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Muni Bond ETF Shrugs Off Moody's Warning on StatesTom Lydon • Wed, Jul 20, 2011
There are no Transcripts on MUB.
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at MarketWatch.com (Dec 28, 2012)
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at MarketWatch.com (Nov 19, 2012)
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at CNBC.com (Nov 16, 2012)
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at CNBC.com (Nov 12, 2012)
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at MarketWatch.com (Aug 31, 2012)
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at CNBC.com (Jul 11, 2012)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jun 7, 2012)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jan 31, 2012)
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at CNBC.com (Dec 5, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Oct 12, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Sep 28, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Sep 21, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Jul 5, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Jun 10, 2011)
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at MarketWatch.com (Feb 14, 2011)
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at CNBC.com (Feb 10, 2011)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jan 25, 2011)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jan 21, 2011)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jan 14, 2011)
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at MarketWatch.com (Jan 14, 2011)
MUB vs. ETF Alternatives
MUB Description
The iShares S&P National AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund seeks results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the municipal bond sector of the United States as defined by the S&P National AMT-Free Municipal Bond Index.
See more details on sponsor's website
See more details on sponsor's website
Country: United States
Key Info
- In Your Portfolio: Broad U.S. Bond ETFs, A Guide to Municipal Bond ETFs and Closed-End Funds
- Asset Class Performance: Bonds
- All
- | Earnings
- | Dividends
- | M&A
- | On the move
- Monday, May 20, 12:30 PM The hot market for corporate junk (HYG, JNK) has pushed the yield on high-yield corporates (4.88%) well below that of high-yield municipals (5.22% nominally, over 8% on a tax-equivalent basis). The nominal spread of 34 bps is down from 56 bps a week ago as investors take notice of the anomaly. High-yield muni ETFs: HYD, HYMB, XMPT. 3 Comments
- Friday, May 17, 3:55 PM The bear market in gold (GLD, IAU) has left three closed-end funds trading at abnormally large discounts to NAV, says Morningstar's Cara Esser: GTU, CEF, and PHYS. Likewise, a small selloff in municipal (MUB) paper has left these muni CEFs at attractive values: NXR, MYD, NXP. 2 Comments [Quick Ideas]
- Tuesday, May 7, 9:39 PM While fears of widespread defaults in the municipal bond (MUB) market (perpetuated in December of 2010 by Meredith Whitney) have so far proven overblown, Moody's says a disturbing trend seems to be developing. Although only five defaults were recorded in 2012, that's more than four times the average yearly rate logged from 1970 to 2007. Perhaps the most notable thing about last year's five defaults: three of them were general government defaults as opposed to defaults on bonds tied to specific projects. The historical average for general government muni defaults: 1 every 4.3 years. 4 Comments
- Wednesday, May 1, 2:54 PM iShares S&P National Municipal Bond Fund ETF (MUB) announces monthly distribution of $0.2527. 30-day SEC yield of 1.63% (as of 4/30/2013). For shareholders of record May 03. Payable May 07. Ex-div date May 01. Comment! [Dividends]
- Tuesday, April 23, 9:29 AM Forecasts of "Armageddon" for the the municipal bond market (MUB) are terribly misguided, writes Randall Forsyth. Higher rates? Variable rate financing is only a small fraction of the market, and any increase would come from rock-bottom levels. Recent bankruptcies? They get a lot of headlines, but last year accounted for just 1% of all obligations. This year, just 0.6%. Comment! [U.S. Economy]
- Tuesday, April 23, 5:53 AM San Bernardino's council has passed a budget that will allow the bankrupt Californian city to restart $1.2M in biweekly employer contributions to Calpers while continuing to renege on its commitments to its other creditors, including bondholders. Along with Stockton, San Bernardino represents a test case over who should get paid first when a municipality goes bankrupt - the public employees or the bondholders. (previous) 4 Comments [Global & FX, Top Stories, U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, April 18, 1:34 PM A butterfly flaps its wings in California? Tiny Canyon Lake (pop. 11K) notifies CalPERs it wants out of the pension plan, and says it's ready to pay a termination fee to do so. Behind the decision is CalPERs' recent approval of a 50% rise in employer contributions over the coming years. "How many cities might opt out," says a bankruptcy attorney. "The issue here for CalPERs is if Canyon Lake becomes a trend." Comment! [U.S. Economy]
- Friday, April 12, 2:46 AM San Bernardino in California has proposed restarting bimonthly $1.2M employer contributions to Calpers almost a year after the city suspended the payments, although it will continue to renege on its commitments to other creditors, including bondholders. The decision highlights the battle over who should take most of the pain when a city goes bankrupt - the bondholders or the public servants. Comment! [U.S. Economy, Global & FX, Top Stories]
- Tuesday, April 2, 10:00 AM Skittish municipal bond investors have driven the MUB below its NAV for more than two weeks - the longest stretch since the panicky period of August 2011. BAML sees opportunity noting munis have lost in March for 5 straight years as many investors sell holdings or avoid buying leading ahead of April 15 to help make tax payments. Comment! [Financials]
- Monday, April 1, 5:02 PM iShares S&P National Municipal Bond Fund ETF (MUB) announces monthly distribution of $0.249. 30-day SEC yield of 1.69% (as of 3/28/2013). For shareholders of record Apr. 03. Payable Apr. 05. Ex-div date Apr. 01. Comment! [Dividends]
- Monday, April 1, 3:41 PM In a blow to municipal bondholders, a judge rules Stockton, CA eligible for bankruptcy protection. The ruling let's stay the city's decision to keep pensions intact while imposing losses on those holding the town's paper. Jefferson County, AL and San Bernardino, CA - along with other municipalities - are watching closely. Bond insurer Assured Guaranty (AGO) slides 3.3%. 16 Comments [U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, March 28, 1:21 PM A "perfect storm" of seasonal weakness combined with investors shifting money into stocks has opened up opportunity in the municipal closed-end sector, says Jeff Margolin. Muni CEFs fell 4.5% earlier this month even as NAVs declined just 0.5%, leaving the average CEF trading at a 1.1% discount to NAV vs. what has been a 3.2% premium. Comment! [Financials]
- Wednesday, March 27, 4:56 AM A federal judge is due to hear closing arguments today about whether Stockton in California should be allowed to file for bankruptcy protection. The main is issue is whether the city can continue paying into the Calpers pension fund while forcing losses on bondholders. The case is being widely watched, with Alabama's Jefferson County and California's San Bernardino also considering breaking with the long-standing practice of meeting obligations to bondholders. 9 Comments [Global & FX, U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, March 21, 9:24 AM iShares adds to its existing lineup of Target Date S&P Municipal Series. MUAG tracks an investment grade muni bond index comprised exclusively of issues maturing in 2018. Its expense ratio of 0.30% is in line with other iShares target date series ETFs, but higher than other municipal ETFs TFI (0.20%), MUB (0.25%), PRB (0.24%), NYF (0.25%). Comment!
- Thursday, March 14, 2:59 PM Bankruptcy is an option, says Kevyn Orr - a bankruptcy vet just hired as overseer of Detroit - but he thinks a turnaround can be completed in 6 months without it. Orr has broad powers to sell assets, break labor contracts, and renegotiate terms with creditors - the city has $14B in debt. 2 Comments [U.S. Economy]
- Tuesday, March 12, 2:43 PM The MUB falls for a 7th straight session - now testing its 200-day moving average for the first time in 2 years. Municipals got beat up in late 2012 when it was rumored their tax-exempt status was to be served up as part of a budget deal. The scare subsided, but Morgan Stanley still sees a 30% chance of that happening. MUB -3.4% since the election. 6 Comments
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