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Coronavirus-related disclosures last week reached to just over 600 filings, but it is still a far cry from just less than a month before which saw 1,200 filings.
July 14 -
Analysts had mixed reactions on what could have caused the decline, pointing to some municipalities closing out their fiscal years at the end of June.
July 7 -
Besides navigating coronavirus market disruption, investors also find themselves dealing with the increasingly important and often inconsistent climate risk disclosure.
June 19 -
Primary market COVID-19 disclosures increased to 2,926 filings from 2,529 the week prior. Continuing disclosures increased to 6,107 filings from 5,677.
June 16 -
Municipalities are making draws on reserves as revenues fall due to the pandemic.
June 9 -
The SEC has asked for more timely, voluntary disclosure from issuers of municipal bonds.
June 5 -
State and local governments have increasingly filed COVID-19-related disclosures to the market, but only about 931 issuers out of roughly 40,000 have filed over 1,500 material event notices and continuing disclosures since the pandemic began.
June 2 -
The announcement comes at a pivotal time for the municipal market as the SEC released a statement earlier this month detailing the kinds of coronavirus disclosures municipalities should be making.
May 22 -
The MSRB also said more municipalities have begun referencing CARES Act loans in their disclosures.
May 19 -
It is feasible that not all COVID-19 filings are or will be material but one may want to err on the side of caution in this regard.
May 12SOLVE