
![]()
- Europe Shares Seen Dropping on Spain Worries
- ECB Rejects Madrid Plan to Boost Troubled Bankia
- Trump Birther Remarks Overshadow Romney Appearance
- Sun to Set on Commodities Super-Cycle: Morgan Stanley
- Most Aid Sent to Athens Circles Right Back to Europe
- Crisis-Battered Greek Banks Set for Weak Quarter
- Romney Clinches Republican 2012 Nomination in Texas
- The Upside to Asian Stock Declines? Better Dividends
- Detroit: From Urban Blight to Tech Might
- Apple CEO: Ping Failed, TV Gaming Interesting
- Why It’s Suddenly Exciting to Be a Yahoo Shareholder Again
- PB&J, Mac & Cheese Step Out From Kids-Fare Shadow
- Ackman: JCPenney Sales Have Hit 'Bottom'
- Goldman Investment Shines Light on Solar Power
- Facebook Options Soar on First Day
- Home Prices Hit Lows, But 'We See Signs of Hope'
- Auto Sales to Really Take Off This Summer?
- JPMorgan Debacle Points to Regulatory Incompetence, Corruption
MOST SHARED
- Sun to Set on Commodities Super-Cycle: Morgan Stanley
- Apple CEO: Ping Failed, TV Gaming Interesting
- Declines in Asian Bank, Property Stocks Yield Rich Dividends
- Asia’s Message to Europe: Bite the Bullet and Implement Reforms
- China's Sany Heavy to Raise $2 Billion in HK IPO
- Thaksin’s Return to Thailand Would Cause Conflict: Former Premier
- JPMorgan Implicated in Japan's Insider Trading Probe
- JPMorgan Dips into Cookie Jar to Offset "London Whale" Losses
- Home Prices Hit Lows, But 'We See Signs of Hope'
- Detroit: From Urban Blight to Tech Might
MOST POPULAR
HOT ON FACEBOOK
Muni Bonds Still A Safe, Tax-Free Option Despite Doomsday Predictions
Special to CNBC.com
Jefferson County, Alabama’s November decision to file for bankruptcy could have sent the municipal bond market into a frenzy.
![]() |
Jeremy Woodhouse | The Image Bank | Getty Images Pennsylvania is poised to take over its struggling capital of Harrisburg, which has $300 million in oustanding debt. |
But just as the muni market fended off dire predictions of spiraling defaults during the height of the credit crisis, tax-exempt bond issuers have continued to hold their own through a recession
and tepid recovery.
Only three municipal bond issuers (out of a universe of about 50,000) have defaulted in 2011, according to ratings agency Standard & Poor’s. While reduced tax revenues put pressure on state and local government to meet their obligations, municipal bankruptcy is rarely an option for legal, financial, and practical reasons.
Debt service on municipal bonds tends to be one of the top spending priorities in state budgets, most of which must be balanced annually. Municipal interest and principal payments are not that onerous, representing less than 10 percent of total government spending in all but three states in 2010 by S&P’s count. Plus, the mere threat of not honoring their debt commitments could cause municipalities to lose the trust of investors, cutting off a vital funding source.
“A muni default has to be a really poor situation,’’ says Tom Weyl, director of municipal research for fund manager Eaton Vance. “There was a spike at the beginning of the recession due to project finance risk in community development districts in California and Florida. Most [issuers] that are going to default have already done so.”
Budget Crisis as Wake-Up Call
In fact, market watchers say state and local budget crises have served as a wake-up call for municipal issuers to get their financial houses in order. Pension reform and other spending cuts combined with an expected rebound in tax collections have most state balance sheets in their strongest financial shape since the start of the recession in 2007. California, for instance, is slated to spend the lowest amount as a percentage of personal income since 1973.
“States have done a much better job over last two to three years than in past economic downturns,’’ says Weyl. “Addressing the problems was already going on when the over-hyped [default] predictions came out.”
A stronger economy should lower defaults in general, but investors can further mitigate risk by focusing on a bond’s payment source.
General obligation municipal bonds that are backed by the taxing power of the issuer are a safer bet to honor payments than revenue bonds that rely on usage fees and other payments for services such as toll roads and airports.
Elle Kaplan of New York’s Lexion Capital Management recommends investing in bonds of municipalities providing essential services like water.
For investors convinced the municipal bond market is back on solid footing, these securities provide handsome tax advantages. Municipal bonds partially offset higher tax rates by sheltering interest income from federal income tax.
At the current top federal tax rate of 35 percent, a muni bond yielding 3.9 percent would produce the same tax equivalent yield as a taxable bond yielding 8 percent. In high tax states, owning muni bonds exempt from state and/or local taxes can offer even greater tax savings.
![]() |
Thinkstock | Comstock Images | Getty Images |
“With tax rates most likely being raised in the future, more and more investors should look into municipal bonds,’’ says Nicholas Olesen, a wealth manager in King of Prussia, PA. “The spread between the yields on municipal bonds and Treasuries is large and, if an investor is in, or will be in the future, a high tax bracket, municipal bonds should be used for non-qualified accounts.”
Diversification
Diversifying across hundreds of municipal issuers through a mutual fund or exchange trade fund
can provide a reliable tax-free income stream while preventing the default of one or several bonds from hurting overall investment performance. With an eye toward risk, here are several funds to consider that invest in municipal bonds across the U.S. Single-state muni bond funds and ETFs are also available that may offer additional tax advantages.
Fidelity Intermediate Municipal Income [FLTMX
Loading...
()
] has held up better in down markets than similar funds by favoring higher quality bonds and those with call features. The Fund sports low expenses of 0.39 percent and a current tax-free yield of 3.43.
T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Short Term [PRFSX
Loading...
()
] keeps volatility in check by owning a mix of high rated bonds and higher yielding securities of out-of-favor companies. That combination has produced consistent results with the Fund, which currently yields 2.21 percent tax free, landing in the top third of its category in eight of the last nine years.
![]() |
For investors willing to take on greater interest rate risk, Vanguard Long-Term Tax-Exempt [VWLTX
Loading...
()
] generates a tax-free yield of 4.21 percent by holding bonds with longer maturities. Its rock bottom expenses of 0.20 percent give it a big advantage in the current low yield environment.
On the ETF side, iShares S&P National AMT-Free Muni Bond [MUB
Loading...
()
]features below-average volatility and a current tax-free yield of 2.66 percent. iShares also offers a series of ETFs with specific maturity dates over the next six years.
- The economy is relatively resilient but there are some decisions that could hurt, says this analyst.
- To escape taxes or political uncertainty, millionaires and billionaires are migrating like never before.
- Some places are kinder than others when it comes to selling homes, as these cities seem to be.
- Here are the 15 publicly traded stocks, by value, that are the biggest holdings of Berkshire Hathaway.
- Some restaurants are taking kid favorites like peanut butter and jelly and turning them into adult fare.
- What we have here are the 10 richest counties in America, according to the average income.














