Publication:East Valley Tribune; Date:Feb 1, 2009; Section:Mesa Business; Page Number:A27


Municipal bonds good investments, but do your research

Rebecca Warren is a certified financial planner professional and certified senior adviser in Mesa. She can be reached at (480) 357-8380 or by e-mail at Rebecca@ WarrenFinancialServices.com.



    Municipal bonds have long been a safe haven for higher-income investors looking for safety and greater tax efficiency.

    The credit squeeze put the municipal bond market through its paces like other competing markets this year, but it may be time to take a second look at both municipal bonds and muni bond funds.

    A municipal bond, or muni, is a bond issued by a local government or its agencies to raise funds for a host of reasons tied to keeping the government going. The potential issuers may include cities, counties, redevelopment agencies, water and sewer projects, school districts, publicly owned airports, seaports and other transportation entities.

    They pay for everything from immediate government expenses to new roads and various public projects. Municipal bonds come in two flavors — general obligation bonds and revenue bonds. General obligation bonds are intended to raise immediate capital to cover government expenses; revenue bonds are the ones that fund infrastructure projects.

    As an incentive for investors to buy these bonds, interest income is often exempt from federal income tax as well as the income tax of the state in which they are issued. Mutual funds that invest in municipal bonds also offer the same tax treatment.

    So where’s the opportunity for you? Look at some of the highly rated outstanding bonds. You’ll find some amazing yields that you certainly won’t find in CDs and other investments. Even though their prices have plunged, some municipals late last year were offering long-term, tax-free yields of 5 percent and above, which translate into the equivalent of nearly 7 percent for taxpayers in the 28 percent bracket and nearly 8 percent for someone in the top 35 percent bracket when the tax exemption is considered.

    That’s a very nice return relative to U.S. Treasuries, considered the safest investments of all.

    But before you buy, here are some things to know and steps to follow.

    Are munis right for you? Your tax professional and/or your financial adviser can take a look at your entire taxable investment portfolio (there’s no point in putting tax-exempt munis into tax-exempt accounts like 401[k]s or IRAs) and determine whether they’re the right approach to take for your investments.

    Keep an eye peeled for the AMT. While most munis pay interest that’s free from federal income taxes, some may pay rates that are subject to the alternative minimum tax, known as the AMT. It’s a little more complicated than we have space for here, but this is absolutely why you need to talk to your tax professional or financial planner before making a move into munis.

    Don’t forget to ladder. “Laddering” is a portfolio structuring term. To ladder bonds means that you are buying them with maturities occurring at regular intervals, so when they mature, you’ll have money to reinvest at those same regular intervals.

    Watch those ratings. Yes, the main private investment ratings firms — Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s among them — have been in the doghouse for rating many battered investments highly, not just munis. But most municipals rated AA or AAA are generally safe to consider. It’s also important to check the issuer’s longterm ratings history. If they’ve been consistently highly ranked over decades and the municipality has no financial scandal (something that can be checked through news archives on the Internet), that’s another good way to research a bond issuer before making a purchase.


YOUR MONEY REBECCA WARREN FOR THE TRIBUNE