David M. Reicher, a partner with Foley & Lardner LLP, is a member of the Finance & Financial Institutions, Public Finance, Education Finance, and Swaps and Derivatives Practices.
Since 1977, he has represented issuers and underwriters and served as bond counsel in connection with the issuance of student loan asset-backed securities, revenue bonds, and commercial paper notes in over 18 states. These transactions represent a wide variety of short-term and long-term financing vehicles, including securities registered with the SEC and those exempt from registration, tax-exempt and taxable asset-backed securities issued with senior and subordinated series, short-term demand notes, bank lines of credit, variable rate instruments, puts, short-term bond issues backed by take-out commitments, letters of credits, or both, issues covered by bond insurance, long-term stand-alone bond issues, and taxable commercial paper.
He also has represented such parties and others in matters before the U.S. Department of Education, the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and Congress, including testimony before the Oversight Committee of the House Ways and Means Committee on proposed changes to the arbitrage bond provisions.
Mr. Reicher has handled securitizations of other asset classes, and represented financial institutions providing letters of credit and interest rate protection products to issuers of all forms of tax-exempt obligations.
In addition, Mr. Reicher has represented parties in a variety of derivatives transactions, including credit derivatives swaps, interest rate swaps, caps, and collars, currency forwards, and total return swaps.
In addition to Mr. Reicher’s extensive experience in a broad range of student loan asset-backed securities transactions and in representing education finance clients in matters before various federal agencies, sample transactions and matters handled by Mr. Reicher include representing:
- The State of Wisconsin in connection with the sale and $1.6 billion securitization of its tobacco settlement receipts.
- The State of Wisconsin in the negotiation and execution of multiple interest rate swaps relating to its $1.8 billion general fund annual appropriation bonds.
- One of the nation’s largest public pension funds in renegotiating swaps and derivatives master agreements with its trading partners.
- A university foundation in its first index-based credit derivatives transaction.
- Tax-exempt organizations and affiliated for-profit entities in IRS audits involving related party transactions and tax-exempt student loan asset-backed securities.
- Federal Family Education Loan Program lenders in connection with U.S. Department of Education 2008-2010 liquidity programs under the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act of 2008.
- Potential purchasers and targets active in higher education finance.
- Lenders and loan servicers in the negotiation of loan servicing agreements and the sale and purchase of loan portfolios.
- The underwriters and acting as special corporate counsel in the country’s first taxable conversion of an Internal Revenue Code section 150(d) student loan issuer and the issuance of over $923 million of student loan asset-backed notes in connection therewith. The transaction involved the transfer by the issuer of its student loan assets, business and operations (including its own servicing system) to a taxable subsidiary, and an SEC registered financing involving a senior/subordinated debt structure with 12 series of asset-backed notes, including tax-exempt auction rate notes, tax-exempt fixed rate notes, taxable auction rate notes and taxable LIBOR rate notes. The financing provided funds for loan purchases and originations and refunded eight outstanding issues of tax-exempt and taxable debt.
- Lenders in litigation against third-party servicers arising from deficiencies in loan servicing.
Mr. Reicher has spoken at conferences sponsored by the Practicing Law Institute, the Public Securities Association, the Consumer Bankers Association, the Education Finance Council, the National Council of Higher Education Loan Programs, Inc. and the National Association of Bond Lawyers. He was chairman of the former Student Loan Financing Committee of the National Association of Bond Lawyers and former chairman of the subcommittee on Student Loans of the American Bar Association’s Committee on Taxation of the Section on Urban, State and Local Government Law.
Mr. Reicher has been Peer Review Rated as AV® Preeminent™, the highest performance rating in Martindale-Hubbell's peer review rating system. In 2010, 2011 and 2012, he was recognized by the Legal 500 United States in the structured finance category. He also has been selected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America® 2012 and 2013 in the areas of derivatives and futures law and securitization and structured finance law.*
Mr. Reicher serves pro bono as a mediator in the Milwaukee Foreclosure Mediation Program. He also has been a volunteer youth athletic coach for over 20 years.
Mr. Reicher is a member of the Wisconsin and Illinois bars. He also is a member of the National Association of Bond Lawyers.
Mr. Reicher graduated from Rutgers College with highest honors in 1974, and from the National Law Center, George Washington University with honors in 1977, where he was a notes editor of The George Washington Law Review.
*The Illinois Supreme Court does not recognize certifications of specialties in the practice of law and no award or recognition is a requirement to practice law in Illinois.