ FBUc-1

PBRAFc= the PBRAFs then in effect, or if an adjustment has been made under Part A, the adjusted PBRAFs from Part A

PBRT= total periodic billing requirement for upcoming period

FBUc-1=prior year’s forecasted billing determinants for class c

PBRG= periodic billing requirement for group = S PBRAFc* PBRT for all classes in the group

Step 2:

For each TC Group in Step 1 where YTCOLG / PBRG < 0.90, a year to year reduction amount (YREDG) shall be calculated where

YREDG= 0.9 (PBRG-YTCOLG)

Step 3:

For all TC Groups, a year to year reallocation amount (YRAG) shall be calculated where:

YRAG= GAPG * {S YREDG} for all groups

Where:

GAPG = Group Allocation Percentage = S PBRAFc for all classes in the group

Step 4:

For all TC groups a year to year group allocation percentage adjustment (YGAPAG) shall be calculated where:

YGAPAG= (YRAG-YREDG) / PBRT

 

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Where S GAPAG = 0 for all G

Step 5:

For all TC classes, a year to year PBRAF adjustment (YPBRAFAc) shall be calculated for use in calculating adjustments to the Transition Charges under Section 8, Part A where:

YPBRAFAc= YGAPAG*(PBRAFc/GAPG)

Step 6:

if{S (YCc*FBUc)}/{S (YCc*FBUct-1)}³ .90 (for all classes in group G) then the adjustment made in year t shall be discontinued.

if{S (YCc*FBUc)}/{S (YCc*FBUct-1)} < .90 (for all classes in group G) then the adjustment made in year t carries forward.

Where FBUc t-1 is the forecasted billing determinants from the year prior to the year an adjustment was made adjusted to reflect any adjustments made under part A between year t-1 and the current year.

 

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Part D: Adjustments to Base Class Allocations

The methodology used to allocate qualified costs and determine Transition Charges shall not be changed except in the limited circumstance described in this paragraph. If, but only if, the total retail stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253 of the Utilities Code) on a statewide basis exceed $5 billion, then the qualified costs attributable to the Company’s share of the statewide stranded costs in excess of $5 billion shall be reallocated using the allocation methodology prescribed in Section 39.253(f) of the Utilities Code. The Company’s share of the statewide stranded costs in excess of $5 billion shall be determined by multiplying (i) the percentage obtained by dividing the Company’s total stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f)) by the total statewide stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f)) by (ii) the amount by which the total statewide stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f) exceed $5 billion. The qualified costs attributable to the Company’s share of the statewide stranded costs shall then be determined by multiplying (i) the Company’s share of the statewide stranded costs by (ii) the percentage obtained by dividing (a) the Company’s stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f)) which were securitized pursuant to the Financing Order dated (date)             in Docket No.              by (b) the Company’s total stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f)). The Company shall file the adjustments required herein, within 45 days after the Commission issues any order determining a utility’s stranded costs or regulatory assets that causes the total statewide stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f) to exceed $5 billion or changes the amount by which the total statewide stranded costs (determined pursuant to Section 39.253(f)) exceed $5 billion. Any changes in Transition Charges resulting from a change in the initial or adjusted PBRAFs under this Part D shall be made prospectively from the date of the Commission’s order approving adjusted PBRAFs under this Part D. No change in an initial or adjusted PBRAF shall cause the sum of all PBRAFs to be more than or less than 100% or change the total Periodic Billing Requirement for any period. Transition Charges for services rendered prior to such effective date will not be changed. Future changes to the PBRAFs underlying the recomputed Transition Charges, if necessary under Parts A – D of this Section 6 will be computed pursuant to this Section 6 using the initial and adjusted PRBAFs as determined by the Commission pursuant to this Part D.

 

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SECTION 7: TRANSITION CHARGES

The Transition Charges to be applied beginning on the effective date of this Schedule TC5 are set out below. Transition Charges to be applied in subsequent periods (Adjusted Transition Charges) will be determined in the manner described in Section 8.

