A mixture of factors such as rising interest rates, uncertainty over federal monetary policy and unprecedented federal aid for state and local governments fueled a drop in overall bond volume in August from the prior year.
While overall issuance fell 8.4% year-over-year, taxable municipal bond issuance dropped nearly 40% in August. Tax-exempt issuance rose 0.5% to $29.536 billion while taxables fell 39.2% to $8.070 billion in August. Alternative minimum tax issuance totaled $2.14 billion.
Total volume fell 8.4% in August to $39.746 billion in 979 transactions from $43.395 billion via 1,056 transactions in August 2020. Compared to 2019, August's totals were similar to the $39.52 billion spanning 982 transactions the market saw then.
Total issuance so far in 2021 is at $306.77 billion, a 1.8% increase over 2020's $301.486 billion and on pace to break last year's $484 billion-plus record.
Total taxable volume so far in 2021 totals $74.703 billion in 1,636 issues. Tax-exempt supply is at 223.563 billion in 6,792 deals. Taxable volume through the end of August 2020 was $88.592 billion.
August saw some volatility with a back-up in yields that began mid-month, giving some issuers pause. However, more the case in 2021 is that federal aid and a better economic recovery has moved issuance slightly lower. August 2020 also was an outlier month in an outlier year for historical purposes as issuance shifted to later months after the primary all but shut down in the spring due to COVID.
"At an 8.4% decline, I think a big part of that has to do with a shift in issuer focus, toward several things," said Jeff Lipton, managing director of credit research at Oppenheimer Inc. "The infrastructure debate — we still have not finalized infrastructure legislation and issuers are trying to assess their capital needs.
"Specifically for munis, there are new state and local funding allocations that issuers are still trying to figure out how best to incorporate such funds into the budgetary process," Lipton said. "And part of it is the uncertainty with respect to central bank monetary policy and the added market volatility."
"As long as rates are low enough and if you have a compelling enough spread environment that produces fertile ground for taxable advance refunding issuance we will see them," Lipton said. "But part of that advance refunding need has been satisfied. Also the rate and spread relationships are not necessarily as compelling as they were at the beginning of the year."
"We have had more in the way of volatility in August, rates have backed up a bit and those market conditions have all served to create lower taxable muni volume," he added.
Lipton expects aggregate taxable sales for 2021 are going to be something closer to 20%, versus 2020’s 30% of total muni volume.
Part of the reason for some of the decline in taxables has to do
"The forward delivery bonds are a vehicle that provides, from an issuer perspective, a way of avoiding or decreasing interest rate risk," Lipton said.
Given that most expect interest rates to rise, forwards have become another tool for issuers to lock in current low rates.
But the appetite for exempts grew into the summer. "If you look at where aggregate new-issue volume is, through the summer months, we have had consistent net negative supply figures," Lipton said. "That places us in a fairly sobering position. New-issue supply simply has been unable to fill the void left by maturing securities and redemptions."
"The prospects for higher individual and corporate tax rates hang in the backdrop," Lipton said of the increased demand for exempt securities.
New-money issuance was up 4.3% to $26.316 billion in 679 transactions from $25.39 billion a year prior and refunding volume was down 22.8% to $10.699 billion from $11.61 billion in 2020.
Issuance of revenue bonds was 7% higher to $25.274 billion from $23.627 billion in 2020, while general obligation bond sales fell 26.8% to $14.472 billion from $19.767 billion in 2020.
Negotiated deal volume fell 1.3% to $32.578 billion from $33.024 billion a year prior. Competitive sales also declined to $7.103 billion, or 14.5% from $8.305 billion in 2020.
Deals wrapped by bond insurance in August rose 2.4% to $4.091 billion in 158 deals from $3.997 billion in 209 deals a year prior. Bonds with insurance in August 2019 totaled $2.27 billion in 154 transactions.
California leads all states in terms of long-term muni bonds sold so far this year. Issuers in the Golden State have accounted for $46.842 billion, a 3.6% increase year-over-yer. Texas is second with $35.992 billion, off 11.2%, New York with $33.383 billion, is down 1.2%, Pennsylvania is fourth with $14.011 billion, 14.8% higher than a year ago, and Florida rounds out the top five with $12.001 billion, a 10.1% increase from 2020.
The rest of the top 10 are: Washington with $8.281 billion, up 1.8%, Illinois is next with $8.197 billion, up 4.7%, followed by Colorado at $8.017 billion, up 40.7%, New Jersey with $7.442 billion, up 50.7%, and Massachusetts with $7.373 billion, a 30.4% drop from 2020.
"With so much federal support flowing through the system, many issuers have not been strongly motivated to access the capital markets," Lipton said. "Part of this is a wait-and-see approach from the issuer perspective."