After months of negotiations, President Trump signed into law the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act (“OBBBA”)” on July 4th. While there are wide-ranging implications for the economy, individuals, and corporations, it is our opinion that the impact of the OBBBA provisions on the municipal market will be relatively modest. Near-term implications are particularly limited, as many provisions do not go into effect for several years or will be phased in over multi-year periods. Some tax-exempt sectors are likely to be more acutely impacted, but the ramifications are longer-term in nature. This horizon provides time and opportunity for issuers to adjust even if such responses do not fully mitigate the effects. Appleton believes the overall impact on the municipal market will be limited and manageable for most municipalities, particularly those already exhibiting strong fundamentals. Given our longstanding preference for investing in high-quality municipal issuers, we are not expecting to make significant changes to our clients’ portfolios due to the new law. Although not inclusive of all provisions of the OBBBA, below we’ve highlighted the most relevant and important aspects of the bill for the municipal market.
Municipal Market Implications
Tax-Exempt Borrowing
The ability of municipalities and other qualifying entities to issue federally tax-exempt debt remains intact. Even those issuers that sit on the peripheral of qualifying for the public good, such as corporations, stadiums, quasi for-profit projects, were left untouched.
In fact, the ability to utilize the tax-exemption actually expanded, with “spaceports” gaining authorization to utilize tax-exempt debt, although we do not expect a wave of spaceport issuers to tap the market anytime soon.
The status quo is also a benefit for national infrastructure, as state and local governments play an outsized role in financing essential infrastructure across the country and have been doing so for decades.
SALT Cap Expansion
The OBBBA expands the deduction of state and local taxes from the federal income calculation to $40,000 from the current $10,000 cap. This higher threshold phases out for taxpayers with adjusted gross income above $500,000. However, the higher cap reverts back to $10,000 in 2030, likely setting up another future negotiation.
Given the modest increase in the cap, the income phase-out, and the relatively short period the higher cap is due to be in effect, we do not feel that demand for municipal bonds will be negatively affected. Tax-exempt bonds provide an attractive avenue to generate income that is exempted from federal income tax, and investors who have benefited from the municipal tax provisions are likely to fuel sustained demand.
Municipal Credit Implications
Hospitals
One of the most significant provisions of the OBBBA lies in changes to Medicaid, the health program funded and administered by the federal government and states.
Changes to eligibility and access to subsidized insurance are likely to result in 11 to 15 million people losing health insurance over the next 10 years.
For hospitals, this is expected to result in lower revenues, higher bad debts, and increased charity expenses, negatively impacting operating margins.
In addition, the OBBBA made changes to supplemental funding mechanisms – Provider Taxes and State Directed Payments – which will also crimp cash flows.
Almost every hospital will be impacted by these changes, but with disparate materiality. Health systems that serve a large Medicaid population and have a greater reliance on supplemental payments face the largest challenges.
The changes in the bill strengthen our preference for investing in large, well-run hospitals with experienced management teams that serve markets with favorable demographics.
State & Local Governments
Medicaid cuts will also impact states, as they share in the funding of the program. While some of the changes will be passed on to healthcare systems, states are responsible for a portion of the costs and will need to make financial adjustments to offset negative budget implications.
States will need to increase revenues, reduce benefits, or restrict eligibility in response to the federal changes to Medicaid. Medicaid is one of the largest, if not the largest, line items within a state’s budget, highlighting the important decisions lawmakers will need to address over the coming years.
State’s will also see increased costs resulting from changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), with individual states becoming responsible for a greater share of the administrative costs of the program as well as a portion of the benefit costs for the first time.
Higher Education
The bill expands an existing Endowment Tax for specific universities and colleges and creates a tiered system where some private universities will see their tax levy increase.
Private universities with more than $500,000 in endowment per student will pay a tax on the net investment income produced by its endowment. The tax rate will vary from 1.4% (pre-OBBBA rate) to 8% for those universities with more than $2M in endowment per student.
The tax excludes those schools with less than 3,000 students and public universities. The new exclusion based on student count will actually result in some universities not paying the tax even though they were subject to it in prior years.
Notably, the impacted institutions, by definition, have sizeable financial resources. While the tax will negatively impact budgets, it should be very manageable for these wealthier entities.
Housing
The OBBBA lowered eligibility qualifications for and expanded access to Low Income Housing Tax Credits, which should boost the production of affordable housing units along with the use of municipal bonds to help finance those projects.
Although it is a niche part of the municipal market, and not a universe in which Appleton typically invests, these changes should increase issuance of single-project affordable housing bonds.
