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What does the new tax legislation mean for the municipal bond market? Bond Buyer Washington Bureau Chief Lynn Hume and Contributing Editor John Hallacy sort it out. Chip Barnett hosts.
December 19 -
Market experts see less municipal bond volume next year, far fewer bank loans, new buyers of bonds, and more volatility if the tax bill is enacted as expected.
December 18 -
After Puerto Rico failed to persuade Congress to ease the modified territorial tax system in the tax law, an opportunity zone measure helping the island may be included in a January emergency spending bill.
December 18 -
In an unusually busy Monday, municipal bond issuers tried to beat the clock and complete sales ahead of the impending tax reform.
December 18 -
Approval of the tax reform bill led the Florida Development Finance Corp. to cancel its Monday meeting to approve a deal for the train project.
December 18 -
The final tax bill released late Friday afternoon saved private activity bonds but advance refunding bonds will disappear.
December 18 -
The future accessibility of private activity bonds and stadium bonds is the massive tax bill's gift to the municipal market this holiday season. However, the bill also brings coal in the form of a year-end halt to advance refundings and a drop in the corporate tax rate.
December 15 -
As the exact language of the final tax legislation looms, municipal market participants eager wait to see how it pertains to private activity bonds, there will be $11 billion of issuance awaits as issuers make one final push.
December 15 -
The municipal bond market will be hurt less than expected by the tax bill with the retention of private activity bonds, but will still be hurt by the loss of advance refundings and the huge reduction in the corporate tax rate to 21%.
December 14 -
After several years of sluggish revenue growth, U.S. states enacted cautious budgets for fiscal 2018, according the National Association of State Budget Officers.
December 14 -
Republicans, however, are still negotiating the PAB provisions and have been considering eliminating the ability of issuers to carry forward for up to three years any of their unused allocations of PABs, as well as scrapping some smaller categories.
December 13 -
St. Louis is moving closer to borrowing to help finance upgrades the arena that hosts the Blues hockey team.
December 13 -
The U.S. is moving toward a territorial tax system for businesses that would hurt Puerto Rico by treating it as a foreign country.
December 13 -
Muni issuers are being forced to take action on tax-exempt private activity draw-down bonds and commercial paper because of the House tax bill.
December 13 -
The rush to beat tax legislation at the Illinois Finance Authority makes for its busiest December ever.
December 12 -
Transportation officials want tax reform to include funding for the Highway Trust Fund and infrastructure as part of the larger package.
December 11 -
The San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District will get its advance refunding deal done this year after accelerating its schedule.
December 8 -
Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., a leading proponent of ending the tax break for stadiums, told The Bond Buyer he'd "be OK with" grandfathering.
December 8 -
Bank loan documents often have corporate tax gross-up provisions.
December 8 -
Democrats complain that Republicans are only providing cosmetic support for Puerto Rico in tax reform legislation and disaster aid.
December 7














