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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.  20549

FORM N-Q

QUARTERLY SCHEDULE OF PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT
INVESTMENT COMPANY

Investment Company Act file number

811-22784

 

 

 

Dreyfus Municipal Bond Infrastructure Fund, Inc.

 

 

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in charter)

 

 

 

 

 

 

c/o The Dreyfus Corporation

200 Park Avenue

New York, New York  10166

 

 

(Address of principal executive offices)        (Zip code)

 

 

 

 

 

Bennett A. MacDougall, Esq.

200 Park Avenue

New York, New York  10166

 

 

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

 

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 

(212) 922-6400

 

 

Date of fiscal year end:

 

  02/28

 

Date of reporting period:

  05/31/16

 

             

 


 

FORM N-Q

Item 1.                         Schedule of Investments.


 

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS
Dreyfus Municipal Bond Infrastructure Fund, Inc.
May 31, 2016 (Unaudited)

  Coupon   Maturity  Principal    
Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Alabama - 1.7%           
Birmingham Special Care Facilities           
Financing Authority,           
Improvement Revenue (Methodist           
Home for the Aging)  5.75  6/1/45  1,500,000   1,543,080 
Birmingham Special Care Facilities           
Financing Authority,           
Improvement Revenue (Methodist           
Home for the Aging)  6.00  6/1/50  1,000,000   1,040,410 
Jefferson County,           
Sewer Revenue Warrants  0/7.90  10/1/50  2,500,000 a  1,873,550 
          4,457,040 
Arizona - 5.5%           
Phoenix Industrial Development Authority,           
Education Facility Revenue (BASIS           
Schools, Inc. Projects)  5.00  7/1/45  2,000,000 b  2,093,980 
Pima County Industrial Development           
Authority,           
Education Revenue (American Charter           
Schools Foundation Project)  5.63  7/1/38  1,485,000   1,454,602 
Pima County Industrial Development           
Authority,           
Education Revenue (Arizona Charter           
Schools Refunding Project)  5.38  7/1/31  4,435,000   4,802,617 
Salt Verde Financial Corporation,           
Senior Gas Revenue  5.00  12/1/37  5,000,000   6,257,100 
          14,608,299 
California - 11.7%           
California Statewide Communities           
Development Authority,           
Revenue (California Baptist University)  6.38  11/1/43  2,035,000   2,304,088 
California Statewide Communities           
Development Authority,           
Revenue (Loma Linda University           
Medical Center)  5.25  12/1/56  1,250,000 b  1,410,725 
Golden State Tobacco Securitization           
Corporation,           
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed           
Bonds  5.75  6/1/47  8,000,000   8,092,720 
Long Beach Bond Finance Authority,           
Natural Gas Purchase Revenue  5.50   11/15/37  5,000,000   6,599,050 
Riverside County Transportation           
Commission,           
Senior Lien Toll Revenue  5.75  6/1/44  3,250,000   3,819,497 
San Buenaventura,           
Revenue (Community Memorial Health           
System)  7.50  12/1/41  2,500,000   3,091,500 
University of California Regents,           
Medical Center Pooled Revenue  5.00  5/15/43  5,000,000   5,942,750 
          31,260,330 

 


 

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) (continued)

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal    
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Colorado - 3.2%           
City and County of Denver,           
Airport System Subordinate Revenue  5.25   11/15/43  5,000,000   5,699,900 
Colorado Health Facilities Authority,           
Revenue (Sisters of Charity of           
Leavenworth Health System)  5.00  1/1/44  2,500,000   2,878,900 
          8,578,800 
District of Columbia - .7%           
District of Columbia,           
Revenue (Knowledge is Power           
Program, District of Columbia Issue)  6.00  7/1/43  1,700,000   1,987,623 
Florida - 2.1%           
Davie,           
Educational Facilities Revenue (Nova           
Southeastern University Project)  5.63  4/1/43  4,805,000   5,614,402 
Illinois - 4.4%           
Chicago,           
Customer Facility Charge Senior Lien           
Revenue (Chicago O'Hare International           
Airport)  5.75  1/1/43  3,750,000   4,425,600 
Chicago,           
Second Lien Water Revenue  5.00  11/1/30  1,500,000   1,775,985 
Metropolitan Pier and Exposition           
Authority,           
Revenue (McCormick Place Expansion           
Project)  5.00  6/15/53  2,500,000   2,758,950 
University of Illinois Board of Trustees,           
Auxiliary Facilities System Revenue           
(University of Illinois)  5.00  4/1/44  2,500,000   2,824,300 
          11,784,835 
Indiana - 6.7%           
Indiana Finance Authority,           
HR (The King's Daughters' Hospital and           
Health Services)  5.50  8/15/40  7,425,000   8,244,423 
Indiana Finance Authority,           
Private Activity Bonds (Ohio River           
Bridges East End Crossing Project)  5.00  7/1/40  5,000,000   5,493,100 
Indiana Finance Authority,           
Revenue (Baptist Homes of Indiana           
Senior Living)  6.00   11/15/41  3,500,000   4,113,690 
          17,851,213 
Iowa - 2.8%           
Iowa Finance Authority,           
Midwestern Disaster Area Revenue           
(Iowa Fertilizer Company Project)  5.25  12/1/25  7,000,000   7,491,960 
Kentucky - 1.1%           
Louisville/Jefferson County Metro           
Government,           
Health System Revenue (Norton           
Healthcare, Inc.)  5.75  10/1/42  2,370,000   2,859,286 
Louisiana - 4.0%           
Louisiana Public Facilities Authority,           
Dock and Wharf Revenue (Impala           
Warehousing LLC Project)  6.50  7/1/36  2,000,000 b  2,258,460 

