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Chapter 5: Municipal Debt

Municipal bonds: where local governments turn their promises into IOUs that somehow become tax-free income for investors. It's a beautiful system where cities get to build schools, and you get to keep more of your investment returns. Win-win, assuming the city doesn't pull a Detroit circa 2013.

This chapter covers how municipalities borrow money, the different flavors of municipal debt, and why your wealthy uncle keeps talking about "munis" at Thanksgiving dinner.

The Basics: Why Cities Borrow Money

The major appeal of municipal debt isn't the excitement of funding sewage treatment plants—it's the preferential tax treatment on the interest income. When Uncle Sam decided to encourage infrastructure investment, he made muni bond interest exempt from federal taxes. Smart move, considering the alternative was letting bridges collapse.

Who issues municipal debt? Pretty much any government entity smaller than the federal government:

Historical Context

The tax exemption for municipal bonds dates back to 1913, the same year the 16th Amendment created federal income tax. The Supreme Court initially ruled that the federal government couldn't tax state and local bonds based on the doctrine of "reciprocal immunity"—basically, "you don't tax us, we don't tax you." This principle held until 1988, when South Carolina v. Baker said Congress could tax munis if it wanted to. So far, it hasn't wanted to. Lucky us.

Municipal Debt Characteristics

Municipal securities operate in their own special world. They're exempt from federal regulations (thanks to the Tower Amendment of 1975), but don't worry—the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) keeps broker-dealers in line. The issuers themselves? They're "self-governing," which works about as well as you'd expect.

The Official Statement (Not a Prospectus)

Since munis are exempt from registration, issuers don't publish a prospectus. Instead, they offer an official statement—think of it as a prospectus that went to community college instead of Harvard. Less detailed, but it gets the job done. Firms must give customers this document by trade confirmation.

Legal Opinion: The Lawyer's Blessing

Every municipal issue needs a legal opinion. The municipality hires a law firm as bond counsel to verify three things:

Legal opinions come in two flavors:

💡 Test Tip: Remember that issuers want an unqualified legal opinion. It's counterintuitive—usually "qualified" sounds better than "unqualified," but not here. Think of it this way: unqualified = unconditional approval.

The Bond Contract

Beyond the legal opinion, municipal bonds need a bond contract with:

General Obligation (GO) Bonds

General Obligation bonds are the municipal bond world's blue chips. They're backed by the "full faith, credit, and taxing power" of the issuer—which is a fancy way of saying "we'll raise taxes if we have to." These are typically backed by ad valorem taxes (property taxes, from the Latin meaning "according to value").

Most GO bonds are backed by unlimited ad valorem taxes, meaning the municipality can raise property taxes without limit to pay bondholders. Homeowners love this feature. (That's sarcasm, in case you missed it.)

Limited Tax Bonds

Some issuers sell limited tax bonds with a cap on tax rates. These carry more risk and higher yields because there's a chance the issuer might not collect enough to service the debt. It's like lending money to someone who promises to pay you back but only from their allowance.

Debt Limits

Many municipalities have a statutory debt limit—a maximum amount of GO bonds they can have outstanding. Once they hit this ceiling, they need legislative action or a public referendum to issue more. It's like a credit limit, but for cities.

Historical Context

The concept of debt limits gained traction after the Great Depression when numerous municipalities defaulted. Arkansas had the dubious honor of the highest default rate—about 44% of its local governments defaulted during the 1930s. This led to widespread adoption of constitutional debt limits. Today, only about 10 states have no debt limits at all.

Capital Appreciation Bonds (CABs)

CABs are zero-coupon municipal bonds with a clever twist: only the discounted purchase price counts against the debt limit. Buy a bond for $600,000 that matures at $1 million? Only $600,000 hits the debt limit. It's creative accounting that's actually legal.

Revenue Bonds

Revenue bonds are the entrepreneurs of the muni world. Instead of relying on taxes, they're backed by revenue from specific projects—toll roads, hospitals, sports stadiums, parking garages. No tax increases required, which makes voters happy.

The catch? If the project fails to generate enough revenue, bondholders can't force the city to raise taxes. You're betting on the project's success, not the municipality's ability to squeeze taxpayers.

Feasibility Studies

Before issuing revenue bonds, municipalities conduct a feasibility study. Outside consultants (who theoretically have no stake in the outcome) analyze whether the project makes economic sense. The study includes:

If the feasibility study says "go," bonds get issued. If it says "stop," politicians usually find another consultant.

Trust Indentures

Most revenue bonds come with a trust indenture, even though municipal issues are exempt from the Trust Indenture Act of 1939. Why? Because investors demand protection when there's no taxing power to fall back on. The market has spoken: no trust indenture, no sale.

