Mispriced Municipal Bonds Cost Mutual Fund Shareholders And Taxpayers Billions Of Dollars (2024)

In a market where at least 99% of trillions of dollars of fixed income securities have no trades to offer price discovery and the financial data to assess credit risk cannot be readily downloaded to a spreadsheet for analysis and comparison, how can there be “fair market value” in pricing?

That question has vexed investors, issuers, and regulators in the $3.9 trillion municipal bond market for decades. The market’s lack of trade data is only matched by its lack of digitized financial data. This “dual data void” compounds the problem, causing municipal bonds to be mispriced and undervalued and it costs mutual fund shareholders and taxpayers alike billions of dollars.

On Your Mark to Market, Get Set, Go

At the close of every business day, billions of dollars of municipal bonds are “mark to market”, that is, valued at the closing price of the bonds that day. If you own shares in a municipal bond mutual fund, the prices of those bonds determine the net asset value of that fund and, in turn, the value of your shares.

Determining the price of a bond is not that complex; it’s all based on an equation that every first-year MBA student learns. Each bond’s structure—coupon, maturity, redemption features—may change up the variables a bit, but the fundamentals stay the same.

While the bond math is no different for the municipal bond market, this market has what is politely called a “structural problem” that affects accurate valuation.

What’s the structural problem? With $3.9 trillion of outstanding debt of over 50,000 municipal and public authorities with over 1 million separately identified bond series, there are plenty of bonds to trade. Moreover, the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s 2021 Factbook notes the average daily number of fixed rate bond trades was 28,985 in 2021, totaling more than $6,200.9 million par value. Based on year-to-date 2022 numbers from those same metrics, some $2,350.8 million par trades have taken place. No paucity of trades to establish prices, right?

Wrong.

In reality, very few of those billions of dollars of outstanding bonds actually trade. Most of them sit “in the vault” as the market saying goes, quietly paying interest until the end of their maturity days.

In fact, even if you take all those $6,200.9 million par value trades in 2021, they only make up 0.16% of all outstanding bonds. Price discovery by “live trades” is extremely limited. And it gets worse. Those are not unique bond trades; if a single block of $1 million bonds trades three times, it counts for $3 million in par trades.

On top of that, the trades driving pricing are almost exclusively “institutional” block sizes—trades of $1 million-or-greater. In 2021, the average daily fixed-rate par amount of $1 million-or-greater block trades was $3,958.3 million. Even with the multiple-trade accounting problem, this is a mere 0.10% of the total outstanding debt in the market.

Therein lies the structural problem: at least 99% of the market’s $3.9 trillion outstanding debt have no trades to offer pricing guidance.

Unfair Valuation

That’s why a valuation methodology based on trades is highly problematic. Independent pricing services such as Bloomberg and IDC work tirelessly developing and refining a complex web of quantitative methodologies to attack this. However, the lack of price discovery from live trades on the vast majority of outstanding bonds simply cannot be fixed.

Correspondingly, the so-called “fair market valuation” of billions of dollars of bonds, valuations setting the net asset value of dozens if not hundreds of mutual funds, valuations determining the prices of shares held by millions of investors, are determined by statistically sophisticated estimates. No wonder observers both inside and outside the municipal bond market refer to its pricing as opaque.

Sisyphusian Efforts

All this focus on extrapolations from scant trading data is misdirected energy. There are numerous applications and computer systems with the ability to calculate, in milliseconds, changes in prices based on interest rate moves. Pricing based on trades may be opaque, but this part of bond pricing is as clear as glass.

For regulators, investors, issuers, and taxpayers, the real issue is fair valuing the credit risk component of municipal bond pricing. Here there is no ready-made formula but, unlike trades, there is copious amounts of regularly reported financial data from issuers large and small across the nation. Applying this data to assess and quantify credit risk translates into better pricing and better liquidity more accurately.

Triple-A Strength and Stability

Credit strength is where the municipal bond market distinguishes itself from all others. Compared to corporate or structured fixed income markets, the high creditworthiness of the market’s borrowers offers investors some of the most stable, safest fixed income investments available, both domestically and globally.

