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WASHINGTON — Local housing finance agencies have asked the Treasury Department to push back the Dec. 31 deadline for converting short-term taxable bonds to long-term, tax-exempt, fixed-rate bonds under its New Issue Bond Purchase program, warning they will have trouble meeting it.
March 31 -
WASHINGTON — President Obama’s enactment of a new law yesterday that would require all federally guaranteed student loans to be originated by the federal government has led the state and nonprofit entities that have historically loaned to students to contemplate their future in the market.
March 30 - Washington
The executive board of the Government Finance Officers Association is again engaging in a spirited dispute against the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, this time arguing that it should cease its work on a project that aims to set standards for forward-looking statements in government financial documents.
March 29 -
The accounts at Causey Demgen & Moore Inc. are teaming up with the attorneys at Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC to help charitable organizations meet their post-issuance compliance obligations.
March 29 - Washington
President Obama has announced that he will appoint Michael Mundaca as the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for tax policy during the congressional recess, citing “months of Republican obstruction to administration nominees” as the reason for bypassing the Senate.
March 29 - Washington
WASHINGTON — One year after the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act fundamentally altered the municipal landscape, market participants are pressing lawmakers to extend and expand its provisions.
March 26 -
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department’s antitrust investigation has found dozens of firms and individuals conspired for at least six to eight years to secretly control the bidding for municipal bond investment and other contracts in more than 250 transactions, according to documents filed with a federal court in Manhattan.
March 26 -
WASHINGTON — John Kendrick, the former Southwest Securities Inc. banker who is being charged in a Securities and Exchange Commission administrative proceeding for allegedly violating pay-to-play restrictions, wants to reach a settlement with the SEC but is considering taking legal action against his former employer.
March 25 -
WASHINGTON — The House Thursday voted 276 to 145 to approve a bill that would increase the maximum allowable passenger facilities charge that airports can collect to $7.00 from $4.50.
March 25 -
WASHINGTON — A federal judge in Manhattan has refused to dismiss class action claims filed by local governments alleging that Wells Fargo & Co. and 15 other banks, broker-dealers and investment brokers conspired to rig bids and fix prices of guaranteed investment and derivatives contracts in the municipal market.
March 25 -
WASHINGTON — Legislation that would extend the Build America Bonds program until April 2013 at gradually reduced subsidy rates was approved by a vote of 246 to 178 in the House yesterday.
March 24 -
WASHINGTON — Southwest Securities Inc. has agreed to pay $470,147 to settle charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission for violating an anti-pay-to-play rule by co-underwriting Massachusetts bond deals within two years after its former senior vice president made political contributions to state Treasurer Timothy Cahill.
March 24 -
The House today is expected to vote on a bill that would reauthorize federal aviation programs and allow airports to ramp up revenue they use to back bonds.
March 24 -
WASHINGTON — Southwest Securities Inc. has agreed to pay $470,147 to settle charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it co-underwrote Massachusetts bond deals within two years after its former senior vice president made political contributions to state Treasurer Timothy Cahill.
March 24 -
WASHINGTON — Money-market fund officials are warning that new terms some banks and issuers are beginning to include in variable-rate debt transaction documents can be difficult to monitor and limit bondholders’ rights.
March 23 -
WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department Tuesday released interim guidance detailing how issuers, bondholders, and other market participants should “strip” the tax credits from tax-credit bonds and how that information should be reported to the Internal Revenue Service.
March 23 -
The Senate has approved a Federal Aviation Administration authorization bill that would establish a pilot program giving six airports the ability to set their own passenger facilities charges, which currently are capped at $4.50 and are used to back bonds.
March 23 -
WASHINGTON — Another extension of federal transportation programs beyond the end of this year is highly possible, a congressional aide and transportation industry sources said at a conference here yesterday.
March 22 -
WASHINGTON — The Senate Banking Committee voted 13 to 10 along party lines Monday evening to approve a redrafted financial regulatory reform bill, with Republicans voting against the measure but vowing to work with Democrats on a compromise package before the bill reaches the full Senate for consideration, possibly next month.
March 22 -
WASHINGTON — With the Senate Banking Committee scheduled to begin marking up draft financial regulatory reform language as early as today, market participants are hopeful that lawmakers will be keen to fill potential loopholes in the bill’s provisions calling for the regulation of municipal market advisers.
March 19





