The Texas Legislature DID NOT have amendments to Chapter 2256 of the Government Code, known as the Public Funds Investment Act (“the Act”), during the 2023 regular legislative session.
The Texas Legislature DID NOT have amendments to Chapter 2256 of the Government Code, known as the Public Funds Investment Act (“the Act”), during the 2023 regular legislative session.
The Texas Legislature DID NOT have amendments to Chapter 2256 of the Government Code, known as the Public Funds Investment Act (“the Act”), during the 2021 regular legislative session.
The Texas Legislature approved amendments to Chapter 2256 of the Government Code, known as the Public Funds Investment Act (“the Act”), during the 2019 regular legislative session. H.B. 2706, which will take effect on September 1, 2019, provides that:
H.B. 293, which was effective as of 06/07/2019, amended the investment training requirements for school district financial officers through the addition of Subsection (g). Subsection (g) provides that the treasurer, chief financial officer, or investment officer of a school district is not subject to the continuing investment training requirements of eight hours every two consecutive fiscal years under Section 2256.008(a-1) if the district does not invest district funds or only deposits district funds in interest-bearing deposit accounts or certificates of deposit as authorized by Section 2256.010 of the Act. The treasurer, chief financial officer, or investment officer must annually submit to the agency a sworn affidavit identifying the related investment categories in Subsection (g) that apply to the district.
Several bills affecting the Texas Public Funds Investment Act (PFIA) were proposed during the recently concluded 85th Texas Legislative Session. A few of these bills passed and will make significant changes to the PFIA. We have provided below a list of these bills and their status as well as a brief summary of each. The hyperlinks will take you to the Texas Legislature Online website where you can find additional details on each bill.
HB 1003 – Passed in House and Senate, signed by Governor June 14, 2017, takes effect immediately. Makes a number of housekeeping updates and other revisions to the PFIA. We have summarized some of the more important ones here, but have not included all of the changes:
HB 1238 – Passed in House and Senate, signed by Governor June 15, 2017, takes effect September 1, 2017. HB 1238 revises the investment training requirements in Section 2256.008 and further confuses these requirements by creating another carve out, this one for housing authorities created under Chapter 392. Investment officers of these housing authorities will still need to obtain 10 hours of investment training within the first twelve months of assuming duties. In every subsequent two-year period, they will need just five hours, unless they invest only in interest‐bearing deposits or CD’s in which case they will be exempted from the subsequent training provisions.
HB 1701 – Passed in House and Senate, signed by the Governor, takes effect September 1, 2017. This bill makes significant revisions to the policy certification requirements found in Section 2256.005 (k) and (l). Currently, any person offering to engage in an investment transaction must be provided a copy of the entity’s investment policy and must sign a certification that acknowledges they have received it and have implemented procedures to preclude imprudent transactions. HB 1701 changes “person” to “business organization” and narrowly defines business organization as either an investment pool or an investment management firm under contract to manage the entity’s portfolio with discretionary authority. Very few investment management contracts for public funds grant such discretion, meaning investment pools will generally be the only organizations still required to sign this certification. This bill has all but killed the legal requirement for the policy certification.
Public entities may wish to revise their investment policy as it seems likely that brokers, absolved of this legal requirement, may no longer be willing to sign those certifications. In our view, public entities should still provide their investment policy to their brokers, who in fact should be asking for it. Among other things, FINRA’s “Know Your Customer” rules, largely established by the suitability requirements of FINRA Rule 2111, require that brokers, “have a reasonable basis to believe that a recommendation is suitable for a particular customer based on that customer’s investment profile.” Providing the broker with your investment policy should very clearly describe your investment profile, particularly with regard to the primary objective of safety of principal.
HB 2647 – Passed in House and Senate, signed by Governor June 15, 2017, takes effect immediately. HB 2647 modifies Section 2256.009(a), clarifying that interest-bearing bank deposits insured by the FDIC or National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund are authorized investments. In addition, HB 2647 lays out specific language authorizing the shared deposit programs in a manner very similar to that already in the PFIA for shared certificates of deposit.
HB 2928 – Passed in House and Senate, signed by Governor June 15, 2017, takes effect September 1, 2017. HB 2928 makes two minor revisions. The first, to Section 2256.009(a) specifically includes obligations of the Federal Home Loan Banks as authorized investments. This solves a potential problem created by the Attorney General’s opinion # KP‐0128 which questioned whether the FHLB would be considered a U.S. agency or instrumentality for purposes of the PFIA. HB 2928 also modifies Section 2256.010(a) by adding a reference to Chapter 2257 (the Public Funds Collateral Act) in the section that describes the means for securing a certificate of deposit. This will clarify that certificates of deposit can be secured by an FHLB letter of credit.
HB 2648 – This bill did not make it out of committee, but much of the same language is included in HB 2928 which did pass (see above). HB 2648 would have specifically included obligations of the Federal Home Loan Banks as authorized investments.
HB 3082 – This bill did not make it out of committee and was not passed. HB 3082 would have revised the investment training requirements found in Section 2256.008. The initial 10 hours required within the first 12 months of taking office or assuming duties would remain. Subsequently, county treasurers would be required to attend 10 hours of training every two years while any other investment officer’s training requirement would have been reduced to five hours every two years. With this bill failing, the requirement for most investment officers remains at 10 hours within the first twelve months. Thereafter, the training requirement varies depending on the entity; with counties needing ten hours, school districts and other municipalities needing eight, and, thanks to HB 1238, five hours for housing authorities.
June 12, 2017
Greg Warner, CTP
Director, Senior Portfolio Manager
First Southwest Asset Management, LLC A Hilltop Holdings Company
The paper was prepared by FirstSouthwest Asset Management, is intended for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or investment advice, nor is it an offer or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any investment or other specific product. Information provided in this paper was obtained from sources that are believed to be reliable; however, it is not guaranteed to be correct, complete, or current, and is not intended to imply or establish standards of care applicable to any attorney or advisor in any particular circumstances. The statements within constitute the views of FirstSouthwest Asset Management as of the date of the report and may differ from the views of other divisions/departments of Hilltop Securities. In addition, the views are subject to change without notice. This paper represents historical information only and is not an indication of future performance.
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Two Legislative bills were passed that will impact the Texas Public Funds Investment Act 2256 effective September 1, 2015:
Reduces the amount of Public Funds Investment Act (Chapter 2256.008, Texas Government Code) training hours for city and school district finance and investment officers from ten hours every two years to eight hours every two years. City and school district finance and investment officers must still initially receive ten hours of training within 12 months after taking office or assuming investment duties. Effective September 1, 2015.
Provides that a city finance or investment officer must take only the initial 10 hour training under the Public Funds Investment Act (Chapter 2256.008, Texas Government Code) but no continuing investment training if the city: (1) does not invest city funds; or (2) only deposits city funds in interest-bearing deposit accounts or certificates of deposit. Effective September 1, 2015.
Since the phrase “does not invest city funds” is not defined in the bill, any city finance or investment officer desiring to forgo investment training under this bill may want to provide a definition of this phrase in the city’s approved investment policy, which is still a requirement under the Public Funds Investment Act.
Additionally, it is recommended that any city finance or investment officer desiring to forgo investment training under this bill may want to confirm the applicability of the training hour changes with their local attorney/auditor.