Here’s the proof. Turn to the US Public Finance US Municipal Bond Defaults and Recoveries, 1970-2020 report Moody’s Investor Service publishes annually. The venerable source of this longitudinal study tracked default data on 13,706 investment-grade rated bonds, determining the five-year Cumulative Default Rate (CDR) for investment-grade municipals was 0.04%. Having your investment-grade rated bond default is nearly the same as your odds of being struck by lightning. Even the 10-year cumulative default rate on theoretically “riskier” investment grade bonds backed by Competitive Enterprises was a meager 0.23%.

Given this nearly undetectable credit risk, one has to ask the question: are risk spreads in municipal bond valuations accurate? Put another way, based on the numbers, the basis point differential quantifying the risk spread between a AAA-benchmark curve and the yield on the bond should be negligible for nearly 99% of every investment grade municipal bond.

Keep thinking this through and it becomes abundantly clear: the vast majority of investment grade bonds currently valued at a risk spread greater than their investment grade CDR or sector default rate are mispriced and undervalued.

Billions Lost

Even if this saved just one basis point in risk spread across only 95% of investment grade bonds, the gains to investors and savings to issuers exceed $3 billion dollars. Two basis points in savings push that to $7 billion. You can do the math from there.

Granted, these may seem broad conclusions based on the data. To prove the point, it would be best to have a well-categorized database with all the financial information disclosed by most of the 50,000-plus municipal bond borrowers. With such a robust database, financial metrics could be as readily searched, sorted, analyzed, and compared as one looks for the best deal on Amazon AMZN .

With hard, evidence-based data, risk spread values could be established by the market and pricing services alike with more transparency and objectivity. Along with this improved data comes improved liquidity. The lubricant of an efficient market is information.

Trapped Fair Value

Sounds pretty good, right? Even better, all this financial data exists. Except with one huge hurdle. It is trapped in that decades’ old technology, the PDF. The PDF is not data. It is pixels. It is not structured data. You cannot download it onto a spreadsheet. To get at this financial data, whether it is in a municipality’s Comprehensive Annual Financial Report or an authority’s Balance Sheet and Income Statement, you have to enter it all by hand.

Embedded in all this trapped data are billions of dollars of trapped fair market value.

Financial Reporting: Digitized and Machine-Readable

The Financial Data Transparency Act (S. 4295 – “FDTA”), pending before the Senate, offers a readily available solution to free that information, making it widely available and usable. In doing so, FDTA expands the adoption of machine-readable, digitized financial reporting. Wholly based on existing information that is already required, collected, and making it available to anyone for free, this legislation is potentially transformative for the $3.9 trillion municipal bond market. It ushers in access to and transparency in government financial reporting that, while the standard for public companies in the U.S. and the rest of the world, is unprecedented in the public sector.

All of these are why the co-sponsors of the legislation, U.S. Senators Mark R. Warner (D-VA) and Mike Crapo (R-ID) introduced the bill. FTDA provides “greater transparency and usability for investors and consumers, along with streamlined data submissions and compliance for our regulated institutions,” offered Senator Warner. Senator Crapo noted the bill would be an important step forward in “making financial data used by federal regulators more accessible and accessible to the American public” as well as “improving government transparency and accountability.”

All this boils down to is that the financial information available from cities and towns and authorities—assets, debts, tax and fee revenues, cash flows, and so forth—can be easily downloaded or uploaded into a spreadsheet and treated just like any other bunch of numbers.

But what it really means is billions of dollars of realized fair market value for investors and billions of dollars of interest savings for municipal borrowers.

And who doesn’t want more money?

Mispriced Municipal Bonds Cost Mutual Fund Shareholders And Taxpayers Billions Of Dollars (2024)

FAQs

How much money do I need to buy municipal bonds? ›

Most municipal bonds are issued in a minimum denomination of $5,000, which is typically the smallest amount of a municipal bond an investor can buy or trade.

How do you calculate the price of a municipal bond? ›

The dollar price is calculated by multiplying the quoted price by the ratio of the par value of the bond and $100. Accretion of discount adjusts the cost basis of the bond upwards for each period and is the difference in the par value and the purchase price divided by time of maturity.

