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A public pension disclosure project spearheaded by a bond attorneys' group is expected to reach a critical milestone when it should become clear whether a voluntary coalition of industry participants will reach consensus on the project or produce separate recommendations.
January 13 - Washington
WASHINGTON — The White House is once again asking Congress to increase the federal borrowing limit by $1.2 trillion to avoid hitting the nation's debt ceiling, but the request is sure to trigger another battle on Capitol Hill and possibly threaten the availability of sales of state and local government series securities to municipal issuers.
January 12 -
WASHINGTON — Despite the financial struggles and criticism faced by prominent fast-rail projects in California and Florida, high-speed and regional rail is likely to proceed out of necessity, according to an analysis by Fitch Ratings.
January 12 - Washington
State and local governments should not allow underwriters to pass through any fees they pay to finance the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, the Government Finance Officers Association warned members Thursday.
January 12 -
SAN FRANCISCO — Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire asked lawmakers Tuesday to put a temporary sales-tax increase measure before voters and pass $3.6 billion of transportation spending.
January 11 -
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission voted 4 to 1 to approve a final rule on business conduct standards for swap dealers designed to protect states and local governments, as well as taxpayers, from fraud in the swaps marketplace.
January 11 -
With the Jan. 31 expiration date of the latest Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization law coming up fast, hopes for a long-awaited multi-year bill are giving way to pessimism as airport lobbyists fear that deep partisan divides and a limited number of congressional work days may wind up producing another short-term measure or FAA shutdown.
January 11 -
SAN FRANCISCO — An eastern Washington public facilities district that defaulted on $42 million of notes last month is scrambling for ways to pay investors.
January 11 -
The Internal Revenue Service's initiative to determine whether municipal bonds are being initially offered at prices that fail to comply with tax requirements has left issuers upset and confused about the definition of issue price and what specific abuses the IRS is looking for.
January 10 - Washington
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board officials on Tuesday urged issuers to encourage Moody's Investors Service to post rating information on the MSRB's online Electronic Municipal Market Access system.
January 10 -
WASHINGTON — Public-private partnerships do not necessarily supply more funds for highway construction than traditional government financing, and spending by the private party must be restricted by budget caps or legal limits for states and localities to see benefits from P3s, a Congressional Budget Office study concluded Monday.
January 9 -
Putting an end to the one of the most high-profile criminal trials in the muni market since the mid-1990s, two former employees of CDR Financial Products Inc. each pleaded guilty to three criminal counts in connection with bid-rigging of investment and derivatives contracts for muni bond proceeds.
January 9 -
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow it to assess its muni members quarterly fees based on the par value of their reported transactions to help fund the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, despite protests from issuers and dealers.
January 6 - Washington
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board's net assets spiked to $36.65 million for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2011, soaring by $6.89 million from the previous year as new technology and transaction fees offset a dip in underwriting assessment fees, according to audited financial statements and an annual report expected to be released Friday.
January 5 -
Moody’s Investors Service has revised the outlook on the University of Washington’s Aaa general obligation bond rating to stable from negative.
January 5 -
A bipartisan House duo has introduced legislation that would authorize up to $50 billion of tax-credit bonds to be used over six years to finance transportation infrastructure projects, mirroring a bill pending in the Senate and garnering support from lobbyists even as some question whether such bonds could overcome expected hesitancy from investors.
January 4 -
The Illinois Department of Transportation will receive $186 million to continue construction on a high-speed rail line linking Chicago with St. Louis, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood announced Wednesday.
January 4 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission has sued a Georgia attorney and his client for securities fraud over their failure to disclose the client's criminal indictment in bond documents for $2.96 million of industrial redevelopment revenue bonds sold by Raleigh County, W. Va., in 2006 and 2007 that are now in default.
January 3 -
The Internal Revenue Service's tax-exempt bond office has formed a seven-person team that is using EMMA and other data from the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board to determine if muni bonds were initially offered at prices that raise questions about tax-law compliance.
January 3 -
The municipal securities market, still reeling from a handful of proposals President Obama and others offered during the last 14 months that pose the greatest threat to tax-exemption since 1986, may have a year's respite due to partisan bickering in Congress and the forthcoming presidential election, according to tax experts.
December 30




