Investing in Municipal Bonds Now

Is now a good time to be investing in municipal bonds? Also known as muni bonds, municipal bonds are bonds issued by state and local governments. Typically, these bonds are used to finance government operations or capital investments for various local and state government agencies. Like corporate bonds, muni bonds pay interest and return your principal at the end of the bond’s term. Should You Invest in Municipal Bonds Now? Municipal bonds are a great investment opportunity that goes largely unnoticed by most non-professional investors. Muni bonds are safer than stocks over a long period of time and can offer significant tax advantages. When investors do take advantage of investing in muni bonds, it is often via muni bond funds which offers a very different investment experience than investing directly in actual muni bonds. So, is now a good time to invest in munis? Like all bonds, the price of muni bonds moves in the opposite direction of interest rates. That is if interest rates rise, bond prices fall. The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate is currently at zero, which means that the part of bond pricing that is attributable to interest rates can only go down. In essence, bond …

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Meredith Whitney Muni Bond Defaults Fails to Materialize

Remember Meredith Whitney? Right about now, she’s probably hoping you forgot. Whitney is the analyst who said, “There’s not a doubt in my mind that you will see a spate of municipal bond defaults…” She went on to say that there could be 50 to 100 sizable defaults or more and that those defaults would amount to hundreds billions of dollars worth of defaults. Municipal bond markets reacted by bidding up the yield for muni bonds. Most experts didn’t buy Whitney’s prediction. Even I wrote a 2011 article about how safe are muni bonds when people kept asking me about it. Of course, none of those stories was a big, inflammatory prediction of doom from a “name-brand” financial analyst. Analyst Predicts Muni Bond Defaults Wall Street and the financial markets are a very weird place. Preeminent analysts are created by making market calls or predictions that come to pass, especially when they make calls that no one else saw coming. Ironically, those same analysts aren’t necessarily held accountable when they make bad calls. Goldman Sachs’ Abbey Joseph Cohen made a name for herself by making ever higher market calls during the technology fueled stock market bubble of the late nineties. …

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Muni Taxes Stay the Same

The U.S. Supreme Court in a 7-2 decision upheld the central tenant of most state’s municipal bond tax policy, specifically that a state can exempt it’s own muni bonds from taxes while taxing the interest on other state’s muni bonds. So, nothing changes from before. If you live in California, the only way to avoid state tax on bond interest is to buy California Municipal Bonds. If you buy bonds from Texas, they can tax that interest. Taxes and Bonds Because interest on bonds is taxed as ordinary income, avoiding taxes on that interest is more important to investors than avoiding taxes on dividends paid by stocks. Most corporate bonds are taxed at both the federal and state level which reduces the real rate of return to the investor. Municipal bonds issued by states are exempt from federal income tax because one branch of the government cannot tax another branch. Whether or not the state municipal bonds are exempt from state income tax is determined by the laws of the states they are issued in. Most states make their own bonds tax-free as a way to make them more attractive for purchase. This tax-free status, plus the relative safety of …

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