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Rules Proposed to Curb Muni-Bond Advisers

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U.S. securities regulators, under pressure from Congress to prevent a repeat of the financial debacles witnessed in municipalities like Detroit and Jefferson County, Ala., are set to propose a series of rules to rein in advisers that help states and localities raise cash in the $3.7 trillion municipal-bond market, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, a self-regulator for the muni-bond market, is expected this week to propose the first of a long-delayed set of rules for municipal advisers aimed at better protecting taxpayers from the types of complex transactions that soured during the financial crisis. Many unsophisticated local governments didn't fully understand those transactions, which primarily involved so-called interest-rate swaps to hedge against higher borrowing costs. The advisers targeted by the rules are firms, sometimes affiliated with banks, hired to work with states and localities to time, market and price municipal-bond deals and related transactions. But most advisers are unaffiliated with banks and were previously unregulated. Lawmakers and regulators say they pushed to increase oversight of municipal advisers in the wake of tumult in localities like Jefferson County, where officials and Wall Street firms repeatedly used interest-rate swaps as a vehicle for kickbacks and other types of fraud. The 2010 Dodd-Frank financial law requires the advisers to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission and adhere to MSRB rules.