California’s housing crisis has propelled a community college to issue junk bonds to fund housing for its students. Lead manager Stifel priced $68.3 million in college housing revenue bonds for the California School Finance Authority on July 15 to support the project at Santa Rosa Junior College. Santa Rosa Junior College is the first community
Bonds
Municipals faced pressure outside of 10 years Wednesday, moving benchmarks on those bonds cheaper by two basis points, while U.S. Treasuries were little changed and new issues showed the spread tightening that continues on sought-after credits. In the primary, an airport deal out of Pittsburgh saw compelling levels for the sector that has seen spread
The Puerto Rico Oversight Board has extended Executive Director Natalie Jaresko’s contract by 26 months. A signed amendment to her employment contract effective July 30 is posted to the board’s website. Jaresko started work on March 20, 2017, nearly seven months after the federal government founded the board. The initial contract was for four years,
Municipals felt the pressure of an increase of supply and a weaker U.S. Treasury market, and benchmarks saw two- to three-basis-point cuts to scales, but new issues repriced to lower yields. The 10-year muni hit 0.90% on ICE Data Services scale and just below that on Refinitiv MMD, Bloomberg BVAL and IHS Markit, reaching early
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned Tuesday in the middle of a sexual harassment accusations and a looming impeachment proceeding by state lawmakers. Cuomo, 63, a Democrat in his third term, will step down in two weeks, he said in a televised announcement. He said Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, 62, will take office then. Hochul,
Municipals were a touch weaker to start the week as U.S. Treasury yields rose again, with the 10-year topping out at 1.32% and the 30-year creeping closer to 2% while equities were mixed on negative COVID Delta news. Triple-A benchmarks saw cuts of one to two basis points across the curve, but still outperformed two
The nation’s largest underwriters of municipal bonds will soon begin operating under a Texas law that bans them from state contracts if their policies are said to discriminate against the firearms industry. Senate Bill 19, one of several pro-gun pieces of legislation signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott, takes effect Sept. 1. The law
The Puerto Rico Oversight Board filed a brief summarizing the arguments it will make in November’s Plan of Adjustment hearing, arguing it has treated the creditors fairly, the plan is in their best interests, and its plan preempts dozens of local laws. The board was required by bankruptcy Judge Laura Taylor Swain to file an
Cain Brothers, a division of KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., has hired Kyle Hemminger as it looks expand its healthcare practice. Hemminger joined the healthcare public finance group in the Columbus, Ohio, office this month as a director to cover healthcare and senior living organizations nationally. He joins a healthcare team that now totals 23 professionals
The shutdown of a major California hydroelectric power facility underscores the severity of drought conditions in the state. The California Department of Water Resources’ Hyatt Powerplant at Lake Oroville, without enough water in the reservoir to operate normally, is offline. “This is the first time Hyatt Powerplant has gone offline as a result of low
The $5 billion American Dream super mall in New Jersey’s Meadowlands had to tap into a reserve fund to make a bond payment as it copes with a cash flow crisis exacerbated by the coronavirus. The 3.3 million-square-foot behemoth, which features an indoor ski slope, amusement park and water park, used the reserves to make
Municipal benchmark yields rose by as much as five basis points Friday, following a stronger-than-expected jobs report, but the asset class outperformed the moves in Treasury bonds. An increase in supply next week may test current low levels. Continued strength in the economy was seen as nonfarm payrolls rose 943,000 and the jobless rate fell
Videos of floodwater in upper Manhattan went viral last month as storms flooded New York’s streets with four inches of rain. While subway commuters waded through waist-high water at 157th Street, water cascaded down the Dyckman Street subway station, home to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s A line. “These videos are a reminder of more dramatic
Municipals were mostly steady, ignoring other markets Thursday as the week’s last sizable new issues closed books while U.S. Treasuries rose and equities were up on better economic data. Secondary trading petered off into the afternoon, holding triple-A benchmarks steady, as most participants await Friday’s nonfarm payrolls. For the 22nd consecutive week, Refinitiv Lipper reported
Improved pension funding led to New Jersey’s second upward revision in weeks, as S&P Global Ratings boosted its outlook on the state’s general obligation bonds to positive from stable. Moody’s Investors Service acted similarly on July 14 after revising its outlook to stable from negative in April. “The decisions made by the state on how
The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco has declined to comply with a document request by Sen. Patrick Toomey as part of the Pennsylvania Republican’s investigation into Fed research on topics including climate change and racial justice. A Republican aide on the Senate Banking Committee who is familiar with the matter said that instead of
Fitch Ratings said Tuesday it has revised the outlooks to stable from negative on 18 large airports and major airline hub facilities and affirmed their ratings. Fitch said the actions “reflect the diminished operational and financial risks that have challenged airports since early 2020 due to a combination of improving passenger volumes in recent months,
Municipals struck a firmer tone on the short end Tuesday as the new-issue calendar got underway, with strong competitive loans, while U.S. Treasuries held steady and equities strengthened into the afternoon. Triple-A benchmark yield curves were bumped on the short end as bonds inside of 10 years have been more tightly bid. Municipal-to-UST ratios were
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board has officially filed for Securities and Exchange Commission approval of rule changes that would reduce the volume of mandatory disclosures dealers make to customers. The MSRB announced the filing Monday after having decided on that course at its quarterly board meeting last month. The changes to MSRB Rules G-10 on
Jeffrey Mark Baker, 72, of River Edge, N.J., a career municipal analyst who was known as a leader and innovator in the municipal market and was chair of two municipal organizations, died on July 26. Baker joined Chase Manhattan Bank in 1972 as a municipal analyst, and later retired from its predecessor firm JPMorgan Chase
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