'Junk Bond' Market Ignores Milken Charges - Los Angeles Times
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‘Junk Bond’ Market Ignores Milken Charges

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From Associated Press

The criminal indictment against the man who led Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc.’s “junk bond†operations to the top of the heap had little effect Thursday on the multibillion-dollar junk bond market.

Prices of the high-yield, low-rated bonds were little changed to slightly higher in quiet dealing the day after a federal grand jury indicted Michael Milken and two others on 98 counts of racketeering and fraud.

Because the government’s action against the 42-year-old Milken had long been expected, “nobody really cares,†said one trader who spoke on condition of anonymity.

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The nonchalant reaction was reminiscent of how the market shrugged off news last December that Drexel agreed to admit guilt to six felonies and pay a record $650-million fine to settle sweeping government securities fraud charges unrelated to its junk bond operations.

It also seemed to indicate how the market for low-rated, high-yield corporate debt securities, which Drexel almost single-handedly expanded into a $180-billion industry, has become an institution that can weather the storm.

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