Thursday, February 18, 2010

A Long Hot Summer for Muni Bonds

It all seems too quiet right now...but it's going to heat up. The state and local government budgeting process is going to get rolling soon, and the picture is bleak. The sheer size of the budget gaps faced by cities, counties, school districts and the state itself is downright overwhelming. Articles are already appearing that hint at potential bankruptcy filings.

In the face of this, muni bonds are still trading at very high prices -- meaning very low yields. We were offered some 1-year bonds yesterday at a yield of 0.40%.

As regular readers know, we are tactical investors. That means that we spend a lot of time waiting for opportunities -- opportunities to move into cheap assets or to move out of expensive ones. Right now, muni bonds are expensive...and we are waiting. While we are quite reluctant to get into the predicting game, we do sometimes play the expecting game. And we expect that the mid-summer budget distaster will reach a crescendo at some point and investors will flee muni bonds the way they fled Fannie Mae and Greek bonds.

If that fleeing occurs, we will buy bonds by the fistfull. As we have written before, some muni bonds are genuinely at some risk of default. But, many types of bonds are "money-good" even under a bankruptcy proceeding. Municipal bankruptcies aren't like corporate proceedings...courts don't dissolve the entity, sell the pieces, and distribute the cash to bondholders. School districts, cities and the like can't "go out of business." They don't have "equity" to give to creditors upon a default.

I read a recent rating agency report that confirmed the AAA credit rating on the general obligation bonds of my favorite California small town. This high credit rating is much deserved, and the report touted at some length our town's prudent fiscal management. But, here's the catch: The credit quality of those bonds has almost nothing to do with the town's prudent fiscal management.

The City Council doesn't "appropriate" the bond payments -- fitting them into a budget of many choices. No -- the bond payments come directly off the property tax bills that are printed, mailed and collected by the county tax collector. Should, heaven forbid, our dear town find itself in bankruptcy, the bonds payments will continue to flow from property owners, right on past city hall, and straight to the county's money pool, from where it will be sent to the paying agent for the bonds.

These are the types of bonds that would get beaten down along with other, more risky, types of muni bonds. And we will be standing by in the heat of July ready to fill our portfolios with misunderstood and high-yielding bonds. We saw the same opportunity in late 2008 and we took advantage of it then.

No comments: