Monday, October 26, 2009

Rough road for munis

Even with the advantage of paying tax free interest, municipal bonds in many instances are yielding more than their corporate equivalents.
Bloomberg: State and local governments that sold $43.8 billion of taxable Build America Bonds this year will pay $385 million a year more in interest than similarly rated corporate borrowers, based on data compiled by Bloomberg.


The spread between corporates and munis varies along the yield curve. In the short end the tax advantage keeps the spread (corporate yield minus muni yield) positive, but for the longer maturities the spread reverses.




This means that in spite of the tax advantage of municipal bonds, given the choice between two equally rated long duration bonds with the same coupon, investors prefer the corporate paper. Clearly unlike corporate bonds, munis have lower analyst coverage and are viewed as a specialty market. Buyers of longer-term munis tend to be specialized muni funds, while corporate paper is held by institutional investors, fixed income funds, etc.

But that's only part of the story. If the risks were truly equivalent, over time the spread would tend to zero. The spread however shows incremental credit risk of municipal bonds over the longer time periods. But how is that possible, given that unlike corporations, municipalities "can raise fees or taxes to make up for deficits. Corporations are at least 90 times more likely to default than local governments, according to Moody’s Investors Service"? (Bloomberg)

The reason given by Bloomberg is poor transparency of municipal issuers.
The public paid extra costs for borrowing with tax-exempt bonds because local governments resist providing investors the same level of disclosure as corporate borrowers, which file quarterly reports.

Municipalities typically file financial statements only once a year. Detroit, the largest U.S. city with a less-than- investment-grade credit rating, released its annual report for fiscal 2007 in March, more than 18 months later.


But other reasons include the deterioration of state budgets and the risk that in the long run munis may lose their tax-free status at the Federal level. But there is something else. Private investors continue to be nervous when dealing with governments as political risk enters into the picture. Who is to say that 10-20 years down the road, municipalities will not walk away from their obligations. There is only so much pain that angry taxpayers in various states may be able to take. And for now that risk is costing municipal issuers the extra spread.



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