Aspect General Obligation Bonds Revenue Bonds
Backing Taxes (ad valorem) Project revenues
Purpose General municipal needs Specific projects
Debt limits Apply Don't apply
Risk level Lower (usually) Higher (usually)
If things go wrong Raise taxes Too bad

Special Types of Municipal Debt

Beyond vanilla GO and revenue bonds, the municipal market offers a variety of exotic flavors. Some are clever financing tools, others are solutions to specific problems, and a few are just creative ways around debt limits.

Special Tax Bonds

Backed by taxes other than property taxes—usually "sin taxes" on cigarettes, liquor, or gasoline. The irony of funding children's hospitals with cigarette taxes isn't lost on anyone.

Special Assessment Bonds

Used for improvements that benefit specific areas. New streetlights for Maple Street? Maple Street residents pay higher taxes. Democracy in action.

Moral Obligation Bonds

The municipality promises to pay but isn't legally required to. It's like an IOU written on a napkin—it might be honored, but you can't sue over it.

The NYC Crisis Example

In 1975, New York City hit its debt limit and faced bankruptcy. The state issued moral obligation bonds, essentially saying "We'll probably help if NYC can't pay, but no promises." President Ford's initial response—immortalized in the headline "Ford to City: Drop Dead"—didn't help. The city survived, the bonds paid out, and moral obligation bonds earned their reputation as "maybe bonds."

Double-Barreled Bonds

These bonds have two sources of repayment: project revenues first, then taxing power as backup. It's like having both a belt and suspenders—one should work, but why risk it?

Certificates of Participation (COPs)

A clever workaround for debt limits. The municipality builds a facility, leases it to itself, and investors buy shares of the lease payments. It's not technically debt, so it doesn't count against debt limits. Accountants love this stuff.

Industrial Development Bonds (IDBs)

Municipalities issue these to build facilities for private companies. The company's lease payments back the bonds. Since they're for private use, the interest is often federally taxable, defeating the whole point of munis. But hey, jobs.

Build America Bonds (BABs)

Created during the 2008 financial crisis, these taxable munis came with a 35% federal subsidy on interest payments. A 10% BAB cost the issuer only 6.5% after the subsidy. The program ended in 2010, probably because someone in Congress did the math on what this was costing.

Short-Term Municipal Debt

Municipalities need short-term financing for the same reason you might need a payday loan—bills come due before revenue arrives. Unlike payday loans, these actually have reasonable rates.

Anticipation Notes

These are the municipal equivalent of "the check is in the mail." Types include:

Variable Rate Demand Notes

Long-term financing at short-term rates. The rate resets weekly, and investors can cash out at any reset date. It's like a CD that reprices constantly, except it's a bond. The financial industry loves making simple things complicated.

💡 Test Tip: Remember the anticipation notes by their acronyms. TANs are for Taxes, RANs are for Revenue, BANs are for Bonds. TRANs combine TANs and RANs. GANs are for Grants. The test loves these acronyms.

Municipal Debt Trading

Municipal bonds trade over the counter (OTC) in what might be the world's quietest market. Most investors buy munis and hold them until maturity or death, whichever comes first. This makes for thin trading.

Making things worse (or better, depending on your perspective), investors typically buy bonds from their own state for maximum tax benefits. Maine residents buy Maine bonds, California residents buy California bonds. It's financial provincialism at its finest.

Settlement

Both municipal and corporate bonds settle T+1 (trade date plus one business day) as of May 28, 2024. This represents a change from the previous T+2 settlement cycle. Municipal bonds are mostly in book-entry form now, making electronic settlement efficient. The days of physical bond certificates are gone, taking with them the romance of clipping coupons with actual scissors.

No Short Selling

You can't short municipal bonds. The market is too thin—you'd never find bonds to borrow. This is probably for the best. Betting against cities and schools isn't a great look anyway.

Tax Status (The Good Part)

Here's why wealthy investors love munis: the interest is exempt from federal income tax. If you live in the issuing state, it's usually exempt from state and local taxes too, achieving the holy grail of triple tax-exempt status.

The Triple Tax-Exempt Dream

Type of Debt Federal Tax State Tax
U.S. Government Taxable Exempt
Corporate Taxable Taxable
Municipal (in-state) Exempt Usually Exempt
Municipal (out-of-state) Exempt Usually Taxable
U.S. Territory Municipal Exempt Exempt
Tax Equivalent Yield

To compare munis with taxable bonds, calculate the tax-equivalent yield. A 4% muni for someone in the 37% tax bracket equals a 6.35% taxable bond (4% ÷ (1 - 0.37)). This is why munis are called "rich people bonds"—the math only works if you're in a high tax bracket. Your barista probably shouldn't buy munis.

What to Remember

Municipal bonds are the steady, tax-advantaged corner of the bond market where cities fund boring but essential projects, and investors collect tax-free income. It's not exciting, but neither is paying taxes.

Key takeaways for the exam:

Remember: municipal bonds exist because cities need money and investors hate taxes. It's a 100+ year old arrangement that works pretty well, occasional Detroit notwithstanding.