• Home
  • Crypto News
  • NFT News
  • Forex News
  • Stock News
  • Trading News
    • Learn Trading
    • Live Chart
    • Trading Signals
  • Auto Trading Bot
  • Contact Us
Thursday, July 7, 2022
Webbey.eu
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • NFT News
  • Forex News
  • Stock News
  • Trading News
    • Learn Trading
    • Live Chart
    • Trading Signals
  • Auto Trading Bot
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • NFT News
  • Forex News
  • Stock News
  • Trading News
    • Learn Trading
    • Live Chart
    • Trading Signals
  • Auto Trading Bot
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Webbey.eu
No Result
View All Result
Home Forex News

Rising Interest Rates Hit Municipal-Bonds Market

webbey by webbey
January 23, 2022
in Forex News
0
Rising Interest Rates Hit Municipal-Bonds Market


Municipal bonds are off to their worst start since 2011.

The early-year bond rout has dragged returns on the S&P Municipal Bond Index to minus 1.1% through Jan. 20, counting price changes and interest payments. The loss is an early sign that rising interest rates could make 2022 rockier than last year, when federal stimulus and elevated demand from homebound savers led to record low volatility and historically high prices. 

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Do you expect climbing interest rates to fuel more volatility in municipal bonds? Why or why not? Join the conversation below.

Now investors are eyeing those prices more warily. Muni bond mutual and exchange-traded funds took in a net $830 million through Jan. 19, compared with $6.1 billion last year, according to Refinitiv Lipper. After Fed officials indicated they could lift short-term rates sooner than expected, muni yields jumped alongside Treasury yields, with 10-year AAA muni yields rising to 1.28% Jan. 20 from 1.03% Dec. 30, according to Refinitiv Municipal Market Data. Yields rise as bond prices fall.

State and local governments issue long-term debt in the roughly $4 trillion muni market, typically for capital projects such as highways and schools. Affluent investors prize munis because most throw off interest that is exempt from federal, and often state, taxes. 

But rising interest rates make outstanding bonds with comparatively lower yield less attractive, a worrisome possibility for anyone holding or buying muni debt. They also increase borrowing costs for state and local governments, whose tax-exempt borrowing fell to $9.2 billion this year through Jan. 20, a four-year low. The city of Greenwich, Conn., issued one-year debt at a net interest cost of 0.21% in the first week of January, up from 0.12% last January, according to Comptroller Peter Mynarski.

Some analysts also expect a drop off in demand for munis this year because of an anticipated slowdown in household savings, which increased during the pandemic, especially for the wealthy. 

The appetite for tax-exempt debt has long exceeded yearly issuance. The imbalance grew over the past year as higher-income Americans moved savings and the windfalls they got from blockbuster stock gains into municipal bonds. Analysts don’t expect those inflows to continue at the same pace this year. 

Creditworthiness could become more of an issue for some struggling cities in 2022 as they continue to spend down waves of federal pandemic aid. That aid, as well as tax revenues from purchases made with stimulus checks and stimulus-fueled stock gains, helped strengthen municipal credit in 2021, when public-finance upgrades slightly outpaced downgrades by Fitch Ratings. In 2020, Fitch did 80% more downgrades than upgrades, as the pandemic shut down local economies and strained services. 

Sustained inflation also could aggravate credit woes, because it would drive up the cost of government projects, services and cost-of-living adjusted retirement benefits, some analysts said.  

“How good is muni credit if the baseline of the budget has to go up 5%” several years in a row? asked Adam Stern, co-head of research at Breckinridge Capital Advisors. “Some places can handle it, other places probably can’t.” 

Default is extremely rare in the municipal market. But debt issued by strapped borrowers tends to fall in price under adverse financial conditions, driving down the value of investors’ portfolios and creating a dilemma for those who want to cash out. 

In some ways, the increased potential for volatility in 2022 marks a return to a more familiar investment environment after a year of unusual calm, which followed a year of Covid-related upheaval. After a liquidity crisis in 2020 in the early days of the pandemic, the muni market in 2021 had a record 113 days when yields on AAA intermediate maturity bonds didn’t change from the day before, according to data from Municipal Market Analytics.

The year “2020 was abnormal in terms of volatility,” said

Michael Zezas,

municipal strategist and head of U.S. public policy research at

Morgan Stanley.

“2021 was abnormally calm. This is a return to normal.”

Write to Heather Gillers at heather.gillers@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Share76Tweet47Pin17ShareScan

Related Posts

Samsung’s Pandemic Boom Is Over
Forex News

Samsung’s Pandemic Boom Is Over

July 7, 2022
Merck Is in Advanced Talks to Buy Seagen for Roughly $40 Billion or More
Forex News

Merck Is in Advanced Talks to Buy Seagen for Roughly $40 Billion or More

July 7, 2022
Blackstone Invests $400 Million in Environmental Commodity Exchange Xpansiv
Forex News

Blackstone Invests $400 Million in Environmental Commodity Exchange Xpansiv

July 6, 2022
Stock Markets Edge Lower Ahead of Fed Minutes
Forex News

Stock Markets Edge Lower Ahead of Fed Minutes

July 6, 2022
Load More

Recent News

Biogen, Spirit, Robinhood and more

GameStop, Seagen, Virgin Galactic and more

July 7, 2022
Attention NFT Lovers – The NFT Expoverse Needs Your Help!

Attention NFT Lovers – The NFT Expoverse Needs Your Help!

July 7, 2022
Key Bitcoin chart ‘will confirm bottom is in’ by July 15, says trader

Key Bitcoin chart ‘will confirm bottom is in’ by July 15, says trader

July 7, 2022
Samsung’s Pandemic Boom Is Over

Samsung’s Pandemic Boom Is Over

July 7, 2022
Facebook Twitter Instagram

About Webbey

Current Business News Live: Find here the latest business news and financial news, share market updates, live stock market news, IPO updates, Cryptocurrency, banking, and insurance sector, regional and global insight to give you information for your investing decisions.

Categories

  • Auto Trading Bot
  • Crypto News
  • Forex News
  • Learn Trading
  • NFT News
  • Stock News
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

Biogen, Spirit, Robinhood and more

GameStop, Seagen, Virgin Galactic and more

July 7, 2022
Attention NFT Lovers – The NFT Expoverse Needs Your Help!

Attention NFT Lovers – The NFT Expoverse Needs Your Help!

July 7, 2022

Webbey.eu ©2022 | All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • NFT News
  • Forex News
  • Stock News
  • Trading News
    • Learn Trading
    • Live Chart
    • Trading Signals
  • Auto Trading Bot
  • Contact Us

Webbey.eu ©2022 | All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.