What is a municipal dollar bond quote? ›

Municipal dollar bonds, which are usually revenue bonds, are quoted just like corporate bonds in percentage of par form in 1/8ths. The Series 7 exam will most likely stick to generalities, so you should assume that municipal bonds are quoted with yields.

Why might an investor prefer to buy a municipal bond even though it pays a lower interest rate than a similar risk corporate bond? ›

Municipal Bonds: Secure Investments: Backed by states, they yield steady returns with lower default rates. Tax Benefits, Lower Risks: Municipal bonds offer tax-free income, less risk than corporates.

Are muni bonds a good buy now? ›

Nuveen, a TIAA company, maintains yields for municipals remain attractive despite a strong rally in November 2023. The company believes demand for municipal bonds could increase in 2024 as investors gain conviction that the Fed has ended its rate hikes. Nuveen expects the Fed to cut rates by 150 basis points in 2024.

Who buys the most municipal bonds? ›

About 72 percent of bonds are owned by individuals directly or through mutual funds and the like.

What is the true interest cost of a municipal bond? ›

True interest cost includes all ancillary fees and costs, such as finance charges, possible late fees, discount points, and prepaid interest, along with factors related to the time value of money (TMV). Because TIC is commonly used in municipal bond offerings, it also may mean the "actual cost" of issuing a bond.

At what income level do municipal bonds make sense? ›

If you sit in the 35% income tax bracket and live in a state with relatively high income tax rates, then investing in municipal bonds (munis, for short) will likely be a better option than taxable bonds. Alternatively, if your income is in the 12% tax bracket, then you may want to steer clear of municipal bonds.

What are the risks of municipal bonds? ›

Important information on risk

Investing in municipal bonds involves risks such as interest rate risk, credit risk and market risk. The value of the portfolio will fluctuate based on the value of the underlying securities.

How much is a $100 savings bond worth after 30 years? ›

How to get the most value from your savings bonds
Face ValuePurchase Amount30-Year Value (Purchased May 1990)
$50 Bond$100$207.36
$100 Bond$200$414.72
$500 Bond$400$1,036.80
$1,000 Bond$800$2,073.60

Why can't you short municipal bonds? ›

Selling short involves an investor borrowing a security, selling it immediately, and hopefully repurchasing it at a lower price. Essentially, it's backward investing. The investor bets the market price falls by selling first and buying second. Municipal bond short sales are rare due to their liquidity risk.

What is the difference between a Treasury bond and a municipal bond? ›

The principal difference between municipal bonds and Treasury bonds, aside from the credit considerations, is that municipal bonds are tax-exempt, that is interest is exempt from federal income taxation.

What is the outlook for municipal bonds in 2024? ›

We believe the municipal market is poised for improvement in 2024. The Fed's anticipated easing this year should bolster demand for municipal bonds. If investor sentiment shifts positively, as we expect, strengthening demand could absorb secondary market supply and act as a catalyst for spread tightening.

Why do banks buy municipal bonds? ›

Banks invest in municipal bonds primarily to generate income. With the security portfolio often being the second largest earning asset on a bank's balance sheet, it is important to take advantage of the earnings your investments can produce.

How long do municipal bonds take to mature? ›

Short-term bonds mature in one to three years, while long-term bonds won't mature for more than a decade. Generally, the interest on municipal bonds is exempt from federal income tax. The interest may also be exempt from state and local taxes if you reside in the state where the bond is issued.

What is the minimum amount to buy a bond? ›

You can buy 2 types of U. S. savings bonds

Buy for any amount from $25 up to $10,000. Maximum purchase each calendar year: $10,000. Can cash in after 1 year. (But if you cash before 5 years, you lose 3 months of interest.)

Can I buy municipal bonds myself? ›

Brokerage Firms: Many brokerage firms offer a wide selection of municipal bonds to individual investors. Online brokerages provide a listing of newly issued municipal bonds, or a person can purchase previously owned bonds from a section called the secondary market within the brokerage site.

How much money do I need to invest in bonds? ›

You can buy an electronic savings bond for any amount from $25 to $10,000 to the penny. For example, you could buy an electronic savings bond for $75.38.

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