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The New York Supreme Court late Thursday denied Bank of America Corp. and Countrywide Financial Corp.’s motion to dismiss MBIA Insurance Corp.’s claims of fraud by Countrywide.
April 30 -
WASHINGTON — As the full Senate began to debate financial regulatory reform legislation Thursday, dealers pushed back against several provisions they said could shut down the swaps market for states and localities.
April 29 -
While local governments face cuts in state aid, declining revenue, and sometimes hefty retirement-benefit obligations, the market should not anticipate a boost in municipal bankruptcy filings, several muni-market professionals said Thursday during a SIFMA conference.
April 29 -
WASHINGTON — A federal judge in Manhattan has ruled that a group of 11 California localities, including Los Angeles, may go forward with their civil cases against Goldman, Sachs & Co., Citigroup, and several other high-profile firms because they may have participated in an alleged conspiracy to rig bids for municipal investment contracts and derivatives.
April 28 -
WASHINGTON — At a meeting today and tomorrow in Philadelphia, the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board plans to discuss proposed rule changes that would dictate the priority of retail and other customer orders in primary offerings, as well as where the board stands on its push to provide rating changes over its EMMA site.
April 28 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — Miami’s former budget director, Michael Boudreaux, on Monday filed a whistleblower lawsuit claiming he was fired for “telling the truth and reporting about malfeasance” by former and current city hall officials.
April 28 -
WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats Tuesday failed for the second straight day to garner the 60 votes they needed to move forward with consideration of a massive financial regulatory reform bill by the full Senate.
April 27 -
A federal judge in Manhattan has refused to dismiss lawsuits four California issuers filed against Wells Fargo & Co., JPMorgan, and other banks, broker-dealers, and investment brokers, charging they conspired to rig bids and fix prices of guaranteed investment and derivatives contracts in the municipal market.
April 27 -
The National Association of Bond Lawyers is urging Congress to fix a number of glitches and provisions with unintended consequences that it has identified in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act enacted last February.
April 27 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — The Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday filed a motion in Alabama federal court announcing that it had reached proposed settlements in the civil securities fraud case against Montgomery bond dealer William Blount and his firm, Blount Parrish & Co., and local lobbyist Al LaPierre.
April 27 -
Harrisburg’s City Council Monday evening was set to hear from outside professionals and government officials regarding Pennsylvania’s municipal financial distress program in addition to information on bankruptcy filings.
April 26 -
DALLAS — Boycotts in the wake of Arizona’s tough new immigration law could add pressure to the state’s slumping economy and further weaken revenue streams for sports and tourism bonds, industry experts said.
April 26 -
Four major municipal market groups yesterday urged the Treasury Department to immediately issue interim guidance on how to determine issue price for Build America Bonds, warning that confusion surrounding the topic is having a “chilling effect” on the still-developing market.
April 26 -
The Investment Company Institute is urging the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board to expand the proposed second phase of its transparency system for short-term debt to include more types of data and documents, while the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association is concerned that the expansion would be unduly onerous for dealers.
April 26 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — The nonprofit Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts Inc. in Palm Beach County, Fla., has paid $320,000 to the Internal Revenue Service to settle a violation of the Internal Revenue Code’s 5% limit on private use in a bond-financed facility.
April 23 -
WASHINGTON — The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority announced yesterday that it has fined HSBC Securities Inc. $1.5 million and U.S. Bancorp Investments Inc. $275,000 to settle sales-practice violations for municipal and other auction-rate securities the firms sold to retail customers.
April 22 -
WASHINGTON — When President Obama last spoke at New York’s Cooper Union as a presidential candidate two years ago, he called for an overhaul of the “balkanized” regulatory system for the financial markets and blamed the credit crisis on Washington lobbyists and politicians who engineered deregulation in the late 1990s.
April 22 -
WASHINGTON — The Senate Agriculture Committee’s passage yesterday of a bill to regulate over-the-counter derivatives and impose a fiduciary duty on swap dealers for muni issuers drew polarized reactions yesterday. Dealer representatives warned that it would kill the muni derivatives market while a former regulator applauded the provision and called for lawmakers to go even further.
April 21 -
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is seeking to intervene and temporarily halt fact-finding by a group of localities in their class action suit against Wells Fargo & Co. and 15 other banks, broker-dealers and investment brokers for allegedly conspiring to rig bids and fix prices of investment and derivatives contracts in the municipal market.
April 21 -
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board is seeking public comment on draft interpretive guidance it released yesterday that outlines steps dealers must take to ensure the prices they charge customers to buy and sell municipal securities are fair and reasonable.
April 21





