Calif. Market Close: Tax-Exempts Yields Finish Firmer

NEW YORK – Long munis posted additional gains Friday as investors shrugged off media reports indicating that policy makers are trying to devise a way for states to file for bankruptcy.

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Traders said tax-exempt yields were firmer by three to five basis points on the long end and mostly flat  in the shorter maturities.

The Municipal Market Data triple-A 10-year scale was unchanged Friday at 3.42%, the 20-year scale declined five basis points to 4.74%, and the scale for 30-year bonds dropped five basis points to 4.90%.

Friday’s triple-A muni scale in 10 years was at 100.3% of comparable Treasuries and 30-year munis were at 107.2%, according to MMD. Meanwhile, 30-year tax-exempt triple-A general obligation bonds were at 114.2% of the comparable London Interbank Offered Rate.

"Earlier in the week, municipals looked extremely cheap versus Treasuries, versus corporates, and we did get crossover buyers come into our market and purchase quite a bit of municipals at the long end," said Ron Schwartz, who manages the $1.14 billion Investment Grade Tax-Exempt Bond fund for RidgeWorth Investments. "You have sophisticated taxable fixed-income buyers looking at our market at this point in time, and understand the credit risk and think there’s value in the municipal market. That’s probably going to be the trend in the short term."

Treasuries were slightly weaker Friday. The benchmark 10-year note was quoted recently at 3.41% after opening at 3.45%. The 30-year bond was quoted recently at 4.57% after opening at 4.60%. The two-year note was quoted recently at 0.62% after opening at 0.63%.

The tax-exempt market had no tangible reaction to news reports that Washington policy makers may consider allowing state governments to file for bankruptcy to deal with financial issues.

“It’s not something I heard anyone talking about today,” a trader in Los Angeles said. “It’s such a radical notion — unconstitutional even, since states are considered sovereign — that I don’t think you’ll see anyone really take it to heart unless it looks like it has the potential to go somewhere.”

Despite this, headline risk continues to chase people from state and local government debt funds, as muni bond mutual funds that report their figures weekly posted an outflow of $4 billion during the week ended Jan. 19, according to Lipper FMI. That new mark beats the old record of $3.1 billion, set the week ended Nov. 17, by 29%.

Activity in the California new-issue market was light Friday.

The economic calendar was light Friday.

Previous Session's Activity
The most actively traded security in the state yesterday was taxable California BABs 7.7s of 2030, which traded 52 times at a high of 105.041 and a low of 100.452.


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