TRANSITION CHARGES

 

TRANSITION CHARGE

CLASS

   PER UNIT
CHARGE
     BILLING
UNIT
 

Residential

   $ 0.002220         Per kWh   

MGS

   $

$

0.822053

0.001908

  

  

    

 

Per kW

Per kWh

  

  

LGS

   $

$

0.869529

0.886745

  

  

    

 

Per kVa

Per kW

  

  

LOS-A

   $ 0.533068         Per kW   

LOS-B

   $ 0.848948         Per kW   

Non-Metered Lighting

   $ 0.002929         Per kWh   

CAPPED CLASSES:

     

Standby Electric Service – Distribution

   $ 0.228544         Per kW   

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Distribution

   $ 1.409731         Per kW   

Interruptible Service – Thirty Minute Notice

   $ 0.419771         Per kW   

Interruptible Service – Ten Minute Notice

   $ 0.214704         Per kW   

Interruptible Service – Instantaneous

   $ 0.491533         Per kW   

Interruptible Service Supplemental – Transmission

   $ 0.727332         Per kW   

Standby Electric Service – Transmission

   $ 0.270579         Per kW   

Standby Interruptible Service

   $ 0.058100         Per kW   

Special Contract Pricing

   $ 0.878121         Per kW   

The Transition Charges shall be applied on a kW basis for all service provided at Transmission voltage and for all service provided to Capped Classes and to any LGS customer that also received SES-Distribution service. The kW to be used in calculating the bill for those customers

 

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Applicable: Entire Service Area

 

obligated to pay on a kW basis will be the highest kW for the month measured over a one hour period occurring on weekdays (Monday through Friday) during the sixteen hours beginning with and including the hour that ends at seven (a.m.) (07:00) and extending until the hour that ends at ten p.m. (22:00), local time (central standard or central daylight saving time, as appropriate).

Except for customers in the MGS class, the Transition Charges shall be applied on a kVa basis for all service provided at distribution voltage (other than service at distribution voltage to Capped Classes or to LGS customers that also received SES-Distribution service) and whose kVa is greater than 10 kVa in the billing month. The kVa will be the highest kVa measured over a 15 minute period during the month if the metering equipment has indicators for measuring and recording only the highest demand during the billing period, otherwise if the metering equipment measures and records continuously for all 15 minute periods the kVa will be the average of the 4 highest 15 minute periods measured during the billing period. If the demand meters used to meter service to a customer measure service is on a kW basis instead of a kVa basis or measure in intervals different than 15 minutes (e.g. 5, 10, 30 minutes) the transition charge to the customer will be based on the kW with the interval measurement period closest to a 15 minute period.

Transition Charges will be applied on a kWh basis for those customers with watt-hour meters and those customers with demand meters whose measured demand is 10 kVa or less, all Residential customers, all Non-Metered Lighting customers and all MGS customers served at distribution voltage.

Each retail customer shall be obligated to pay Transition Charges for its applicable class. The Transition Charge shall be applied to all service received by the customer during the applicable billing period. If a customer was taking service in more than one rate class through one point of service on April 30,1999, or on the day before the customer discontinued taking service from HL&P on a pre-restructuring rate schedule, its Transition Charges shall be determined as follows:

 

  1. For customers taking service under two or more rates through a single meter, the following order will be used to determine Transition Charges for the customer:

 

  (a)

If the customer takes service in one or more Capped Classes (other than SCP) through a single meter, the service shall be allocated first to Capped Classes in ascending order of unit Transition Charges beginning with the Capped Class with the lowest unit Transition Charge. All service to the customer, up to the lesser of (i) the highest hourly on-peak kW for total premises load (Total kW) or the Monthly Cap for the class, shall be deemed to be service under the Capped Class with the lowest unit Transition Charge. If the Total kW is greater than the Monthly Cap for

 

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the class with lowest unit Transition Charge, the difference up to the Monthly Cap for the Capped Class with the next lowest unit Transition Charge will be deemed to be service under the Capped Class with the next lowest unit Transition Charge. The remainder will then similarly be allocated to each other Capped Class under which the customer is served until the Total kW has been allocated or all applicable Monthly Caps have been reached.

 

  (b) If the total amount allocated to Capped Classes under (a) is less than the Total kW, the remainder, up to the Monthly Cap for SCP shall be deemed to be service provided under SCP.

 

  (c) Any amount remaining after the allocations in (a) and (b) will be deemed to be service provided under the Transition Charge Class (other than Capped Classes and SCP) that is applicable to the customer. If the customer is not otherwise taking service under any Transition Charge Class (other than Capped Classes and SCP) the amount remaining after the allocations in (a) and (b) shall be deemed to be service under LOS-A, if the customer is served at transmission voltage, or under LGS, if the customer is served at distribution voltage.

