A Few Rational Words on Munis

The New York Times has had a number of interesting articles on the current state of the muni market that may be of use to advisors and their clients. Thanks to Paul Touchstone at Stone and Youngberg for the analysis. 

The first, Opportunity in a Muni Maelstrom, discusses opportunities in the market caused by the recent flows out of muni funds. 

  • Since November 2011, $38 billion flowed out of muni funds (7% of the tax-exempt bond mutual fund market).
  • Outflows caused short-term price distortions, including high-grade credits.
  • Article quotes a recent Moody’s study noting that every U.S. state is more creditworthy than 96% of corporate bonds.
  • Quotes several market participants dismissing the possibility of widespread muni defaults.

The second, Broke Town, U.S.A., centers on the Vallejo, Calif. bankruptcy case and points to several characteristics of the muni market and local and state government, generally, to dismiss Meredith Whitney’s calls for significant, widespread defaults.

  • Unlike banks, government entities are generally not dependent on short-term financing.
  • Municipalities carry much less debt relative to the size of their economies than national governments, with annual debt service totaling less than 10% of revenues; quotes Moody’s: “State and local governments really don’t have a crushing debt problem.”
  • On unfunded pension liabilities: Notes the cumulative liability is high, but that governments are addressing them; many states are reducing benefits for new employees and asking for higher contributions from employees.
  • On the municipal bankruptcy: Points to Vallejo “as an example of why bankruptcy for cities won’t work”; high costs and little benefits to filing.
About the Author
Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Veteran investment strategist Ben Warwick brings 20 years of investment management expertise to AdvisorOne.com in his blog, Searching for Alpha. His market and economic insights provide readers with an insider’s view on generating alpha through asset allocation, the use of strategic portfolio “tilts” and alternative investments.

Ben Warwick founded Quantitative Equity Strategies (QES) in 2002 as a platform for implementing his quantitative investment strategies. The firm manages assets with traditional long-only equity and fixed income, private equity, managed futures and alternative investment mandates. QES has developed an industry leading expertise in building investment programs that can replicate alternative returns, while offering daily liquidity and transparency. These products include the HFRq, a hedge fund replication strategy developed in concert with Hedge Fund Research in Chicago; the Managed Futures Beta Index, with Aspen Partners; and the Nomura QES Modeled Private Equity Returns Index (PERI), which was developed with Nomura Bank and Preqin, the leading source of information in the private equity industry.    

He is the author of several books, including "Searching for Alpha: The Quest for Exceptional Investment Performance," (Wiley, 2000) and "The Handbook of Managed Futures," with Carl Peters, (McGraw-Hill, 1996).  He can be reached at ben@qesinvest.com.

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