WASHINGTON — U.S. durable goods orders were exceedingly soft in October, possibly a signal of recession. Orders were down 0.4% in their third consecutive monthly drop. Excluding transportation, orders were off 0.7%, and excluding defense orders fell 0.9%, showing widespread weakness. Each of the latter two categories fell in two of the last three months, also confirming manufacturing slack. Boeing Co. reported 56 new orders, down from 132 in September, so it was no surprise that nondefense aircraft printed down 5.2%. But the breakdown away from aircraft was troubling.— Market News International
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The new-issue calendar is led by Washington with $1.3 billion of GOs selling by competitive bid in three series.
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A trio of current and former Alaska lawmakers presented views differing from the governor's on how to solve the state's budget red ink.
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Kutak Rock warns tax attorneys about the Internal Revenue Service doing compliance checks as opposed to formal audits on certain multifamily bond issues as tax season is expected to add more stress to an understaffed agency.
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The rating agency cited weak operating results and high leverage.
February 6 -
Piper Sandler will price $100 million of electric revenue bonds for Iowa public utility Muscatine Power and Water on Wednesday.
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Longer-term bonds could ease financial pressure for Sound Transit's $54 billion long-range plans.
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