In addition, each customer which has New On-Site Generation shall pay an amount each month computed by multiplying the output of the on-site generation used to serve the internal electric requirements of the customer (either kW or kVa, as determined by the Transition Charge class for which the customer would qualify if it were being served by the Company or an REP) by the Transition Charge in effect for services provided to customers in that class during the month. This amount shall be in addition to any Transition Charges applicable to energy or demand actually delivered to the customer through the Company’s or another T&D Provider’s facilities.

SECTION 8: STANDARD TRUE-UP FOR ADJUSTMENT OF TRANSITION CHARGES

Transition Charges will be adjusted annually effective on (date)             to ensure that the expected collection of Transition Charges is adequate to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds when due pursuant to the expected amortization schedule, and pay as due all other qualified costs. In addition to these annual true-up adjustments, true-up adjustments may be made more frequently at any time during the term of the transition bonds to correct any undercollection or overcollection, as provided for in the Financing Order, in order to assure timely payment of transition bonds based on rating agency and bondholder considerations. In addition to the foregoing, either of the following two conditions may result in an interim true-up adjustment in the month prior to an upcoming transition bond principal payment date:

 

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  (a) The collection of transition charges for the upcoming payment date will result in a difference that is greater than 5% in absolute value, between (i) the actual outstanding principal balances of the transition bonds plus amounts on deposit in the reserve subaccount and (ii) the outstanding principal balances anticipated in the target amortization schedule; or

 

  (b) To meet a rating agency requirement that any series of transition bonds be paid in full by the expected maturity date for any series of transition bonds that matures after a date determined mutually, at the time of pricing by CenterPoint Houston and the Commission’s designated personnel or financial advisor.

In no event will interim true-up adjustments occur more frequently than every three months if quarterly transition bond payments are required or every six months if semi-annual transition bond payments are required; provided, however, that interim true-up adjustments for any transition bonds remaining outstanding during the fourteenth and fifteenth year after the bonds are issued may occur quarterly.

All annual and interim adjustments will be designed to cause (i) the outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds to be equal to the scheduled balance on the expected amortization schedule; (ii) the amount in the capital subaccount to be equal to the required capital plus any investment earnings on amounts in the capital subaccount to the extent that the investment earnings have not been released to the SPE and (iii) the reserve subaccount to be zero by the payment date immediately preceding the next adjustment or by the final payment date, if the next payment date is the final payment date.

Part A: TRUE-UP ADJUSTMENT PROCEDURE FOR STANDARD AND INTERIM TRUE-UPS

Servicer will calculate the Adjusted Transition Charges using the methodology described below and will file the Adjusted Transition Charges with the Commission. Annual adjustments will be filed 15 days prior to the effective date of the Adjusted Transition Charges unless an adjustment to the PBRAFs is required under Section 6 (including Intra-Group Allocation Adjustments under Part D of Section 6) in which case the annual adjustment will be filed not later than 90 days prior to the effective date. Interim Adjustments will be filed not less than 15 days prior to the effective date of the Adjusted Transition Charges.

The Adjusted Transition Charge for the upcoming period for each class (TCc) shall be computed as follows:

 

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For the residential class,

 

  TCc=

PBRT*(PBRAFc+PBRAFA c+YPBRAFAct)/FBUc

For classes in the Commercial and Industrial TC Groups, except if any class in the Industrial Group is forecast for the ensuing period to experience more than a 10% reduction in billing determinants compared to the industrial base billing determinants for that class, then the transition charges for the classes within the Industrial TC Group will be determined according to Section 8, Part B:

 

  TCc

= TCc-1 {S [PBRT * (PBRAFc+PBRAFAc+YPBRAFAct)] / S(TCc-1*FBUc)}

For all classes in the applicable group.

Where

 

  TCc-1

= the transition charge for that class from the previous period

PBRT= Periodic Billing Requirement for the ensuing period (the 12 months beginning on the effective date of the adjusted transition charges in the case of annual true-ups and the period until the next scheduled annual true-up in the case of interim adjustments). The Periodic Billing Requirement will be the amounts required to pay principal and interest on the transition bonds when due pursuant to the expected amortization schedule, pay as due all other qualified costs, and recover any net system under-collections or credit any net system over-collections so that (i) the outstanding principal balance of the transition bonds will be equal to the scheduled balance on the expected amortization schedule; (ii) the amount in the capital subaccount will be equal to the required capital plus any investment earnings on amounts in the capital subaccount to the extent that the investment earnings have not been released to the SPE and (iii) the reserve subaccount will be zero by the payment date immediately preceding the next adjustment or by the final payment date, if the next payment date is the final payment date.

