Highlights of the week:
This was a busy week. (Yes, we know we said that last week.)
Talk of a recession was put on the back burner after the release of the July jobs report. 528,000 jobs were created in July, and June’s numbers were revised to reflect an additional 26,000 jobs created. As measured by Bloomberg estimates, the markets predicted an increase of just 250,000 new jobs (oops).
Furthermore, the unemployment rate dropped from 3.6% to 3.5%. Average hourly earnings increased at a rate of 5.2%, beating an expected increase of 4.9% (though still below most inflation measures), while the labor force participation rate held steady at 62.1%.
Most fixed income markets reacted with significantly higher rates, but the municipal market must not have seen the full employment report.
Rates in the Treasury market moved higher last week in reaction to the jobs report. The yield curve inverted from 1–30 years. The comments of four Fed officials lead one to believe that the Fed’s resolve to fight inflation remains intact and that more significant increases in short-term interest rates are on the way.
Rates in the municipal market barely moved last week, except in the one-year and shorter portion of the market. Municipal market participants must have missed the release of the July jobs report (rest assured that the CDI fixed income team did not). This could also be a reaction to extremely low seasonal supply. We expect new issuance supply to increase in September and provide municipal market participants a better entry point. That is, of course, unless muni dealers charge excessive markups.
A study of municipal market transaction costs was reviewed in The Wall Street Journal in an article titled “Muni Market Transaction Costs Remain High, Despite Customer Protection Rules, Study Says”.
An additional story can be found on Bloomberg. Having read both articles, our reaction is equal to Captain Renault's shock (see our LinkedIn post for full reference), summarized in the following bullet points:
To be fair, we have not read the study — just the above-referenced articles. (After reading those articles, however, we probably will not read the study.) Also, we are extremely biased, with Chris serving on the MSRB board for several years. The MSRB’s disclosure work can be found on the EMMA portion of their website, free to anyone with an internet connection.
If the general premise of the articles is correct, muni dealers charge the retail buyer of municipal bonds high transactional costs. Rest assured — the clients of City Different Investments benefit from our business model of cost-effective pricing for our services, a high degree of transparency, and our fixed income team’s experience.
Muni-Treasury ratios decreased across the curve in the last week, except in the 1-year and shorter portion of the market. The municipal market’s front end looks unattractive compared to its Treasury equivalents. A higher M/T ratio tends to make Munis a more attractive buy.
Investment-grade rates were mostly higher last week following the Treasury market’s lead.
It was a busy week in Washington, as well.
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) was passed on Sunday, although a better name for the bill might be “Build Back Smaller.”
The chips bill was passed, although the Republicans got a little testy and delayed passage after getting outplayed by the Democrats.
The PACT Act was passed Tuesday night, expanding health care benefits for millions of veterans exposed to toxic burn pits. This bill also was the victim of pettiness. Last-minute changes were held up by outgoing Sen. Pat Toomey, causing proponents of the bill (including Jon Stewart, driving down from New Jersey) to protest outside the Capitol. Throughout our history, politicians support our soldiers when they are going off to war but neglect veterans when they come home. George Washington had an interesting perspective on veterans that should give us all food for thought:
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation."
Nancy Pelosi stopped in Taiwan on her tour of Asia, prompting outrage from China. This caused a couple of talking heads on the financial cable channels to say things like, “don’t poke the bear” or we’re “pouring salt in an open wound for China.” Both sounded vaguely reminiscent of Neville Chamberlain’s “peace for our time.”
One final comment. We find it telling that the best examples of courage and character coming out of D.C. are set by women (not to overlook Adam Kinzinger). One from the Senate and Liz Cheney from the House. One Republican and one Democrat. Maybe Josh Hawley should examine this phenomenon before writing about “The Masculine Virtues America Needs.”
The 5-year Breakeven Inflation Rate ended the week at 2.28%, 5 basis points lower than last week’s closing 2.33%. The same can be said for the 10-year Breakeven Inflation Rate ending the week at 2.46%, 7 basis points lower than last week’s 2.53%.
Quality spreads continued to widen, moving further into the fair range. While we don’t think the move has been significant enough to change our strategic outlook towards credit, it's getting close.
Various sources are used to report cash flows related to municipal bond mutual funds and ETFs, all reporting at different times. The source we have chosen to use is the Investment Company Institute (I.C.I.). The I.C.I. reported weekly cash flows from municipal bond mutual funds for the week of July 27, as -$246 million compared to -$602 million from the week before.
Municipal bond ETF cash flows for the same period were +$879 million, compared to -$23 million the prior week.
Other cash flow sources:
Lipper reported combined weekly and monthly inflows for the second straight week, with inflows of $1.6 billion for the period ending August 3 and decreasing YTD outflows to $79.1 billion. High Yield funds recorded $725 million of inflows, Intermediate funds saw $231 million of inflows, and Long Term funds saw $1.7 billion of inflows. Municipal ETFs registered $277 million of inflows.
The implied tax rate for a taxable vs. a tax-exempt A.A. municipal bond in various maturities are as follows:
In its Municipal Markets Weekly newsletter, JP Morgan commented on the supply picture this week, stating that:
“Next week we expect total supply of $6.2 billion, or 62% of the 5-year equivalent week average ($10.1 billion). We anticipate tax-exempt supply of $5.6 billion (71% of average), while taxable/corp cusip supply of just $0.6 billion (29% of the average) remains subdued.”
The supply picture does not get interesting until it exceeds $10 billion tax-exempt issuances in a given week.
In U.S. Investment Grade land, new issue activity has petered out as the fixed income market digests the volatility.
In its weekly "Credit Flows" report, Wells Fargo commented:
To quote Samuel L. Jackson in “Jurassic Park” — “hold on to your butts.”
August promises to be a volatile month. The strong July jobs report certainly didn’t resolve the question of whether the U.S. economy is in a recession. This week will see the release of two important inflation reports. Will they prove the four Fed officials talking about the Fed’s aggressive moves prescient or not?
See next week's commentary for the results.
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