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Federal lawmakers will have to become more comfortable with tolling highways, tunnels, and bridges if they want to obtain the revenues needed to create a national infrastructure bank or fund large capital projects in the future, transportation advocates said yesterday.
December 15 - Washington
A coalition of publicly traded, non-bank corporations that own billions of dollars of illiquid student loan auction-rate securities is pushing for a federal liquidity backstop so they can sell the ARS and have money to invest in their businesses.
December 15 - Washington
House Democrats have scuttled plans to include a $1.8 trillion boost to the national debt limit in the upcoming defense appropriations bill, and instead plan to propose separate legislation that would raise the limit by $200 billion and allow the Treasury Department to continue issuing debt for two more months.
December 15 - Washington
Public power utilities are facing the prospect of increased costs and riskier credit profiles due to the Environmental Protection Agency's recent movement toward regulation of coal plant and other carbon-based emissions, analysts said yesterday.
December 14 -
Robert Bradbury, the former chairman and chief executive officer of the now-defunct underwriting firm Dolphin & Bradbury Inc., was sentenced by a federal judge in Philadelphia yesterday to a 366-day prison sentence and ordered to pay a $10,000 fine in connection with his pleading guilty to one criminal count of securities fraud.
December 14 -
The Senate and House have both approved an omnibus appropriations bill for fiscal 2010 that provides funding for high-speed rail projects and grants to states for transportation infrastructure.
December 14 - Washington
Scott DeFife is leaving the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association as its senior managing director of government affairs early next year to take on a similar post at the National Restaurant Association, the two trade groups announced yesterday.
December 14 - Washington
More than a year after Moody's Investor Service announced that it was postponing the recalibration of its U.S. municipal rating scale amid the financial crisis, the agency may be close to announcing its plans to move forward on the changes once again.
December 14 -
WASHINGTON — As the House Friday approved the most sweeping financial regulatory reform legislation since the Depression, municipal issuers are debating the effectiveness of a little-noticed provision that would require rating agencies to rate municipal and other debt on the same scale and based on the likelihood of repayment to investors.
December 11 -
WASHINGTON — If Congress does not pass legislation boosting the federal debt limit by the end of the year, the Treasury Department could be forced to close its window for state and local government series securities, which municipal issuers purchase for refunding escrows to avoid earning arbitrage, market sources said yesterday.
December 11 -
WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission has barred ex-Wachovia Securities LLC broker Guy P. Riordan from associating with any broker or dealer, and ordered him to pay a $500,000 penalty and to disgorge almost $938,354 in ill-gotten gains and interest for securities fraud violations stemming from a pay-to-play scheme involving the former treasurer of New Mexico.
December 11 -
WASHINGTON — The House is poised to approve a massive financial regulatory reform bill today, after considering a series of amendments late into last night.
December 10 -
WASHINGTON — House Democrats plan to introduce and vote next week on a jobs bill, Speaker Nancy Pelosi said yesterday as the chamber voted 221 to 202 to approve a nearly half-trillion dollar appropriations bill with funding for high-speed rail.
December 10 - Washington
WASHINGTON — The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board yesterday announced 11 market participants that have joined its issuer and investor advisory groups for two-year terms that end Sept. 30, 2011.
December 10 -
WASHINGTON — Congress is expected as early as this week to take up a $446.8 billion appropriations act for fiscal 2010 that would provide more high-speed rail funds than the Obama administration had requested, along with highway and other transportation infrastructure funds and bond-related community development block grants.
December 9 - Washington
WASHINGTON — Municipal issuers will sell an estimated $450.5 billion of long- and short-term tax-exempt debt in 2010, a 7.9% rise over the $417.5 billion estimated for 2009, while the number of taxable Build America Bonds issued in 2010 could be 50% more than this year’s total, according to a survey of broker-dealers last month compiled by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.
December 9 -
The House yesterday approved by a vote of 241 to 181 legislation that extends a number of expiring bond-related and other tax provisions, but it is unclear when or whether the Senate will approve similar legislation.
December 9 -
WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission announced Wednesday that it has settled its civil litigation against Robert Bradbury, the former chairman and chief executive officer of the now defunct underwriting firm Dolphin & Bradbury Inc., and barred him from the securities markets.
December 9 -
WASHINGTON — House Financial Services Committee members and their colleagues have drafted almost 250 amendments that they would like to see added to the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2009, including one that would prohibit state and local governments and public pension funds from entering into swaps.
December 8 -
WASHINGTON — Several small local housing finance agencies will not be participating in the new-issue bond purchase program recently rolled out by the Treasury Department. Instead, they have opted to return their allocations because high fees and the Treasury’s refusal to allow escrowed bonds to be sold at a premium make it economically infeasible for them to do the transactions.
December 8