PBRAFc = the PBRAFs then in effect, or if an adjustment has been made under Section 6, Part A, the adjusted PBRAFs from Section 6, Part A.

PBRAFAc= the adjustment (if any) from Section 6, Part B, Step 5

YPBRAFAct= the adjustment from Section 6, Part C, Step 5 for every year t in which an adjustment was made unless that adjustment was discontinued under Section 6, Part C, Step 6.

 

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  FBUc=

the forecasted billing determinants for the upcoming period

Part B: Intra Industrial Group Adjustments Due to Cumulative Load Loss Not Attributable to Eligible Generation

In connection with each annual Standard True-up Adjustment, the Company will compare the projected billing determinants being used to set Transition Charges for each Industrial Group Transition Charge Class during the ensuing year to the billing determinants for the period (initial rate year)             (adjusted to exclude any billing determinants attributable to Eligible Generation if any adjustment was made under Section 6, Part A after (initial rate year end date)            ) (such billing determinants as adjusted are hereafter referred to as the “Industrial Base Year Billing Determinants”). The Transition Charges of all Transition Charge Classes in the Industrial TC Group will be adjusted if one or more Transition Charge Classes experience load loss (calculated excluding load loss attributable to Eligible Generation for which adjustments have been made under Section 6, Part A but including load loss attributable to small power production facilities of 10 megawatts or less) aggregating more than 10% on a cumulative basis when measured against the Industrial Base Year Billing Determinants. The adjustments under this Part B will be made using the following procedures:

Step 1:

 

If FBUc /IBDc ³ 0.90 for each Industrial TC Class

   Then, no adjustments will occur under this Section 8, Part B and the transition charge for each Industrial TC class will be calculated under Section 8, Part A.

If FBUc /IBDc < 0.90 for any Industrial TC Class (Load Loss Class)

   Then, adjustments will be calculated pursuant to Steps 2 through 6.

Where:

 

  FBUc

= forecasted billing determinants for class c

 

  IBDc

= Industrial Base Year Billing Determinants for class c

 

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Step 2:

For each Industrial TC Class in Step 1 where FBUc /IBDc < 0.90, a reduction amount (REDc) will be calculated as follows:

 

  REDc=

PBRc – TCLLC

Where:

 

  PBRc

= PBRT * PBRAFc

 

  TCLLc

= Test Collections with 10% Load Loss for Class c = [PBRc/ (IBDc * 0.9)] * FBUc

 

  PBRT

= total periodic billing requirement for upcoming period

 

        PBRAFc=

 the PBRAFs then in effect, including any adjustment made under Section 6, Part A; plus any adjustment made under Section 6, Part B and Section 6, Part C unless the adjustment was discontinued.

Step 3:

For each Industrial TC class for which a reduction amount was not calculated in Step 2 and whose TCc-1 £ TCLOSA-1, a reallocation amount shall be calculated as follows:

RAc = IAPc * S REDc for all classes

Where:

 

  IAPc

=  Intra-Group Allocation Percentage for class c = PBRAFc / S PBRAFc for all Industrial TC Classes for which a      reduction amount was not calculated in Step 2 and whose TCc-1 £ TCLOSA-1

 

  TCLOSA-1

= Transition Charge implemented for the LOSA TC class in the last true-up filing

 

  TCc-1 

= Transition Charge implemented for class c in the last true-up filing

 

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Step 4:

The adjusted transition charge for a class (TCc) shall be calculated as follows:

For those Industrial TC Classes receiving a reallocation amount in Step 3:

TCc = [PBRc + RAc] / FBUc

For all other Industrial TC Classes:

TCc = [PBRc - REDc] / FBUc

Step 5:

Calculate the percent increase in the Transition Charge from the Base Year as follows:

PIc = (TCc/TCcBASE )- 1

Where:

TCc = The adjusted transition charge calculated in Step 4

TCcBASE = The transition charge calculated using the Industrial Base Year Billing Determinants.

