Christine Albano is a reporter in the Investor’s & Investing beat, which she has covered for the past two decades. She has a wide range of buy side sources in the municipal market and has covered trends affecting retail investors, institutions, municipal mutual funds, tax-exempt money market funds, and the high-yield beat. She has also written about some of the industry’s biggest issues, such as historic defaults in Orange County, Calif., Puerto Rico, and Jefferson County, Ala., as well as the collapse of the variable-rate demand market. In addition, she reported on the subsequent 2008 financial crisis, and the death of municipal bond pioneer Jim Lebenthal. She provided next day coverage of the impact on the municipal bond market of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, and recently interviewed The Vanguard Group Inc. founder, former chief executive officer, and investment guru John C. Bogle about the best investing advice for the municipal market.
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California came to market with a $2.15 billion general obligation bond deal as JPMorgan priced the big taxable offering
By Chip BarnettApril 17 -
The municipal market is seeing several new deals hit the screens ahead of the big taxable deal from California.
By Chip BarnettApril 17 -
California’s $2.2 billion taxable sale is in the spotlight as the market gets set for a $7.5 billion supply slate.
By Chip BarnettApril 13 -
The imbalance of supply and demand continues to crimp activity for some municipal bond professionals.
By Chip BarnettApril 12 -
Municipal bonds remained stronger as a high-grade deal from Charlotte, N.C., came to market.
By Chip BarnettApril 12 -
The old saw that rising rates are bad for bonds may not really be the case, one new report says.
By Chip BarnettApril 10 -
Despite the previous technical difficulties of supply and demand, municipals are poised for a potentially stronger second quarter, according to Jeffrey Lipton, managing director of credit research at Oppenheimer & Co.
April 10 -
Traders and muni professionals said it was a typical light Monday in the municipal market — with favorable market technicals mixed with some underlying concern on the political front.
April 9 -
Weekly municipal market volume is expected to sink back below $5 billion in the coming week, making it harder for investors to price bonds.
April 6 -
Traders noted some caution in the muni market ahead of Friday’s release of the March unemployment report.
April 5