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Jennifer Johnston, director of research, municipal bonds, at Franklin Templeton, talks with Chip Barnett about whether a “Great Migration” from cities like New York and San Francisco is really taking place or is it just an urban myth. (19 minutes)
November 16 -
A planned 4,500-bed dorm at the University of California Santa Barbara comes as the neighboring city threatens to sue over a lack of on-campus housing.
November 10 -
The long end of the municipal curve rallied under a backdrop of stronger-than-expected October jobs data and upward revesions to the prior two months ahead of the arrival of $9.6 billion next week.
November 5 -
A first-time home buyer program would be fueled by a huge bond component, if Sen. Robert Hertzberg gets lawmakers to put it on the ballot and voters approve it.
November 5 -
California faces a $117 billion highway repair backlog and the highest gas tax in the country. The question is whether the fuel-tax funded SB 1 is doing enough.
November 4 -
The public power procurers face cost challenges that drove one into bankruptcy, even as more established aggregators begin issuing bonds.
October 28 -
Gavin Newsom unveils his annual budget proposal in mid-January.
October 26 -
Fitch Ratings changed the outlook on the city's bonds to stable from negative ahead of the deal.
October 22 -
The $1 trillion spending bill could boost GDP by 0.2% by 2031.
October 21 -
Profits were up in New York City's securities industry, according to the state comptroller's annual report, even as job losses accelerated.
October 21