He added that most of the market’s liquidity pressure “is exactly in this part of the curve, because investors are converting many of their financial assets to cash without regard to what those assets are,” he added. “It will greatly reduce the pressure on the muni money markets to cover investor redemptions while not tanking the value of the underlying municipal bonds they hold, specifically short maturity bonds and notes,” he said in an email. While the Fed action did not directly impact the trillions of dollars long-term municipal bonds held by individuals in hundreds of thousands of issues from state and local government, it would support the top rated short-term securities such as the variable rate notes that are derived from the long-term debt and used in muni-funding operations. The Fed action looked likely to help the central bank stabilize the short-term rates that provide liquidity, said Matt Fabian, the head of market and credit research at Municipal Market Analytics. The group had added that the market would be crippled without Fed support since firms would “effectively prevented them from taking on more municipal inventory.” “Liquidity has waned significantly as measured by bid-ask spreads and price volatility has been perhaps the most severe ever in the history of the market,” Mike Nicholas, the group’s chief executive officer said in a letter sent to the Fed last Thursday. The trade group sought Fed support to ease liquidity shortages in Variable Rate Demand Notes that play a key role in short-term funding operations for municipals. With losses mounting and liquidity falling through the end of last week, the Bond Dealers of America on Thursday called on Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to extend its direct purchases of securities to the most-stressed parts of the market and consider easing rules. The industry self-regulator, the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, issued an alert to firms in early March saying that they should review compliance and oversight “in light of the coronavirus” in early March said it was “closely monitoring the impact of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) on municipal market participants.” The market in the second week of March was overwhelmed by selling amid fear that California might soon be joined by other state and local governments facing resource constraints from the pandemic and would face financial stress. California said in early March that there could be “no assurances that the spread of a novel strain of coronavirus called COVID-19 will not materially impact the state and national economies and, accordingly, materially adversely impact the general fund.” California was among the first states to report incidents of the virus. The subsequent turnaround in sentiment came in part from a warning in early March in a California municipal bond offering from the state’s general fund. The muni market had seen record inflows in February in the early stages of the market turmoil caused by the spreading health crisis, as investors moved funds from riskier assets to munis, considered safe haven in which defaults have been rare. An even larger pool of investment money than money-market funds, the muni market fell under intense pressure in March when it was hit by the biggest wave of fund redemptions on record despite the Fed’s actions to shore up short-term credit. The municipal market has separate funding mechanisms that were not included in the Fed’s money-market and commercial paper programs. “The agencies encourage financial institutions to work with borrowers, will not criticize institutions for doing so in a safe and sound manner, and will not direct supervised institutions to automatically categorize loan modifications as troubled debt restructurings,” a Fed statement said. economy as businesses close and consumers stay home to slow its spread. banking agencies on Sunday said they were encouraging banks to restructure loans to borrowers hit by the COVID-19 virus that has shut down a widening swath of the U.S. economy since the financial crisis in 2008.Īs part of its effort, the Fed and other U.S. The Fed has stepped in by offering support for firms hit by virus turmoil with direct purchases of short-term securities that make up money market funds and ultra-low interest rates to stem the most severe financial turmoil to hit the U.S. A trader works as the economic effects of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) are discussed on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., March 20, 2020.
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