Gary Siegel is a journalist with more than 35 years of experience. He started his professional career at the Long Island Journal newspapers based in Long Beach, N.Y., working his way up from reporter to Assistant Managing Editor. Siegel also worked for Prentice-Hall in Paramus, N.J., covering human resources issues. Siegel has been at The Bond Buyer since 1989, currently covering economic indicators and the Federal Reserve system.
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Next week's potential volume is slated to be more than $8 billion, led by $1.25 billion of taxable and tax-exempt future tax-secured subordinate bonds from the New York City Transitional Finance Authority.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 25 -
Outflows continued, with Refinitiv Lipper reporting investors shed $1.503 billion from municipal bond mutual funds in the week, following outflows of $2.136 billion in the previous week. High-yield saw small inflows.
March 24 -
The triple-A 10-year yield is above 2% on all scales, the highest since March 2020.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 22 -
Muni performance has been strong as of late, and spreads have actually corrected after a month of gradual widening.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 21 -
Next week's potential volume is slated to be $7.7 billion. The largest deal of the week comes from New York City with $891 million of tax-exempt general obligation bonds. Recent New York paper traded up Friday.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 18 -
Outflows continued, rising significantly in the latest week, with Refinitiv Lipper reporting $2.136 billion coming out of municipal bond mutual funds, following outflows of $661.675 billion in the previous week.
March 17 -
The Investment Company Institute on Wednesday reported $2.258 billion of outflows in the week ending March 9, down from $3.502 billion of outflows in the previous week.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 16 -
Bond investors are understandably cautious in response to recent market volatility and ahead of what is expected to be a Fed rate hike Wednesday, participants say.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 15 -
The market is being driven by the prospect of higher long-term inflation and the potential that the Federal Reserve may have to raise rates further than expected.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 14 -
DASNY leads the calendar with $2.3 billion of exempt personal income tax bonds and $662.32 million of taxables. Potential volume is slated to be $5.11 billion, with $4.392 billion of negotiated deals and $718.1 million of competitive loans.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 11 -
Outflows continue but dropped significantly in the latest week with Refinitiv Lipper reporting $662 million of outflows from municipal bond mutual funds following $2.823 billion the week prior.
March 10 -
The Investment Company Institute on Wednesday reported another round of large outflows, this week at $3.502 billion, up from $2.647 billion of outflows in the previous week.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 9 -
Secondary trading showed weaker prints, moving triple-A yields higher by three to seven basis points, outperforming larger losses in UST. California priced $2.2 billion of GOs for retail.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 8 -
Market volatility has risen significantly, particularly in the last several weeks, with daily Treasury yield swings of 10 basis points or more becoming the norm with municipals struggling to stabilize.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelMarch 4 -
Ongoing turmoil in the Ukraine is roiling markets, municipals included. Refinitiv Lipper reported more outflows, with high-yield seeing $818.218 million pulled out in the latest week.
March 3 -
The Investment Company Institute on Wednesday reported $2.637 billion of outflows in the week ending Feb. 23, down from $3.120 billion of outflows in the previous week.
By Lynne Funk and Gary SiegelMarch 2 -
The Russian invasion of Ukraine could slow interest rate hikes and has led the market to pull back on the chances of a 50-basis-point liftoff.
March 1 -
All markets, but particularly municipals, are in uncharted territory once again, with volatility amplified by the crisis in Ukraine and a still somewhat uncertain path for the Federal Reserve and inflation.
February 28 -
Between the long holiday weekend and investors trying to absorb the Russia-Ukraine developments, it was a slow start to the week in the municipal market.
By Jessica Lerner and Gary SiegelFebruary 22 -
The new-issue calendar for the holiday-shortened week is $4.98 billion, with $3.633 billion of negotiated deals and $1.347 billion of competitive loans.
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