Step 6:

 

A. For any Industrial TC Class where PI is less than the PI for the TC Classes identified in Step 1 as Load Loss Classes:

TCcFINAL = TCc

 

B. If PI for any Industrial TC Class is greater than or equal to the PI for the Load Loss Classes identified in Step 1, then calculate an initial Equal Percent Increase for that class and the Load Loss Classes identified in Step 1:

TCcFINAL = TCcBASE * (1 + EPIINITIAL)

Where:

  EPIINITIAL 

= initial Equal Percent Increase = S (TCc * FBUc)/ S (TCcBASE*FBUc) for only those Industrial TC Classes identified in Step 1 as Load Loss Classes and TC classes with a PI greater than or equal to those Industrial TC Load Loss Classes identified in Step 1.

 

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C.

In the event that EPIINITIAL for any Industrial TC Class, other than a Load Loss Class identified in Step 1, exceeds the PIc calculated in Step 5, then for that Class,

TCcFINAL = TCc

 

D. For the remaining classes, a final Equal Percent Increase will be calculated to reflect the exclusion of the Classes identified in Step 6, Parts A and C above as follows:

TCcFINAL = TCcBASE * (1 + EPIFINAL)

Where:

  EPIFINAL 

= final Equal Percent Increase = S (TCc * FBUc)/ S (TCcBASE*FBUc) for only those Industrial TC Classes remaining in Step 6, Part D.

SECTION 9: BILLING AND COLLECTION TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Transition Charges will be billed and collected as set forth in this Schedule TC5. The terms and conditions for each party are set forth below.

 

A. Billings by Servicer to other T or D Providers:

 

  1. Transition Charges applicable to former retail customers of the Company in multiply certificated service areas who are now taking service directly from other T or D Providers or through REPs served by other T or D Providers will be billed to and collected from the other T or D Provider, which, in turn will be responsible for collecting the Transition Charges from the retail customers and REPs.

 

  2. The T or D Provider shall pay all Transition Charges not later than 35 days after bill is mailed by Servicer. The T or D Provider shall make such payment regardless of whether it collects such charges from the end-use retail customer or REP.

 

B. Billings by Servicer to New On-Site Generation:

 

  1. Customers subject to Transition Charges for New On-Site Generation shall pay such charges in full not later than sixteen days after the date the bill is mailed to the customer.

 

  2. Transition Charges applicable to New On-Site Generation are in addition to applicable transition charges under A above or C below.

 

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  3. If the entity with New On-Site Generation receives transmission or distribution service from the Company or another T or D Provider, Servicer shall have the same right to terminate service or require the other provider to terminate service for non-payment of Transition Charges as the Company has to terminate service for non-payment of charges under the Company’s rate schedules. Any termination shall comply with applicable Commission rules.

 

C. Billings by the REP or its replacement to end-use customers:

 

  1. REPs will bill and collect, or cause to be billed and collected, all Transition Charges applicable to consumption by retail customers served by the REP.

 

  2. If Servicer is providing the metering, metering data will be provided to the REP at the same time as the billing. If Servicer is not providing the metering, the entity providing metering services will be responsible for complying with Commission rules and ensuring that Servicer and the REP will receive timely and accurate metering data in order for Servicer to meet its obligations under the Servicing Agreement and the Financing Order with respect to billing and true-ups.

 

  3. Each REP must (1) have a long-term, unsecured credit rating of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service, respectively, or (2) provide (A) a deposit of two months’ maximum expected Transition Charge collections in the form of cash, (B) an affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit providing for payment of such amount of Transition Charge collections in the event that the REP defaults in its payment obligations, or (C) a combination of any of the foregoing. A REP that does not have or maintain the requisite long-term, unsecured credit rating may select which alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof it will utilize, in its sole discretion. The indenture trustee shall be the beneficiary of any affiliate guarantee, surety bond or letter of credit. The provider of any affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit must have and maintain a long-term, unsecured credit ratings of not less than “BBB-” and “Baa3” (or the equivalent) from Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service, respectively.

 

  4. If the long-term, unsecured credit rating from either Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s Investors Service of a REP that did not previously provide the alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof or of any provider of an affiliate guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit is suspended, withdrawn, or downgraded below “BBB-” or “Baa3” (or the equivalent), the REP must provide the alternate form of deposit, credit support, or combination thereof, or new forms thereof, in each case from providers with the requisite ratings, within 10 business days following such suspension, withdrawal, or downgrade. A REP failing to make such provision must comply with the provisions set forth in paragraph 3 of Section D, Billings by Servicer to the REP or its replacement (when applicable).

