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Matt Dalton is willing to buy the debt of a bankrupt borrower — and he can’t find any for sale at a suitable price.
January 14 -
Only in municipal bonds.Matt Dalton is willing to buy the debt of a bankrupt borrower — and he can’t find any for sale at a suitable price.
January 14 -
San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders ruled out bankruptcy and pledged to balance the city’s structural budget deficit within the next 18 months in his annual state of the city address this week.
January 14 -
WASHINGTON — In the biggest reorganization of its enforcement division in 30 years, the Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday announced the new heads of five specialized enforcement units, including Elaine Greenberg, who will lead a unit expected to boost enforcement of municipal securities and public pension abuses.
January 13 -
WASHINGTON — Two environmental groups critical of coal-fired electric plants are urging the Securities and Exchange Commission to encourage broker-dealers that underwrite municipal bonds for such projects to provide more disclosure about the regulatory and fiscal changes stemming from climate change.
January 12 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — The Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Corp. is seeking more than $10 million in damages in a federal suit against JPMorgan and Bear, Stearns & Co. over failed auction-rate securities that the state-run, nonprofit insurer was forced to refinance.
January 12 -
Moody’s Investors Service has placed Coon Rapids’ $1.8 million of multifamily housing revenue refunding bonds for the Pine Point Apartments project on watch due to a possible default based on the transaction’s asset-to-debt ratio and projected cash flows.
January 12 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — After more than a year of negotiations, New Orleans has filed an amended complaint in its federal suit against Ambac Assurance Corp., Ambac Financial Services LLC, PaineWebber Capital Services Inc., and UBS Securities LLC.
January 11 -
Seven groups representing state securities regulators, investors, and investment advisers are urging leaders of the Senate Banking Committee not to water down language in its draft financial regulatory reform legislation that would require every individual that provides investment advice to be held to a fiduciary duty under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
January 11 -
The Court of Federal Claims has rejected Wells Fargo & Co.’s attempt to claim a $115 million tax deduction stemming from 26 sale-in, lease-out transactions, 17 of which involved public transit agencies, saying that the deals lacked economic substance.
January 11 -
Financial Guaranty Insurance Corp. met the regulatory deadline to submit a proposal to repair its battered finances.
January 7 -
WASHINGTON — Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon will resign and be sentenced Feb. 4 as part of a plea agreement negotiated with prosecutors after being convicted on one criminal count last year for using gift cards donated to the city.
January 6 -
A federal judge in Birmingham Monday delayed the sentencing of Montgomery bond dealer William Blount and Alabama lobbyist Albert LaPierre. Both men pleaded guilty last year to pay-to-play charges related to Jefferson County’s troubled sewer debt and were scheduled to be sentenced today.
January 6 -
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland was handed a victory this week when the state’s 10th District Court of Appeals ruled that the governor and the General Assembly have the authority to spend more than $230 million of tobacco settlement funds originally set aside for antismoking programs to help balance the budget.
January 5 -
BRADENTON, Fla. — Standard & Poor’s yesterday affirmed its A-minus rating, with a stable outlook, on the Prichard Waterworks and Sewer Board in Alabama.
January 4 -
CHICAGO — A Minnesota judge last week ruled that budget cuts ordered by Gov. Tim Pawlenty last summer were unconstitutional — a ruling that could have a big impact on the state’s current $57 billion budget and on how lawmakers tackle a fresh $1.2 billion deficit heading into 2010.
December 31 -
The Jefferson County Commission has enacted a new occupational tax, as required by the Alabama Legislature, but a local dentist has filed a lawsuit challenging it.
December 30 -
WASHINGTON — Next year will bring significant changes in the municipal securities market if Congress passes sweeping financial regulatory reform in what would be the biggest overhaul of financial regulation since the Great Depression.
December 29 -
WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday charged a Houston-based broker with engaging in unauthorized and unsuitable trading on behalf of two Florida municipalities, putting them at risk of losing millions of dollars while reaping more than $14 million in commissions.
December 29 -
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. will complete the buyback of auction-rate securities from retail investors six months early under a settlement in principle reached with securities regulators in Missouri, Indiana, and Colorado announced late Monday.
December 29

