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The municipal bond market will see an almost $10 billion new issue calendar next week.
May 11 -
The City Council urged greater transparency and an end to "frontloading" in its response to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s $89.06 billion fiscal 2019 executive budget.
May 9 -
The municipal market and its participants are prepped and ready for what should be the busiest day of the week, as the two largest negotiated deals hit the market.
May 9 -
The quarterly update showed growth slowed from 3.4% amid declining commercial leasing activity, and sluggish private sector job growth.
May 8 -
New York City's executive budget came under fire for increasing spending and setting aside too little in reserves for cuts from Washington and uncertain times ahead.
April 27 -
New York mayor Bill de Blasio claimed progress in addressing the challenges of population growth, aging infrastructure, increasing inequality, and climate change.
April 20 -
Municipals will see yet another week of sub-$4 billion issuance, as taxables take the top spot on the calendar.
March 23 -
A day after seeing the market rally and strengthen by five basis points on the long end, munis were quiet and flat ahead of another week of lackluster volume.
March 23 -
New York City Transitional Finance Authority was able to cut yields amid healthy demand for its $1 billion bond sale Wednesday, as a drop in CUSIP requests signaled the supply drought may continue.
March 14 -
Jefferies priced the New York City Transitional Finance Authority’s $1 billion of building aid revenue bonds and competitively sold $75 million of taxables.
March 14