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Municipal Bond Closed-End Funds Could Be Ripe for Tax-Loss Sales

Municipal Bond Closed-End Funds Could Be Ripe for Tax-Loss Sales

(Bloomberg) -- It’s July, but it’s not too early to discuss selling municipal-bond closed-end funds to offset a capital gains tax liability, according to Greg Neer of Relative Value Partners.

Almost 90 percent of closed-end funds monitored by Bloomberg posted a loss this year as rising interest rates increased the cost of leverage that the funds use to buy longer-dated debt, putting pressure on dividends. In addition, yields on 30-year municipal bonds rose 0.4 percentage point in the first quarter, reducing the value of the debt held by the funds.

More than a third of muni closed-end funds posting losses this year have declined more than 5 percent and four funds have lost more than 10 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. If the losses hold, investors could sell closed-end fund shares, Neer said.

“If things stay as is or as people expect, you’ll likely get a significant amount of sellers come early fall and winter," Neer said. “They may not be able to accept the volatility of what they thought was a more stable asset, or they’re going to say, let’s swap, let me take my loss on Fund A and buy Fund B and realize that loss."

Municipal closed-end funds rebounded in the second quarter, getting a boost from a Treasury rally spurred by political unrest in Italy that had global investors fleeing to relatively safer assets.

Municipal Bond Closed-End Funds Could Be Ripe for Tax-Loss Sales

Many closed-end funds borrow short-term and buy higher-yielding, long-dated debt. Short-term borrowing costs in the muni market have almost doubled to 1.51 percent in a year, and the Federal Reserve is expected to raise short-term interest rates two more times this year.

Rising leverage costs narrow the profit that can be made by investing in long-dated debt, eating into distributions to investors. On Monday, BlackRock Inc. said it was cutting dividends on 20 of its muni closed-end funds.

“Leverage costs seem like they’re only going one way: up. The curve keeps flattening, dividends will continue to get pressured," Neer said.

Tax-loss selling could cause discounts on muni-closed end funds -- the difference between a closed-end fund’s share price and the underlying value of its assets -- to widen further, Neer said. Discounts typically widen in the fourth quarter and rebound in the first quarter, he said.

National leveraged municipal closed-end funds traded at an average discount of 6 percent as of June 13, compared to their 52-week average discount of 3 percent, according to UBS Global Wealth Management.

However, in the near-term muni closed-end funds could benefit from stronger seasonal demand for tax-exempt debt. The volume of new municipal bond sales in July will be far less than the amount of money investors will receive from interest payment on maturing securities, according to Citigroup Inc.

To contact the reporter on this story: Martin Z. Braun in New York at mbraun6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Crombie at jcrombie8@bloomberg.net, Michael B. Marois

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