 

 

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  5. The computation of the size of a required deposit shall be agreed upon by Servicer and the REP, and reviewed no more frequently than quarterly to ensure that the deposit accurately reflects two months’ maximum collections. Within 10 business days following such review, (1) the REP shall remit to the indenture trustee the amount of any shortfall in such required deposit or (2) Servicer shall instruct the indenture trustee to remit to the REP any amount in excess of such required deposit. A REP failing to so remit any such shortfall must comply with the provisions set forth in Paragraph 3 of the Section D, Billings by Servicer to the REP or its replacement (when applicable). REP cash deposits shall be held by the indenture trustee, maintained in a segregated account, and invested in short-term high quality investments, as permitted by the rating agencies rating the transition bonds. Investment earnings on REP cash deposits shall be considered part of such cash deposits so long as they remain on deposit with the indenture trustee. At the instruction of Servicer, cash deposits will be remitted with investment earnings to the REP at the end of the term of the transition bonds unless otherwise utilized for the payment of the REP’s obligations for Transition Bond payments. Once the deposit is no longer required, Servicer shall promptly (but not later than 30 calendar days) instruct the indenture trustee to remit the amounts in the segregated accounts to the REP.

 

  6. In the event that a REP or the Provider of Last Resort (POLR) is billing customers for Transition Charges, the REP shall have the right to transfer the customers to the POLR (or to another certified REP) or to direct Servicer to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use customer for non-payment by the end-use customer pursuant to applicable Commission rules.

 

D. Billings by Servicer to the REP or its replacement (when applicable):

 

  1. Servicer will bill and collect from REPs all Transition Charges applicable to consumption by retail customers served by the REP, including applicable customers served by New On-Site Generation.

 

  2.

Payments of Transition Charges are due 35 calendar days following each billing by Servicer to the REP, without regard to whether or when the REP receives payment from the end-use retail customers. Servicer shall accept payment by electronic funds transfer, wire transfer, and/or check. Payment will be considered received the date the electronic funds transfer or wire transfer is received by Servicer, or the date the check clears. A 5% penalty is to be charged on amounts

 

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received after 35 calendar days; however, a 10 calendar-day grace period will be allowed before the REP is considered to be in default. A REP in default must comply with the provisions set forth in paragraph 3 of this Section D. The 5% penalty will be a one-time assessment measured against the current amount overdue from the REP to Servicer. The “current amount” consists of the total unpaid Transition Charges existing on the 36th calendar day after billing by Servicer. Any and all such penalty payments will be made to the indenture trustee to be applied against Transition Charge obligations. A REP shall not be obligated to pay the overdue Transition Charges of another REP. If a REP agrees to assume the responsibility for the payment of overdue Transition Charges as a condition of receiving the customers of another REP that has decided to terminate service to those customers for any reason, the new REP shall not be assessed the 5% penalty upon such Transition Charges; however, the prior REP shall not be relieved of the previously-assessed penalties.

 

  3.

After the 10 calendar-day grace period (the 45th calendar day after the billing date), Servicer shall have the option to seek recourse against any cash deposit, affiliate guarantee, surety bond, letter of credit, or combination thereof provided by the REP, and avail itself of such legal remedies as may be appropriate to collect any remaining unpaid Transition Charges and associated penalties due Servicer after the application of the REP’s deposit or alternate form of credit support. In addition, a REP that is in default with respect to the requirements set forth in paragraphs 4 and 5 of Section C and paragraph 2 of this Section D shall select and implement one of the following options:

 

  (a) Allow the POLR or a qualified REP of the customer’s choosing to immediately assume the responsibility for the billing and collection of Transition Charges.

 

  (b) Immediately implement other mutually suitable and agreeable arrangements with Servicer. It is expressly understood that Servicer’s ability to agree to any other arrangements will be limited by the terms of the Servicing Agreement and requirements of rating agencies that have rated the transition bonds necessary to avoid suspension, withdrawal or downgrade of the ratings on the transition bonds.

 

  (c) Arrange that all amounts owed by retail customers for services rendered be timely billed and immediately paid directly into a lock-box controlled by Servicer with such amounts to be applied first to pay Transition Charges before the remaining amounts are released to the REP. All costs associated with this mechanism will be borne solely by the REP.

