(Bloomberg) -- Houston, Alabama and the San
Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District plan to borrow a total
of more than $1 billion in the largest scheduled offerings of
U.S. tax-exempt bonds today.
The San Francisco area agency is selling debt to pay for
work designed to prepare its rail network to withstand a
magnitude-8 earthquake on the San Andreas fault, and the city of
Houston will offer bonds to replace existing airport debt with
higher interest costs. Alabama is auctioning bonds among
investment banks to fund economic incentives for German
steelmaker ThyssenKrupp AG's new plant in the state.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District plan to borrow a total
of more than $1 billion in the largest scheduled offerings of
U.S. tax-exempt bonds today.
The San Francisco area agency is selling debt to pay for
work designed to prepare its rail network to withstand a
magnitude-8 earthquake on the San Andreas fault, and the city of
Houston will offer bonds to replace existing airport debt with
higher interest costs. Alabama is auctioning bonds among
investment banks to fund economic incentives for German
steelmaker ThyssenKrupp AG's new plant in the state.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
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