-
Municipal bond activity returns to a near-normal level as a slew of deals heads into the market, led by New York and California issuers.
July 6 -
The state program invests retirement savings for workers whose employers don't offer pension plans.
July 6 -
Working under three elected comptrollers for 12 years, she was a stabilizing presence behind the scenes.
July 6 -
Ipreo estimates weekly bond volume at $6.6 billion, consisting of $5.5 billion of negotiated deals and $1.2 billion of competitive sales.
July 6 -
After years of underfunding and inattention, New York MTA is undertaking accessibility Initiatives that include the hiring of a dedicated executive, Alex Elegudin.
July 6 -
Rita Sallis has briefly rejoined the MSRB board following the resignation of Jim Beard and Ronald Dieckman's term has been extended.
July 5 -
The city's voters will decide in November if it will establish the public bank.
July 5 -
Texas maintained its torrid pace of sales tax collections in June with its sixth monthly record in 2018.
July 5 -
Municipals remained stronger into the close on Thursday as the minutes from the last Federal Reserve meeting were released.
July 5 -
Tax accountants, financial advisors, private schools, and other organizations are advertising tax credits for donating to private K-12 voucher funds as ways to "sidestep," "bypass," "circumvent," or "mitigate" the impact of the federal SALT deduction cap, according to a survey.
July 5 -
Carol Kostik, the senior among eight deputies, has worked for three city comptrollers and managed the issuance of more than $110 billion of debt .
July 5 -
New Jersey’s police officers and firefighters received control over their pension management decisions.
July 5 -
The board responded that it would vigorously defend its budget and fiscal plan.
July 5 -
Federal Reserve officials reaffirmed their commitment to gradually raising the benchmark lending rate amid rising risks from trade battles and emerging-market turmoil that could blunt the tailwind from fiscal policy.
July 5 -
A sluggish and somewhat skittish tone kicked off the post-July 4th trading on Thursday.
July 5 -
Better management may not be enough for Hartford and other Connecticut cities, says the Manhattan Institute.
July 5 -
Bradley Wendt, a former investment banker with extensive experience in municipal bonds, interest rate swaps, and other fixed income products, joins Treasury's Office of Domestic Finance.
July 3 -
Six straight treasurers want SEC chairman Jay Clayton to stay the course on the commission's forced arbitration policy.
July 3 -
Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., and co-sponsors of a recently offered bill want to prevent businesses in their states from being forced to collect sales taxes from e-commerce transactions.
July 3 -
Muni finished stronger Tuesday in an abbreviated trading session. Markets are closed Wednesday and trading will resume on Thursday.
July 3
























