Why the Muni Bond Market Is in Decline [View article]
If this were a risk aversion story, munis would be outperforming corporates, which are far riskier. The muni problem is largely a liquidity story. TARP has been handled by idiots, who have chosen not to do the single most helpful thing they can do to save jobs and economic activity, which would be to support normal state government spending which has been killed by the non-functional muni market.
Muni Bonds: Juicy Opportunity for Investors
[View article]
Obama has virtually guaranteed he's going to support state infrastructure spending, and Mayor Bloomberg is even pushing for the federal government to guarantee municipal bonds, which would make their values soar. Under these circumstances, how the idea of shorting municipal bonds makes sense is beyond me.
Don't scare people needlessly. This has almost no relevance to the overall muni market. Jefferson County was trading derivatives, and was ripped off by Wall Street banks. Also, the underlying bond was a "revenue bond," which is more like a corporate bond, as it was paid off by the sewer authority revenues rather than by tax revenues, like a GO muni bond. GO (general obligation) bonds are what most muni investors have, and these bonds are the next safest thing to T-Bills, in that they are backed by the full faith and credit of the state. They are incredibly safe.
Agree with stockbrokerfraud.com. This has been truly appalling behavior that does huge damage to investor confidence not only in these notes, not only in munis, but in all aspects of financial markets. It's obvious that retail investors assume the same decency in others that they have in their normal, everyday dealings with others. Now they have learned this is not reciprocated by the financial industry, which will damage confidence in the entire private investment system.
Our Run-In With Auction Rate Securities - And What It Taught Me About Markets [View article]
The correct lesson would have been to trust NO ONE on Wall Street. The holders of these notes were deceived and abandoned by the investment banks and brokers. You got your money out, but many didn't. Moreover, the market is still illiquid, even for bonds with higher resets.
Some Muni Bonds Appear Screaming Buys Here [View article]
"As long as property values keep declining, cities will take in less and less revenue - potentially endangering those muni bonds. I was thinking of moving into munis myself, but if this property deflation carries on too long..."
REVENUES WILL NOT NECESSARILY FALL, SINCE MUNICIPALITIES CAN SIMPLY RAISE THE MILL RATE TO COMPENSATE FOR FALLING ASSESSMENTS. MOREOVER, EVEN IF THERE ARE FORECLOSURES, THE FORECLOSING BANK OR SUBSEQUENT OWNER WILL HAVE TO PAY THE BACK TAXES ON THE PROPERTY LIEN.
Why the Muni Bond Market Is in Decline [View article]
Muni Bonds: Juicy Opportunity for Investors [View article]
Munis in the Crosshairs [View article]
Auction-Rate Securities, RIP? [View article]
Our Run-In With Auction Rate Securities - And What It Taught Me About Markets [View article]
Some Muni Bonds Appear Screaming Buys Here [View article]
Some Muni Bonds Appear Screaming Buys Here [View article]
REVENUES WILL NOT NECESSARILY FALL, SINCE MUNICIPALITIES CAN SIMPLY RAISE THE MILL RATE TO COMPENSATE FOR FALLING ASSESSMENTS. MOREOVER, EVEN IF THERE ARE FORECLOSURES, THE FORECLOSING BANK OR SUBSEQUENT OWNER WILL HAVE TO PAY THE BACK TAXES ON THE PROPERTY LIEN.