| | | | Dear Reader, | Municipal bonds have a well-earned reputation for dependable income, and the tax break can make the math especially attractive for high-bracket savers. But the past few weeks have underscored a simple truth: when rates are unsettled, markets stop giving weaker borrowers the benefit of the doubt. | You can see that "higher-for-longer sensitivity" in how Washington is managing issuance. In the Treasury's February 4 quarterly refunding statement, officials laid out financing plans that keep supply a front-and-center variable for bond investors. For muni buyers, this means the credit story matters more than the label on the bond. |
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| | | | | | The Gulf of America Is Set To Make Some People Very Rich… | With the signing of Executive Order 14285, President Trump has set into motion a new, American bull market for every legal citizen of the United States. | Because under that law, every citizen now has a claim to what may be the most valuable resource jackpot in human history... | Which means - if you are a citizen, of course - they're YOUR sovereign rights. | Your birthright share of a national treasure. | And today, I'm going to show you exactly how to stake your claim to a piece of this $500 trillion fortune. | But first, you need to understand exactly how... | Thanks to a single stroke of his pen... | The President renamed it "The Gulf of America"... | ...and quite possibly made every American citizen heir to a $1.5 million fortune. | Claim your stake here | |
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| | | | | Why This Matters | If you're a retiree or conservative investor, munis often sit in the "sleep well at night" bucket. The problem is that municipal credit risk doesn't usually explode - it erodes. It shows up as a pension bill that grows faster than revenues, a shrinking tax base, or fixed obligations that leave little room when the economy slows. | Pensions are the classic slow-burn risk. In S&P's late-January review of pension pressure points for 2026, the message is clear: funded ratios may look better on average, but discipline and assumptions will drive which issuers stay sturdy when markets (and politics) turn less friendly. |
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| | | | | Where Things Stand | Start by sorting what you own. Essential-service revenue bonds (water, sewer, electric) often have user-fee revenue and the practical ability to raise rates. Politically fragile credits - where repayment depends on annual budget choices - can face far tougher tradeoffs in a downturn. | Then stress-test like a credit analyst: | Pensions: Are required contributions paid consistently, or "kicked down the road" when budgets tighten? Tax base: Are assessed values and population growing, flat, or declining? A shrinking base forces harsher choices. Debt service and flexibility: When debt, pensions, and healthcare dominate, one recession can crowd out core services. Variable-rate exposure: Floating-rate structures can be fine - until funding markets tighten and costs jump.
| Finally, check the market backdrop. In a February 9 snapshot of muni yields, new-issue supply, and fund flows, you can see how steady demand can coexist with meaningful issuance - conditions that sometimes mask weaker credits. And when you want a reality check on trading activity, the MSRB's February 2 monthly trading summary provides a clean, market-wide view of what's actually changing hands. |
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| | | | | The Patriot Perspective | "Tax-free" is not the same as "risk-free." The conservative move is to buy munis you can defend in a downturn: broad tax base, pension costs that stay funded through good years and bad, and debt payments that don't crowd out the basics. If you can't explain why the bond gets paid when times get tough, you're not investing - you're hoping. | Stay steady, The Patriot Investor |
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