 

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If a REP that is in default does not immediately select and implement one of the options specified in (a), (b) or (c) or, after so selecting one of the foregoing options, fails to adequately meet its responsibilities thereunder, then Servicer shall immediately implement option (a), subject to the limitations and requirements of the bankruptcy code if the REP is a debtor in bankruptcy. Upon re-establishment of compliance with the requirements set forth in paragraphs 4 and 5 of Section C and paragraph 2 of this Section D and the payment of all past-due amounts and associated penalties, the REP will no longer be required to comply with this paragraph 3.

 

  4.

The POLR appointed by the Commission must meet the minimum credit rating or deposit/credit support requirements described in paragraph 3 of Section C (“Billings by the REP or its Replacement to end-use customers”) in addition to any other standards that may be adopted by the Commission. If the POLR defaults or is not eligible to provide such services, responsibility for billing and collection of Transition Charges will immediately be transferred to and assumed by Servicer until a new POLR can be named by the Commission or the customer requests the services of a certified REP. Retail customers may never be re-billed by the successor REP, the POLR, or Servicer for any amount of Transition Charges they have paid their REP (although future Transition Charges shall reflect REP and other system-wide charge-offs). Additionally, if the amount of the penalty detailed in paragraph 2 of this Section D is the sole remaining past-due amount after the 45th calendar day, the REP shall not be required to comply with clauses (a), (b) or (c) of paragraph 3 of this Section D, unless the penalty is not paid within an additional 30 calendar days.

 

  5. In the event that Servicer is billing customers for Transition Charges, Servicer shall have the right to terminate transmission and distribution service to the end-use customer for non-payment by the end use customer pursuant to applicable Commission rules.

 

  6. The REP will be allowed to hold back an allowance for charge-offs in its payments to Servicer. Such charge-off rate will be recalculated each year in connection with the annual true-up procedure. In the initial year, REPs will be allowed to remit payments based on the same charge-off percentage then being used by the REP to remit payments to the servicer in connection with transition charges related to transition bonds issued by CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC on February 12, 2008. On an annual basis in connection with the true-up adjustment process, the REP and Servicer will be responsible for reconciling the amounts held back with amounts actually written off as uncollectible in accordance with the terms agreed to by the REP and Servicer, provided that:

 

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  (a) The REP’s right to reconciliation for write-offs will be limited to customers whose service has been permanently terminated and whose entire accounts (i.e., all amounts due the REP for its own account as well as the portion representing Transition Charges) have been written off.

 

  (b) The REP’s recourse will be limited to a credit against future Transition Charge payments unless the REP and Servicer agree to alternative arrangements, but in no event will the REP have recourse to the indenture trustee, the SPE or the SPE’s funds for such payments.

 

  (c) The REP shall provide information on a timely basis to Servicer so that Servicer can include the REP’s default experience and any subsequent credits into its calculation of the adjusted Transition Charge rates for the next transition charge billing period and the REP’s rights to credits will not take effect until such adjusted Transition Charge rates have been implemented.

 

  7. In the event that a REP disputes any amount of billed Transition Charges, the REP shall pay the disputed amount under protest according to the timelines detailed in paragraph 2 of this Section D. The REP and Servicer shall first attempt to informally resolve the dispute, but if they fail to do so within 30 calendar days, either party may file a complaint with the Commission. If the REP is successful in the dispute process (informal or formal), the REP shall be entitled to interest on the disputed amount paid to Servicer at the Commission-approved interest rate. Disputes about the date of receipt of Transition Charge payments (and penalties arising thereof) or the size of a required REP deposit will be handled in a like manner. It is expressly intended that any interest paid by Servicer on disputed amounts shall not be recovered through Transition Charges if it is determined that Servicer’s claim to the funds is clearly unfounded. No interest shall be paid by Servicer if it is determined that Servicer has received inaccurate metering data from another entity providing competitive metering services pursuant to Utilities Code Section 39.107.

 

  8. If Servicer is providing the metering, metering data will be provided to the REP at the same time as the billing. If Servicer is not providing the metering, the entity providing metering services will be responsible for complying with Commission rules and ensuring that Servicer and the REP will receive timely and accurate metering data in order for Servicer to meet its obligations under the Servicing Agreement and the Financing Order with respect to billing and true-ups.

