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  2. How Safe is the Muni Bond Market? - AOL

    www.aol.com/2012/08/16/how-safe-is-the-muni-bond...

    In a new post at the New York Federal Reserve's blog site, three bank officials took a look at the $3.7 trillion US municipal bond market. After noting that about 75% of US municipal bonds are ...

  3. 4 reasons to snap up muni bonds amid flashing recession ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/4-reasons-snap-muni-bonds-133701264.html

    For its part, Charles Schwab considers it too early to declare an ongoing downturn, but offered a safe-haven tip given elevated risk: municipal bonds. These fixed-income assets are issued by local ...

  4. The One Safe Way to Invest in Municipal Bonds Now - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2011-04-08-municipal-bonds-safe...

    Late last year, outspoken banking analyst Meredith Whitney rattled the staid world of municipal bonds with a bold prediction on 60 Minutes that hundreds of billions of dollars in munis would soon ...

  5. Build America Mutual - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Build_America_Mutual

    Build America Mutual Assurance Company (stylized as Build America Mutual or BAM) is a mutual, monoline bond insurer of essential public-purpose U.S. municipal bonds. Since its inception in July 2012, the company has insured more than $65 billion in par amount for more than 3,300 member-issuers.

  6. Municipal bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_bond

    A municipal bond, commonly known as a muni, is a bond issued by state or local governments, or entities they create such as authorities and special districts. In the United States, interest income received by holders of municipal bonds is often, but not always, exempt from federal and state income taxation.

  7. Yield burning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yield_burning

    Yield burning was a method by which major Wall Street U.S. municipal bond dealers cheated the United States government out of millions of dollars of revenue. [1] The scam was initially exposed by whistleblower Michael Lissack in 1994, and eventually the firms involved settled with the government for $205 million.

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