
The senior-lien rating of the Foothill/Eastern Transportation Corridor Agency in Orange County, California, was upgraded to A3 from Baa1 by Moody's Ratings, citing a strengthening financial position and the expectation that debt reduction will remain a board priority and be achievable despite a large capital plan.
Moody's affirmed the junior lien rating at Baa1 saying those bonds have lower recovery prospects given senior debt comprises 90% of the total debt owed. The rating outlooks are stable.
"The stable outlook reflects our expectation that financial metrics will be sustained at healthy levels," with total debt-service coverage ratio above 2.0 times and cash to debt of close to 25%, supported by stable traffic, Moody's analysts Moses Kopmar and Earl Heffintrayer said in the ratings report released Thursday.
Foothill/Eastern consists of 36 miles of high-speed, electronically tolled four-to-six lane roads: State Route 241, State Route 261, and a portion of State Route 133. The toll roads link Orange County employment centers with commuters in neighboring counties.
The
In May, Fitch Ratings upgraded Foothill/Eastern's $2.3 billion of senior lien bonds to A from A-minus and $221 million in junior lien bonds to A-minus and from BBB-plus. In June, it upgraded
Factors in this week's Moody's upgrade include a substantial and growing cash balance; stable traffic levels coupled with a policy of annual toll rate increases; and a trend of improving leverage metrics, which Moody's said it expects will continue and potentially accelerate beyond fiscal 2029. Toll revenue has recovered well post-COVID and the road benefits from its connectivity with population centers in Riverside County.
The rating incorporates elevated leverage and escalating debt service requirements because of Foothill/Eastern's $520 million capital project to connect its SR 241 toll road with the











