Thursday, December 06, 2007

Municipal Governments May Be Stuck Holding Investments Tied To Subprime Junk

A story appearing last month on Bloomberg News reported on the belief of many municipal government finance managers throughout the country that their investment of taxpayer money in state-run government agency investment pools is risk-free and easy. An excerpt from the story:

  • It may be easy, but it's not risk free. What [one local official] didn't know in October -- and what thousands of municipal finance managers like him across the country still haven't been told -- is that state-run pools have parked taxpayers' money in some of the most confusing, opaque and illiquid debt investments ever devised. These include so-called structured investment vehicles, or SIVs, which are among the subprime mortgage debt-filled contrivances that have blown up at the biggest banks in the world.

For more, see Public School Funds Hit by SIV Debts Hidden in Investment Pools.

See also a Miami Herald story (12-6-07): State's investment loss of $2.5B falls below standards (The State Board of Administration reported that it has more than $2.5 billion in downgraded investments in several accounts, including the state retirement fund):

  • The damage caused to Florida by the turmoil in the mortgage industry is growing. Florida's troubled agency in charge of handling investments, under fire for not disclosing the extent of questionable investments it made on behalf of cities and counties across the state, acknowledged Wednesday it holds more than $2.5 billion in investments that have fallen below the state's quality guidelines.

Go here for related posts on how investors are being affected by investments tied to subprime mortgages, including how a Florida state-run fund recently experienced the equivalent of "a run on the bank" when municipal finance managers throughout the state started frantically pulling their cash from the fund before the state stepped in and froze the fund's assets.