Market Gets Breather with Next Week's Smaller Slate

The municipal bond market will clear the decks Friday ahead of next week's lighter new issue calendar.

Secondary Market

Treasury prices were mostly higher on Friday, with the yield on the two-year Treasury note remaining unchanged from 0.68% on Thursday, while the 10-year yield fell to 2.14% from 2.17% and the 30-year yield decreased to 2.87% from 2.91%.

The yield on the 10-year benchmark muni general obligation on Thursday was one basis point stronger at 2.16% from 2.15% on Wednesday, while the yield on the 30-year GO was steady at 3.11%, according to the final read of Municipal Market Data's triple-A scale.

The 10-year muni to Treasury ratio was calculated on Thursday at 99.7% versus 99.2% on Wednesday, while the 30-year muni to Treasury ratio stood at 107.2% compared to 106.2%, according to MMD.

Primary Market

Topping the new issue slate is a $1 billion offering from the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York.

Scheduled to be priced by JPMorgan Securities on Wednesday after a one-day retail order period, the DASNY issue is expected to be rated Aa1 by Moody's Investors Service and triple-A by Standard & Poor's.

The Series 2015E general purpose state personal income tax revenue bonds are tentatively structured as serials running from 2016 through 2037.

City Securities is slated to price Valparaiso, Ind.'s $143 million multi-school building construction first mortgage bonds. The issue is expected to be rated AA-plus by S&P.

Barclays Capital is set to price the Lower Colorado River Authority, Texas, $135 million of Series 2015D refunding revenue bonds on Wednesday. The issue is rated A by S&P and Fitch Ratings.

In the competitive arena, the state of Wisconsin will sell $391 million of Series 2015C general obligation bonds on Tuesday.

Municipal Bond Funds See Outflows

Municipal bond funds saw outflows in the latest week, according to Lipper data released on Thursday.

Funds which report weekly saw $344.563 million of outflows in the week ended Aug. 26, after seeing inflows of $43.656 million in the previous week, Lipper reported.

The latest inflow brings to 17 out of 35 weeks this year that the funds have seen a cash infusion. Inflows for the year to date are still in the green, totaling $2.663 billion.

The four-week moving average remained negative at $149.516 million after being in the red at $81.719 million in the previous week. The moving average has now been negative for 14 weeks in a row. A moving average is an analytical tool used to smooth out price changes by filtering out fluctuations.

Long-term muni bond funds also experienced outflows, losing $29.224 million in the latest week, after seeing inflows of $289.019 million in the previous week. Intermediate-term funds saw outflows of $44.327 million after seeing outflows of $6.790 million in the prior week.

Exchange traded funds saw inflows of $61.284 million, after experiencing outflows of $19.800 million in the previous week.

And high-yield muni funds saw outflows of $40.317 million in the latest reporting week, after seeing an inflow of $182.789 million the previous week.

In the past 18 weeks, high-yield funds have seen outflows 12 times totaling $1.815 billion and inflows six times totaling $322.011 million.

MSRB Previous Session's Activity

The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board reported 40,412 trades on Thursday on volume of $9.984 billion.

Bond Buyer Visible Supply

The Bond Buyer's 30-day visible supply calendar rose $710.7 million to $6.78 billion on Friday. The total is comprised of $2.70 billion competitive sales and $4.08 billion of negotiated deals.

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