Bonds Investment TV

No Muni Miracle for 2012, Though Yields Are Enticing


By Carla Fried - Jan 18, 2012 2:37 AM GMT+0800
Article from Bloomberg

Barely a year ago, the municipal bond market was tarred as a horrible investment. The expiring taxable Build America Bonds program had triggered an uptick in new issues that created a supply glut, bond rates were on the rise and analyst Meredith Whitney told "60 Minutes" that defaults would amount to "hundreds of billions of dollars." From October 2010 through January 2011, municipal bond funds saw net outflows of more than $33 billion, while a benchmark municipal bond index fell nearly 5 percent.

Rumors of the municipal debt market's death were way off base. The default wave didn’t materialize and munis staged an impressive rally as U.S. bond rates tumbled across the board. The 10.7 percent total return for the Barclays Municipal Bond index in 2011 squashed the 2.1 percent total return of the S&P 500-stock index. It also bested the 7.8 percent return of the Barclays Aggregate Bond index, the benchmark for taxable bond investments that’s mostly composed of government and corporate bonds. Pimco's Muni Move
That muni bonds are alive and kicking was underscored when Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world's largest bond fund, boosted its holdings of U.S. muni debt to the highest level in more than five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It's not that Joe Deane, who manages $16 billion as head of municipal-bond investments at Pimco in New York, expects a repeat of 2011 returns. More likely is a return of  6 percent to 7 percent this year, he told Bloomberg.

The reason for lower return expectations: After hitting a late 2010 high of 3.6 percent, the yield on AAA rated 10-year municipal bonds is now 1.8 percent. From that level, it's unrealistic to expect much in the way of price gains that come from falling yields. James Kochan, chief fixed-income strategist at Wells Fargo Funds, expects muni total returns in 2012 to be in line with the coupon interest paid. “We’re not likely to get price appreciation on top of that.”

That means you might get 1.9 percent if you stick to a 10-year AAA rated municipal bond, close to what a 10-year Treasury pays out. Of course, if you’re investing in taxable accounts, the 1.9 percent muni yield is worth a lot more because its interest payout isn’t subject to federal income tax, while Treasury bond income is. The 10-year Treasury would have to pay 2.6 percent to be a better deal than the muni for an investor in the 28 percent federal tax bracket, or 2.9 percent for someone in the top 35 percent federal marginal tax bracket. Finding a Yield Advantage

Bond pros say there’s an opportunity to pocket even more yield. “Go down the credit scale just a little bit and you can pick up sizable yield advantages over Treasuries,” notes Chris Alwine, head of Vanguard’s municipal bond team. Don’t worry, this isn’t about venturing into junk. Rather, all you need to do is set your sights on the lower tiers of investment grade bonds, he says: AA, A and BBB.

For example, 10-year single A rated tax-exempt bonds yield 3 percent, Kochan points out. That's 150 percent of the Treasury bond, a rich advantage given that the average for 20 years prior to the financial crisis was 90 percent. For investors in the 28 percent bracket, that 3 percent is the taxable equivalent of 4.2 percent. If you’re paying the top tax rate of 35 percent, you’d need to earn 4.7 percent in a taxable bond to match the 3 percent muni yield. Good luck finding that in the high-grade pool these days. The Bank of America/Merrill Lynch index of investment grade corporate bonds has a yield of 3.8 percent.

One obvious risk bond pros note is that you can only get those fatter yields in intermediate and longer-term issues. “But we’ve got a very benign interest rate environment with the Federal Reserve holding rates low through at least the middle of 2013,” says Anthony Valeri, fixed-income strategist at LPL Financial. He also notes that the extra yield on longer issues will provide some buffer if we see a rise in rates this year. “It’s just too early in the cycle to be overly cautious about rising interest rates,” says Kochan. Diversified Funds

Municipal bonds are one investment where hiring a professional fund manager makes a ton of sense. They have the analysts to ferret out good investment-grade values, and you get the broad diversification that helps mitigate default risk. Fidelity Intermediate Municipal Income (3.35 percent yield; $10,000 minimum; 0.39 percent expense ratio) and Vanguard Intermediate Term Tax-Exempt (3.51 percent yield; $3,000 minimum; 0.20 percent expense ratio) earn high marks from fund research firm Morningstar. Another option is the iShares S&P National AMT-Free Bond Fund, the biggest exchange-traded fund tracking municipal bond debt, which is trading near a record high.

Franklin Federal Tax-Free (4.27 percent yield; $1,000 minimum; 4.25 percent initial load and 0.62 percent expense ratio) also gets the nod from Morningstar. Co-manager Carrie Higgins says the fund gets "substantially more yield in the 10- to-20-year range." Its yield advantage over  the Vanguard or Fidelity funds comes from focusing on longer-term bonds. The fund's portfolio has an average maturity of 20 years, about four times that of the Vanguard and Fidelity intermediate portfolios. Its expenses are also significantly higher.

That extra yield may be enticing. In volatile periods, however, a concentration in longer muni bonds can work against investors. For example, in 2008 the Franklin fund's total return was a negative 7 percent, while the Fidelity intermediate portfolio lost 0.96 percent and the Vanguard fund lost 0.14 percent. (Carla Fried is a freelance writer based in California.)

