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Municipal bond supply will keep on keeping on this week, continuing a boom that started August.
September 23 -
The primary market was somewhat stagnant after the FOMC but things should revert back how they were before — with most deals getting put away quickly.
September 20 -
Municipal bond yields moved lower in secondary trading as some big deals were sold.
September 19 -
The market got what it expected and can now shift attention to the week's remaining deals after Fed policy makers cut interest rates by a quarter point.
September 18 -
Few deals priced, as trading was subdued before the Federal Open Market Committee’s interest rate decision.
September 17 -
Middle East unrest, oil price volatility and a Fed policy meeting all combine to weigh on this week’s $10B new-issue calendar.
September 16 -
Municipal yields and issuance plans both rose, showing market participants aren't uncertain about the meeting, with a quarter point cut in interest rates baked in.
September 13 -
Municipal traders and managers said the tax-exempt market’s early strength translated into weakness before the end of trading — due to taxable and overseas influences.
September 12 -
Los Angeles and Broward County deals were offered while some say the municipal market feels "heavy" and in retreat.
September 11 -
It was a big day for the municipal bond market as billions of dollars of new deals hit the screens.
September 10