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Municipal Bonds - Understanding Tax Free Municipal Bonds

By Nick Hunter


Municipal bonds and notes are issued by state and local governments. These municipalities include:

States

Counties and Cities

Towns and Schools

Municipal Authorities

Interest payments on traditional municipal bonds are exempt from federal tax. They are subject to state and local tax.

Tax Free Yield

When looking to purchase muni bonds, a person should understand how tax exempt yields work. The higher the tax bracket, the higher the yield. If an investor is considering buying a 6% municipal bond at par and they are in the 28% tax bracket, the tax free yield would be higher than 6%. The formula is: Municipal stated rate or coupon divided by 100 minus the tax bracket.

The calculation would break down like this:

6% divided by 72 (100-28), which equals 8.33%. This means that to achieve a better return than this 6% coupon bond, you would need equal to or better than 8.33% in a taxable investment. A lower tax bracket would show a lower tax free yield.

Type of Municipal Issues

There are two main types or ways a municipality can guarantee or back its bond. One way is through the taxing power of the municipality. This would be called a General Obligation Bond or G.O. Bond. Another is called a Revenue Bond, which uses specific revenue sources to secure the issue.

General Obligation Bonds

These are the most common and normally the better rated issues. A state raising money and backing the bond issue with higher income or sales tax would be considered a G.O. Bond. A school district rasing money through a broker dealer on a municipal bond and securing the bond investors with school or property tax revenue is considered a General Obligation bond as well. Since taxes are the most secure source for money now and in the future, some investors prefer them over most revenue issues.

Revenue Bonds

Issues that rely on the revenue producing ability of a facility or from the issuer through other means are Revenue Bonds. There are several types of issuers. These would include:

Transportation - Bridges, Tolls, and Airports would be good examples

Health care - City or county hospitals

Utility Companies - Electric or water companies could assess usage increases to raise money.

Industrial - Some municipal issuers will work with private companies and use the companys lease payments to the city as a revenue source for bond issues.

Triple Tax Free Municipal Bonds

Investors who buy municipal securities issued within their own state are exempt from federal, state and local taxation. An investor in California should consider buying California municipal bonds above issues from outside the state. Retail or individual investors should only buy from within their state because of this. Larger institutions will normally buy from all over the country.

Municipal bonds should be a part of most investor portfolios. They are also a way of supporting your local area.

For more information visit: Muni Bonds at Brokerjobs.com

About the Author:

Nick Hunter is the President of American Investment Training, AIT and the owner of http://www.brokerjobs.com - A financial education and career website.




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