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The first quarter of 2021 concludes with $102.1 billion, slightly higher than the $95.3 billion that the market saw in the COVID-ravaged first quarter of 2020.
March 31 -
Gov. Gavin Newsom proposes securitizing future car registration fees to back bonds that speed construction of the electric vehicle charging stations.
March 31 -
MTA and regional transportation advocates welcome the news that the Federal Highway Administration is advancing the project.
March 31 -
Transportation fare and tax revenues lost to the coronavirus can be countered with federal relief funding, says the Illinois Economic Policy Institute.
March 30 -
Sam Turvey of ReThinkNYC explores ways to make New York's Pennsylvania Station complex more functional and aesthetic. Paul Burton hosts (17 minutes).
March 30 -
Municipals continue to outperform Treasuries amid a light holiday-shortened week led by a California tobacco deal.
March 29 -
Moody’s followed S&P in lifting Illinois’ outlook to stable, where it stood before the COVID-19 pandemic, but a lot more needs to happen for an upgrade.
March 26 -
Both personal income and expenditures dropped in February, while personal consumption expenditures also came in weaker than expected, meaning inflation remains in check for now.
March 26 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission previously charged one of the seven, an unregistered investment adviser, with similar allegations.
March 26 -
Gov. Tom Wolf said the tax has become unreliable for funding the commonwealth's vast network.
March 26 -
Other detention centers and prisons operating near the U.S.-Mexico border have undergone similar IRS audits the last couple of years in which issuers have agreed to convert their bonds from tax-exempt to taxable.
March 26 -
Jeffrey Fladell, who retired from RBC Capital Markets in 2017, agreed to pay that fine while neither admitting nor denying FINRA's charges.
March 26 -
Moody's is the second rating agency this month to bring its outlook on Illinois to stable, though all ratings remain at the lowest investment grade.
March 25 -
American Relief Plan funds may also spare the city's reserves, but officials are waiting on the fine print from Washington to see what they can actually do.
March 25 -
Veneta Dimitrova, senior U.S. economist at Ned Davis Research, says the COVID pandemic showed us the government has more fiscal space than thought. She also discusses inflation, housing, the manufacturing sector, global supply chain challenges and the Fed’s balance sheet. Hosted by Gary Siegel. Taped Feb. 24. (32 minutes)
March 25 -
ICI reported another week of inflows at $2.23 billion. U.S. Treasuries strengthened further as COVID-19 concerns linger with shutdowns in Germany and spreads elsewhere. Equities were mixed.
March 24 -
Under the Transit Tech Lab accelerator program, companies can pilot their technologies with several New York region transportation agencies.
March 24 -
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said prices would rise this year as the pandemic recedes and Americans are able to go out and spend, but he played down the risk that this would spur unwanted inflation.
March 23 -
The change represents a doubling of related investments, Mayor Bill de Blasio and Comptroller Scott Stringer announced.
March 23 -
Lawmakers approved a Golden State Stimulus that provides relief to businesses and $600 checks to low-income residents on the strength of an earlier-reported surplus.
March 23
