 

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OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS

If the customer or REP pays only a portion of its bill, a pro-rata portion of Transition Charge revenues shall be deemed to be collected. The Company will allocate any shortfall first, ratably based on the amount owed for Transition Charges and the amount owed for other fees and charges, other than late charges, owed to the Company or any successor, and second, all late charges shall be allocated to the Company or any successor.

If the Company does not regularly include the notice described below in the bills sent by it to REPs or directly to retail customers, then at least once each year the Company shall cause to be prepared and delivered to REPs and such customers a notice stating, in effect, that the amount billed includes Transition Charges which were authorized by the Financing Order dated (date)             and have been transferred to and are being collected on behalf of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC and are not owned by the Company. In the customer’s initial bill from the REP and at least once each year thereafter, each REP that bills Transition Charges shall cause to be prepared and delivered to its customers a notice stating, in effect, that the amount billed includes Transition Charges which were authorized by the Financing Order dated (date)             and have been transferred to and are being collected on behalf of CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company IV, LLC and are not owned by the REP or the Company, and that under certain circumstances described in Schedule TC5 Servicer may be permitted to collect the Transition Charges directly from the retail customer. Such notice shall be included either as an insert to or in the text of the bills delivered to such REPs or customers, as applicable, or shall be delivered to REPs or customers by electronic means or such other means as Servicer or the REP may from time to time use to communicate with their respective customers.

 

Revision Number:     Original

  Effective: xx/xx/xx


APPENDIX C

FINANCING ORDER

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC

Projected Ongoing Qualified Costs

 

Total Securitizable Amount

   $ 1,695,000,000         [per Stipulation
  

 

 

    

 

[A]    [B]    [C]      [D]  

 

Estimated Ongoing Costs

 

 

No.

  

Description

   Annual      Semi-Annual  

1

   Ongoing Servicer Fee (Third Party as Servicer) (0.60% of principal amount)    $ 10,170,000       $ 5,085,000   
     

 

 

    

 

 

 

2

   Ongoing Servicer Fee (CEHE as Servicer) (0.05% of principal amount)    $ 847,500       $ 423,750   

3

   Administration Fee    $ 100,000       $ 50,000   

4

   Accountants’ Fees    $ 75,000       $ 37,500   

5

   Legal Fees/Expenses for Company’s/Issuer’s Counsel    $ 25,000       $ 12,500   

6

   Trustee’s/Trustee’s Counsel Fees and Expenses    $ 4,500       $ 2,250   

7

   Independent Manager’s Fee    $ 3,500       $ 1,750   

8

   Rating Agency Fees    $ 50,000       $ 25,000   

9

   Printing/EDGARization Expenses    $ 2,500       $ 1,250   

10

   Miscellaneous    $ 50,000       $ 25,000   
     

 

 

    

 

 

 

11

   Total (CEHE as Servicer)    $ 1,158,000       $ 579,000   
     

 

 

    

 

 

 

12

   Total (Third Party as Servicer)    $ 10,480,500       $ 5,240,250   
     

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

[D]    [E]      [F]      [G]  
            Ongoing Costs  
            Expected      Sensitivity  
     Estimated      Case      Case  
     Ongoing Costs      PV @      PV @  

Year

   (CEHE as Servicer)      2.50%      7.50%  

2012

   $ 1,158,000       $ 1,129,805       $ 1,077,191   

2013

   $ 1,158,000       $ 1,100,286       $ 1,002,022   

2014

   $ 1,158,000       $ 1,073,448       $ 932,098   

2015

   $ 1,158,000       $ 1,047,263       $ 867,054   

2016

   $ 1,158,000       $ 1,021,715       $ 806,548   

2017

   $ 1,158,000       $ 996,790       $ 750,265   

2018

   $ 1,158,000       $ 972,472       $ 697,909   

2019

   $ 1,158,000       $ 948,745       $ 649,207   

2020

   $ 1,158,000       $ 925,596       $ 603,904   

2021

   $ 1,158,000       $ 903,011       $ 561,761   

2022

   $ 1,158,000       $ 880,976       $ 522,560   

2023

   $ 1,158,000       $ 859,477       $ 486,094   

2024

   $ 1,158,000       $ 838,502       $ 452,173   

2025

   $ 1,158,000       $ 818,038       $ 420,619   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total

   $ 16,212,000       $ 13,516,125       $ 9,829,406