Skip to main content

Fitch: Smooth ride so far for US managed lanes

Managed lanes throughout the US are off to a good start in 2017, according to Fitch Ratings in its latest managed lanes peer review. Actual performance is so far exceeding Fitch’s rating case for the sector as a whole, with 95 Express in Northern Virginia and NTE (segments 1 and 2) in Texas proving to be notable examples. Also boosting long-term prospects for managed lanes is the performance on the longest operating facility, SR-91 in Orange County, California. This state road is seeing strong compound a
March 9, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Managed lanes throughout the US are off to a good start in 2017, according to Fitch Ratings in its latest managed lanes peer review.

Actual performance is so far exceeding Fitch’s rating case for the sector as a whole, with 95 Express in Northern Virginia and NTE (segments 1 and 2) in Texas proving to be notable examples. Also boosting long-term prospects for managed lanes is the performance on the longest operating facility, SR-91 in Orange County, California. This state road is seeing strong compound annual growth rate (CAGR) post initial ramp-up despite numerous adverse developments.

According to Fitch, SR-91 did see moderate softening during the most recent recession coupled with multiple free capacity expansions. Long term revenue growth CAGR is six per cent despite volatility and expansion plus the roadway’s ‘land-bridge’ configuration has helped drive demand. Many of the projects will eventually link into managed lanes networks and it is still uncertain how performance will be impacted as such networks develop.

High occupancy vehicle (HOV) policy and other policies governing free access to managed lanes remains an essential component of Fitch’s analysis. Free access policies have their pros and cons, with policies for HOVs with two or more passengers (HOV2) proving to be problematic over time as non-tolled vehicles crowd out paying drivers. As such, some policies will need to change for all users to share both the costs and benefits of the managed lanes.

Taking these uncertainties into account, the Rating Outlooks for the vast majority of Fitch’s rated managed lanes is Stable. Fitch recently revised the Rating Outlook for 95 Express to Positive from Stable. Broadly speaking, however, Fitch does not envision rating changes in the near term with 10 out of 11 projects in various stages of construction or ramp up.

Related Content

  • December 18, 2013
    US toll roads stable for 2014, says Fitch
    Within a broader review of US transport infrastructure securities, including ports and airlines, Fitch Rating analysts say the recent slow growth in aggregate traffic is likely to continue but that many established toll roads look financially solid because of their pricing power - tolls that have been well below revenue maximising levels. Their pricing power has been somewhat reduced, Fitch says, by strong increases in toll rates on many toll roads, which mean they have less scope for big increases in to
  • November 12, 2013
    Fitch Ratings analysis indicates problems for toll express lanes
    A special report, US Managed Lanes, by Fitch Ratings sees toll express or managed lanes (MLs) as especially difficult to assess for financial viability, saying that they vary enormously one to another and are likely to demonstrate very different performance and be subject to greater volatility than regular toll roads. But they say there is now sufficient experience with managed lanes (MLs) for some lessons to be learned. ML time savings compared to the regular lanes has been seen as the fundamental drive
  • February 25, 2015
    San Francisco plans express lane network across Bay Area
    Colin Sowman looks at plans to convert 240km (150 miles) of HOV/car pool lanes. While some authorities have debated the conversion of high occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV) into express or managed lanes allowing toll paying single-occupant vehicles to avoid congestion, San Francisco’s Bay Area Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) has acted. It is converting 240km (150 miles) of HOV/car pool lanes to express lanes and last fall the MTC’s Bay Area Infrastructure Financing Authority selected TransCore to d
  • February 21, 2017
    Fitch Ratings: ‘Fair’ US interstate tolling can curb highway deficits
    According to the latest Fitch Ratings report, a widening gap for the US economy, highway, road and bridge funding deficits, can be curbed by establishing interstate US tolling, providing it is approached fairly and pragmatically. The current tolling framework across the US seems to have no sustainable rationale for the average citizen for why some highways (in states on the east coast and the southeast, for instance) are tolled and some highways (like in many western states) are not. This fosters distrus