About Noah
Noah Lebowitz serves as bond counsel, borrower’s counsel, underwriters’ counsel, disclosure counsel, and bank counsel on tax-exempt and taxable public finance transactions.Prior to joining Nixon Peabody, Noah served as Assistant County Executive and Director of Communications for Monroe County, New York.My focusMy practice focuses on assisting clients with a wide variety of financings, including to support infrastructure and capital improvement projects for state and local governments, public power systems, transportation agencies, higher education and facilities for nonprofit organizations. I also focus on securitization bond issuances, including bonds backed by utility ratepayers and student loans. In addition to negotiating and drafting the underlying finance and disclosure documents for public finance transactions, I counsel clients with respect to evolving regulatory developments involving primary and secondary market disclosures.Looking aheadFrom cybersecurity events to extreme weather, public finance market participants are increasingly facing a dynamic and complex risk matrix that must be carefully considered when preparing disclosure materials in order to give investors a fair and accurate portrayal of an issuer’s financial condition and management’s expectations for future performance.
Prior to joining Nixon Peabody, Noah served as Assistant County Executive and Director of Communications for Monroe County, New York.
My focus
My practice focuses on assisting clients with a wide variety of financings, including to support infrastructure and capital improvement projects for state and local governments, public power systems, transportation agencies, higher education and facilities for nonprofit organizations. I also focus on securitization bond issuances, including bonds backed by utility ratepayers and student loans. In addition to negotiating and drafting the underlying finance and disclosure documents for public finance transactions, I counsel clients with respect to evolving regulatory developments involving primary and secondary market disclosures.
Looking ahead
From cybersecurity events to extreme weather, public finance market participants are increasingly facing a dynamic and complex risk matrix that must be carefully considered when preparing disclosure materials in order to give investors a fair and accurate portrayal of an issuer’s financial condition and management’s expectations for future performance.