Tax Free Munis Continue To Perform

 | Jun 27, 2018 03:36PM ET

The tax-free bond market has continued to benefit from the drop in supply so far in 2018. To recap, the end of 2017 saw a bulge in supply as issuers tried to beat the tax-cut bill that Congress was still massaging through joint Senate/House committee work. The final results of the bill were an elimination of advance refunding bonds but a continuation of private activity bonds. With the lack of clarity about aspects of the final bill, the supply of both advance refundings as well as private activity bonds mushroomed in early December, leading to a record amount – $63 billion of municipal bond issuance – in the last month of the year.

The offset to the huge uptick in supply in December 2017 has been a drop in supply this year. Through the first five months of the year, new-issue supply has dropped from $161 billion at this time last year, to $126 billion. We have also seen demand pick up, particularly in high-tax states. Many states are seeing an increase in demand because, under the new tax bill, state income taxes as well as local property taxes are no longer deductible on federal taxes; thus the taxable equivalent yield for high-tax state bonds from California, New York, Minnesota, and other high-tax states has risen.

The relative improvement in the tax-free bond market can be seen in the table below.