It’s the most frequent question readers have asked me lately. Is there a buying opportunity thanks to the sell-off in municipal bonds and muni bond funds? Municipal bonds are issued by states and municipalities to fund public works. Generally they are considered safe, but in November many muni funds saw their biggest one-day price drop since the financial crisis. Investors withdrew a record $5.4 billion from municipal bond funds within two weeks last month, according to Lipper FMI. Some funds fell by 5% or more, and… Read More
It’s the most frequent question readers have asked me lately. Is there a buying opportunity thanks to the sell-off in municipal bonds and muni bond funds? Municipal bonds are issued by states and municipalities to fund public works. Generally they are considered safe, but in November many muni funds saw their biggest one-day price drop since the financial crisis. Investors withdrew a record $5.4 billion from municipal bond funds within two weeks last month, according to Lipper FMI. Some funds fell by 5% or more, and many hit 52-week lows. So what exactly is going on, and more importantly, is this a chance to buy municipal bond funds for cheap and lock in attractive yields on some of the safest securities available? Believe it or not, this sell-off wasn’t entirely unexpected. The pattern of a sell-off at year-end and a rebound in January is well-documented. It occurs when some investors sell before the end of the year to lock in their gains or losses for tax purposes. Then, they buy back the same shares in January. Read More