Economics

‘It’s Just Dirt’: Anything Goes in Today’s Muni Bond Market

  • Yields on riskiest muni-debt drop to 4%, the lowest on record
  • That is pushing investors into increasingly exotic deals
A “home sold” sign in Castle Rock, Colorado on April 28, 2016.Photographer: Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via Getty Images
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Last month, a risky, new deal hit the municipal-bond market. It came from a small borrower in Colorado that was looking to finance the construction of 1,200 luxury homes in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

It was an odd time for such a project. Denver’s decade-long housing boom was beginning to show signs of cooling and, moreover, rival developers had already raised record sums to turn vast tracts of land into new communities. “There’s no houses to see,” said Nicholas Foley, a municipal-bond fund manager at Segall Bryant & Hamill in Denver. “It’s just dirt.”