Muni Market 2014 Halftime Show

 | Jun 18, 2014 10:30AM ET

The municipal bond market continued to roar ahead in the second quarter with long tax-free yields continuing their decline in April and May before rising slightly in June. Many of the same factors that were at work in the first quarter were again at work in the second quarter. Lower supply from a more austere universe of municipal issuers, higher demand from bond fund inflows, some asset allocation out of stocks and into bonds, and a general overall recognition of better municipal credit quality were all significant factors in the past three months. Liquidity – the ability to buy and sell bonds at reasonable spreads – has completely turned around from a year ago. Then we had the “taper tantrum” that saw record municipal bond fund outflows amidst fear of the Federal Reserve’s scaling back bond purchases. That period of June and July 2013 was marked by the almost total nonexistence of what one would consider a market-level bid. This was, of course, on longer-maturity municipal bonds, which are what bond funds owned and had to sell to meet redemptions.h3 The graphs below demonstrate several salient points./h3

  1. Short-term yields were mostly unaffected last year, because the sell-off was the province of bond funds that bore the brunt of the tapering fears of retail investors
  2. Long-term bond yields were greatly affected, again because they were what bond funds WERE selling. The drop in trailing headline inflation from near 2% to 1.2% made longer-maturity tax-free munis the most compelling they had been since the post-Lehman Brothers sell-off of 2008.
  3. There has been a remarkable recovery in the tax-free bond market.