This commentary reflects the opinions of Appleton Partners based on information that we believe to be reliable. It is intended for informational purposes only, and not to suggest any specific performance or results, nor should it be considered investment, financial, tax or other professional advice. It is not an offer or solicitation. Views regarding the economy, securities markets or other specialized areas, like all predictors of future events, cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and may result in economic loss to the investor. While the Adviser believes the outside data sources cited to be credible, it has not independently verified the correctness of any of their inputs or calculations and, therefore, does not warranty the accuracy of any third-party sources or information. Specific securities identified and described may or may not be held in portfolios managed by the Adviser and do not represent all of the securities purchased, sold, or recommended for advisory clients. The reader should not assume that investments in the securities identified and discussed are, were or will be profitable. Any securities identified were selected for illustrative purposes only, as a vehicle for demonstrating investment analysis and decision making. Investment process, strategies, philosophies, allocations, performance composition, target characteristics and other parameters are current as of the date indicated and are subject to change without prior notice. Registration with the SEC should not be construed as an endorsement or an indicator of investment skill acumen or experience.
"Moody’s Investor Services downgraded the US Government’s credit rating from Aaa/negative to Aa1/stable on May 16th, reflecting accelerating deficit growth and associated borrowing requirements, a fiscal situation exacerbated by recently elevated borrowing costs. Despite considerable attention being paid to federal spending cuts, Moody’s noted a lack of faith in the willingness of Congress to actually reduce the deficit, and US debt levels have now reached thresholds that are materially weaker than other Aaa-rated peers..."
"The high-grade tax-exempt markets are typically characterized by relative price stability, particularly when contrasted with lower grade credits, let alone equities. But it’s been anything but the case so far in April, as extreme volatility has driven up municipal yields at an unusual pace. Advisors and investors are understandably looking for answers, and we aim to provide some below. The primary driver of this turbulence is a liquidity crunch, which has been exacerbated by the factors noted below..."
"Cutting through the “noise” during times of high market volatility can be challenging but this piece attempts to do so by offering our perspective concerning recent market events, some historical context, and a few forward thoughts. Appleton’s Wealth Managers are available to discuss your personal circumstances, so please reach out..."
Economic & Market Commentary
07.16.2025
Municipal Market Implications of the Tax & Budget Bill (“OBBBA”)
After months of negotiations, President Trump signed into law the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act (“OBBBA”)” on July 4th. While there are wide-ranging implications for the economy, individuals, and corporations, it is our opinion that the impact of the OBBBA provisions on the municipal market will be relatively modest. Near-term implications are particularly limited, as many provisions do not go into effect for several years or will be phased in over multi-year periods. Some tax-exempt sectors are likely to be more acutely impacted, but the ramifications are longer-term in nature. This horizon provides time and opportunity for issuers to adjust even if such responses do not fully mitigate the effects. Appleton believes the overall impact on the municipal market will be limited and manageable for most municipalities, particularly those already exhibiting strong fundamentals. Given our longstanding preference for investing in high-quality municipal issuers, we are not expecting to make significant changes to our clients’ portfolios due to the new law. Although not inclusive of all provisions of the OBBBA, below we’ve highlighted the most relevant and important aspects of the bill for the municipal market.
Municipal Market Implications
Tax-Exempt Borrowing
SALT Cap Expansion
Municipal Credit Implications
Hospitals
State & Local Governments
Higher Education
Housing
This commentary reflects the opinions of Appleton Partners based on information that we believe to be reliable. It is intended for informational purposes only, and not to suggest any specific performance or results, nor should it be considered investment, financial, tax or other professional advice. It is not an offer or solicitation. Views regarding the economy, securities markets or other specialized areas, like all predictors of future events, cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and may result in economic loss to the investor. While the Adviser believes the outside data sources cited to be credible, it has not independently verified the correctness of any of their inputs or calculations and, therefore, does not warranty the accuracy of any third-party sources or information. Specific securities identified and described may or may not be held in portfolios managed by the Adviser and do not represent all of the securities purchased, sold, or recommended for advisory clients. The reader should not assume that investments in the securities identified and discussed are, were or will be profitable. Any securities identified were selected for illustrative purposes only, as a vehicle for demonstrating investment analysis and decision making. Investment process, strategies, philosophies, allocations, performance composition, target characteristics and other parameters are current as of the date indicated and are subject to change without prior notice. Registration with the SEC should not be construed as an endorsement or an indicator of investment skill acumen or experience.
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