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Pressures from inflation concerns and broader rising rates weigh on munis in the second week of 2022.
January 10 -
Munis followed UST weaker while stocks sold off after the employment report, which offered many messages. Analysts believe the bottom line is the Fed will liftoff in March.
January 7 -
The Federal Reserve expects Omicron to fizzle in weeks, and while pandemic-related risks remain, the economy is strong and the Fed needs to address inflation and could liftoff as soon as March, Bullard says.
January 6 -
ICI reported $1.101 billion of inflows into municipal bond mutual funds for the last week of 2021. Refinitiv Lipper figures on Thursday may give a sense of investor sentiment for week one of 2022.
January 5 -
The U.S. Treasury selloff caught up to tax-exempts with two to three basis point cuts to scales, but munis still outperform.
January 4 -
Municipals triple-A benchmarks continue the trend of ignoring other markets to start 2022. The new year will likely usher in slower growth and continued inflationary pressures, analysts said.
January 3 -
Municipal volume is estimated at $1.13 billion for the opening week of 2022. Persistently strong net supply challenges will bias credit spreads tighter, credit discipline weaker in the next few years, analysts say.
December 30 -
2022 volume projections are clouded by many uncertainties. What is not murky is that demand for municipals is unlikely to fade.
December 30 -
A HilltopSecurities survey found skilled nursing and senior living as the sectors they were most concerned about for 2022.
December 30 -
Investors will also receive $139 billion of interest payments in 2022, about $593 million more than in 2021, according to a report from CreditSights.
December 28