Bonds

Federal transportation and housing funding will continue to flow until early March after Congress late Thursday passed a short-term appropriations bill a day ahead of a partial government shutdown. “There will not be a shutdown on Friday,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “Because both sides have worked together, the government will stay open.
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A Congress that just narrowly avoided a government shutdown is getting a fresh wish list from a wide cross section of organizations of issuers, including calls for preserving the tax exemption on municipal bonds.   The letter originates from the Public Finance Network, which encompasses twenty-four issuer organizations including the Government Finance Officers Association, the National
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William “Bill” Edward Laverty, 72, died in Vero Beach, Florida, Dec. 18, 2023. He died of natural causes several years after being diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia. Mr. Laverty spent most of his life living and working in New York City as a municipal bond underwriter for several Wall Street firms. Mr. Laverty worked as a
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Sioux Falls, South Dakota, has put out a request for competitive sealed proposals from financial advisory firms as it gears up for several major capital projects. The RFP aims to forge a multi-year, multi-issuance agreement for services around debt issuance, debt refinancing, debt reporting and other financial market-related work. Proposals are due no later than
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Siebert Williams Shank has formed a six-person quantitative solutions group to be headed by public finance industry veteran Giles Nicholson. Siebert said the hire highlights the firm’s steadfast and growing commitment to expand its public finance practice. “Hiring Giles along with other senior and experienced hires over the last year demonstrates our deep commitment to
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Two public finance professionals helped craft legislation that added whole categories of residential care facilities to the list of borrowers eligible to issue debt through the California Health Facilities Financing Authority. Assembly Bill 839, authored by Assemblymember Dawn Addis, D-Morro Bay, and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in October, allows nonprofits that operate independent living,
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A proposed bond-financed crude oil-transporting railway project in Utah lost a federal right-of-way permit in the wake of a 2023 court ruling. The U.S. Forest Service announced Wednesday it withdrew a 2022 permit allowing the Uinta Basin Railway’s construction and operation on about 12 miles of land in the Ashley National Forest.  The federal agency
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Cities and states dreading the implementation of standardized data under the Financial Data Transparency Act may end up enjoying market benefits like lower borrowing costs and elevated profiles among bond buyers who are increasingly looking for choice and customization. That’s the prediction from panelists participating Wednesday in a webinar hosted by XBRL US on how
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Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board board of directors member Liz Sweeney has joined the Milken Institute as a senior fellow. Sweeney made the announcement on Tuesday and will continue her duties as president of Nutshell Associates while also serving the MSRB. “I’m delighted to be working with the public finance team at MI Finance,” she said.
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Jennifer Fredericks, a sales director at market data platform SOLVE, will lead Women in Public Finance’s board of directors in 2024, the organization recently announced. Women in Public Finance, a professional networking group for women working in the public finance sector, is about advancing women in sector, including helping them find jobs, putting together education
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Municipals faced rising yields in the secondary market Wednesday while large new-issues priced in the primary market. U.S. Treasuries were weaker again, and equities saw more losses. The Investment Company Institute Wednesday reported large inflows into municipal bond mutual funds for the week ending Jan. 10, with investors adding $2.066 billion to funds following $77
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Lake Erie College, a small private school in Ohio, entered into a forbearance agreement with bondholders after the school didn’t meet certain covenants it agreed to as part of a debt sale.  The Painesville, Ohio-based institution, which has just over 700 undergraduate students, is the latest small college to see its financial struggles extend into
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As a potential government shutdown looms and tax season is set to open, key provisions friendly to the municipal market tied to low-income housing tax credits appear poised to become law in legislation aimed at avoiding the government stoppage.  The Republican-chaired House Ways and Means Committee and the Democrat-led Senate Finance Committee have preliminary agreements
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