-
The creation of the Municipal Liquidity Facility helped not only eligible entities but also those left out of using the program.
March 9 -
The pandemic has caused some special circumstances for state and local governments in juggling their finances. Jeffrey Previdi, the vice-chairman of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board who spent more than 20 years of his career at S&P Global Ratings, talks about what his regulatory organization has done to assist them. Previdi also talked about how GASB influences how state and local governments spend taxpayer money on such things as schools, firehouses, water treatment plants, and other infrastructure. Brian Tumulty hosts. (25 minutes)
March 9 -
Despite the recent outflows and volatility of the Treasury market, municipal bonds have and should continue to outperform as stimulus from Washington provides some respite.
March 8 -
The museum is borrowing through the tax-exempt market for the first time to finance is ongoing transformation plans.
March 8 -
U.S. Deputy Transportation Secretary nominee and former New York City official Polly Trottenberg called it 'a project of national significance.'
March 8 -
With the reset in yields in the rear view, valuations — especially relative to Treasury — will likely support continued robust demand.
March 5 -
Possible withdrawal of bond insurer support and the opposition of the local government to pension cuts are the biggest hurdles to the plan.
March 5 -
Refinitiv Lipper reported $600 million of outflows from municipal bond mutual funds as the market correction caught up. High-yield funds lost a massive $722 million after $330 million a week prior.
March 4 -
An appeals court ruled that PRIFA and HTA issuers do not have to pay debt service during the Puerto Rico bankruptcy.
March 4 -
Far West municipal issuers sold $99.1 billion of debt last year, a 16% increase from 2019.
March 4 -
Even though the report has been publicly available for more than two years, the Oversight Board is still asked the perennial question: Why didn't we audit the debt? We did.
March 4
Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico -
A year after COVID disrupted the markets, Sylvia Yeh and Scott Diamond, co-heads of fixed income at Goldman Sachs Asset Management discuss their strategies for 2021 and the important role of retail, consider the new regime in Washington, and contemplate where ESG fits into their portfolio as the muni market incorporates the burgeoning investor interest in it. Lynne Funk hosts (35 minutes)
March 4 -
The Beige Book suggests the economy is recovering, with optimism for 6-12 months ahead, while economists don't envision inflation rising enough for the Fed to take action any time soon.
March 3 -
Trade volume increased by just 4% compared to 2019 following a volatile year for munis.
March 3 -
Reinstating certain municipal bond provisions would make way for more infrastructure investment.
March 3 -
The First Circuit said Puerto Rico credit unions did not take appropriate timely steps to challenge the bond restructuring.
March 3 -
Lt. Gov. Dan McKee succeeds her on a day state voters approved seven bond measures totaling $400 million.
March 3 -
Institutional pricing of New York City and competitive deals from Baltimore and Cambridge, Mass., should help give a sense of where yields are heading, while Ohio offers up GOs for a market that's been little changed for three days after a large sell-off.
March 2 -
Flexibility in federal funding programs that would allow cities to target what they consider their highest priorities is key.
March 2 -
From the use of taxables to forward deliveries, refunding deals drove an overall 15.8% hike in Midwest bond volume that exceeded the national average.
March 2




