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Suzanne Woolley at swoolley2@bloomberg.net

Article from Bloomberg

Israel Benchmark Bonds Drop Before Inflation Data, Debt Auction


January 15, 2012, 2:58 PM EST
Article from Bloomberg Business Week

By Sharon Wrobel

Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Israel’s benchmark bonds fell for the first time in five days before an inflation report today and a government debt auction tomorrow.

The yield on the 5.5 Mimshal Shiklit bond due January 2022 increased one basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 4.48 percent, at the close of Tel Aviv trading. Inflation probably declined to an annual rate of 2.4 percent in December from 2.6 percent the prior month, according to the median estimate of 12 economists compiled by Bloomberg. Prices probably rose 0.2 percent in the month after declining 0.1 percent in November, according to the survey. The data is scheduled to be released at 6:30 p.m. local time.

“Investors were sitting on the fence at the end of the trading day ahead of the inflation data coming out later and ahead of the bond auction tomorrow,” Sagie Poznerson, head of trading at Leader Capital Markets Ltd. in Tel Aviv, said by telephone. “Some investors were selling today to buy at better prices at the auction tomorrow.”

The Finance Ministry is planning to sell 1.5 billion shekels ($390 million) of debt tomorrow, including 300 million shekels of the benchmark bonds due 2022 and 200 million shekels of the 5.5 percent bonds due 2042.

The two-year break-even rate, the yield difference between the inflation-linked bond and fixed-rate government bonds of similar maturity, fell seven basis points to 195. That implies an average annual inflation rate of 1.95 percent. The yield on the CPI-linked bonds due June 2013 was little changed at 0.45 percent. The rate has dropped 35 basis points this year.

Fund Flows

Israeli funds raised a net 349 million shekels from investors in the week ended Jan. 12, Meitav Investment House Ltd. said today. Corporate-bond funds drew investments for the first week since October, pulling in 34 million shekels, while government bond funds raised 226 million shekels and stock funds drew investments of 32 million shekels, according to Tel Aviv- based Meitav.

The Tel Aviv Bond 40 Index, a measure of inflation-linked and fixed-rate corporate bonds, fell for the first time in seven days, dropping 0.2 percent. Israel Electric Corp. said its board approved a bond sale of as much as $500 million to institutional investors, according to a Jan. 12 filing.

The shekel, which weakened 7.5 percent in the past 12 months, lost 0.4 percent to 3.8473 a dollar on Jan. 13. Two-year interest-rate swaps, an indicator of investor expectations for rates over the period, rose two basis points to 2.50 percent on Jan. 13. The central bank last month held the benchmark interest rate at 2.75 percent.

--Editors: Andrew Rummer, Claudia Maedler

To contact the reporter on this story: Sharon Wrobel in Tel Aviv at swrobel4@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Maedler at cmaedler@bloomberg.net

Article from Bloomberg Business Week

Municipal Debt Yields Plunge to 44-Year Low as 2012 Supply Trails Demand


By Brian Chappatta - Jan 14, 2012 1:01 PM GMT+0800
Article from Bloomberg

U.S. municipal-bond yields dropped to the lowest in more than four decades as issuers were slow to sell enough debt this month to meet demand after the asset class beat Treasuries and U.S. stocks last year.

The interest rate on 20-year general-obligation bonds with an average Moody’s Investors Service rating of Aa2, the third- highest, fell 0.21 percentage point to 3.62 percent in the week ended Jan. 12, according to a Bond Buyer index. That’s the lowest since April 1967, when Lyndon B. Johnson was president.

“We’re in the middle right now of just a powerful rally,” said Joe Deane, who manages $16 billion as head of municipal- bond investments at Pacific Investment Management Co. in New York. “You have to let the new-issue market begin to put supply back into the marketplace because, at the moment, the market is on the tight side.”

Municipal interest rates are also falling as tax revenue rebounds following the 18-month recession that ended in 2009, and as governments close $500 billion of budget deficits. State and local-government tax revenue rose 4.1 percent in the third quarter, the eighth straight gain, the Census Bureau said.

In the two weeks ending Jan. 6, states and municipalities issued $1.27 billion of bonds, the lowest two-week total since January 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The amount of local-government debt scheduled for sale in the next 30 days dropped to about $4.2 billion, down 37 percent from a one-month high on Jan. 10, Bloomberg data show.

At the same time, investors are funneling money into the $3.7 trillion market at a faster clip. U.S. municipal-bond funds added about $1.1 billion in the week to Jan. 11, the most since March 2010, Lipper US Fund Flows data show.

The yield on top-rated 30-year municipal bonds fell the past five days, to 3.39 percent at 4 p.m. New York time yesterday, according to Bloomberg Valuation Index data.

The municipal market returned 11.2 percent in 2011, compared with 9.8 percent for Treasuries, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index was little changed for the year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Chappatta in New York at bchappatta1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Tannenbaum at mtannen@bloomberg.net

Article from Bloomberg