Calif. Market Close: Tax-Exempts Finish Flat

NEW YORK - The California municipal market was unchanged Thursday amid light secondary trading activity on the final full trading day of 2010.

Processing Content

Traders said tax-exempt yields were flat and trading was sparse ahead of Friday's early market close and the coming new year.

"It was painfully quiet," a trader in San Francisco said. "Maybe you could get a little something done early on, but there's been hardly anything going on the last few hours. Tomorrow should be even quieter than this. We're ready for the new year."

The Municipal Market Data triple-A 10-year scale was flat Thursday at 3.16%, the 20-year scale was unchanged at 4.39%, and the scale for 30-year debt held at 4.68%.

Thursday's triple-A muni scale in 10 years was at 93.2% of comparable Treasuries and 30-year munis were at 105.4%, according to MMD. Meanwhile, 30-year tax-exempt triple-A general obligation bonds were at 111.7% of the comparable London Interbank Offered Rate.

The Treasury market showed little movement Thursday. The benchmark 10-year note was quoted recently at 3.36% after also opening at 3.36%. The 30-year bond was quoted recently at 4.43% after also opening at 4.43%. The two-year note was quoted recently at 0.64% after opening at 0.63%.

In the daily MMD commentary, Randy Smolik wrote: "In past years we have seen activity perk up in the muni sector as the New Year approaches. We did see some larger blocks exchange hands mid week but activity tapered off today. Overall, trading appeared mostly steady but still very spotty."

 

Smolik also wrote that next week's limited primary calendar could "encourage dealers to hold positions into the New Year with nothing major selling competitively and less than a handful of negotiated deals that can potentially be scheduled."

"So when January re-investment gets ramped up, there is only the secondary to provide supply to feed this demand," Smolik wrote.

In economic data released Thursday, initial jobless claims unexpectedly dropped 34,000 to 388,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending Dec. 25.

The figure was beneath the 415,000 claims predicted by a median estimate of economists polled by Thomson Reuters, but Labor department economists said there was no unusual claims activity in any state or group of states to explain the decline.

The decline follows an upwardly revised 422,000 claims figure for the week ending Dec. 18, originally reported as 420,000.

Continuing claims rose 57,000 to 4.128 million for the week ending Dec. 18, higher than the 4.110 million of continuing claims predicted by a median estimate of economists polled by Thomson Reuters.

Continuing claims for the week ending Dec. 11 were revised to 4.071 million from an earlier reported 4.064 million.

Pending home sales climbed 3.5% to a reading of 92.2 in November from a revised 10.4% jump to 89.3 in October, originally reported as 10.1% increase to 89.1. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters predicted a 2.0% increase for the index.

The Chicago Purchasing Managers' Business Barometer rose to 68.6 in December from 62.5 in November. An index reading below 50 signals a slowing economy, while a level above 50 suggests expansion. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters predicted a 61.0 reading for the indicator.

Also, MBIA Inc.'s stock shot up 14% to $11.81 on news that JPMorgan Chase and Barclays Bank are withdrawing from a lawsuit alleging MBIA's Feb. 2009 restructuring was an intentionally fraudulent action and a breach of good faith that hurt policyholders. The suit was brought by JPMorgan, Barclays, and 16 other banks.

Previous Session's Activity

The most actively traded security in the state yesterday was California 3s of 2011, which traded 51 times at a high of 100.935 and a low of 98.020.


For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
MORE FROM BOND BUYER
Load More