 


 

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal    
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Louisiana - 4.0% (continued)           
Louisiana Public Facilities Authority,           
Revenue (Entergy Louisiana, LLC           
Project)  3.50  6/1/30  2,500,000   2,582,275 
New Orleans,           
Sewerage Service Revenue  5.00  6/1/44  2,000,000   2,296,420 
New Orleans,           
Water Revenue  5.00  12/1/34  1,000,000   1,163,750 
New Orleans,           
Water Revenue  5.00  12/1/44  2,000,000   2,290,080 
          10,590,985 
Massachusetts - 3.9%           
Massachusetts Development Finance           
Agency,           
Revenue (North Hill Communities           
Issue)  6.50   11/15/43  2,000,000 b  2,190,860 
Massachusetts Port Authority,           
Special Facilities Revenue (Delta Air           
Lines, Inc. Project) (Insured; AMBAC)  5.00  1/1/27  8,210,000   8,242,594 
          10,433,454 
Michigan - 9.7%           
Detroit,           
Water Supply System Senior Lien           
Revenue  5.25  7/1/41  2,250,000   2,491,448 
Kent Hospital Finance Authority,           
Revenue (Metropolitan Hospital           
Project)  6.25  7/1/40  5,750,000   5,764,720 
Michigan Finance Authority,           
HR (Trinity Health Credit Group)  5.00  12/1/39  4,990,000   5,685,107 
Michigan Finance Authority,           
HR (Trinity Health Credit Group)           
(Prerefunded)  5.00  12/1/21  10,000 c  11,993 
Michigan Finance Authority,           
Local Government Loan Program           
Revenue (Detroit Water and Sewerage           
Department, Sewage Disposal System           
Revenue Senior Lien Local Project           
Bonds) (Insured; Assured Guaranty           
Municipal Corp.)  5.00  7/1/30  1,500,000   1,763,895 
Michigan Finance Authority,           
Local Government Loan Program           
Revenue (Detroit Water and Sewerage           
Department, Water Supply System           
Revenue Senior Lien Local Project           
Bonds) (Insured; National Public           
Finance Guarantee Corp.)  5.00  7/1/36  2,250,000   2,577,780 
Michigan Tobacco Settlement Finance           
Authority,           
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed           
Bonds  6.00  6/1/34  5,000,000   4,977,150 
Wayne County Airport Authority,           
Airport Revenue (Detroit Metropolitan           
Wayne County Airport) (Insured; Build           
America Mutual Assurance Company)  5.00  12/1/39  2,250,000   2,665,103 
          25,937,196 

 


 

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) (continued)

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal    
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Minnesota - .8%           
Saint Paul Housing and Redevelopment           
Authority,           
Hospital Facility Revenue (HealthEast           
Care System Project)  5.00   11/15/25  2,000,000   2,267,680 
Missouri - 2.3%           
Missouri Health and Educational Facilities           
Authority,           
Educational Facilities Revenue (Saint           
Louis College of Pharmacy)  5.50  5/1/43  2,000,000   2,252,940 
Saint Louis County Industrial Development           
Authority,           
Senior Living Facilities Revenue           
(Friendship Village Sunset Hills)  5.00  9/1/42  3,500,000   3,807,615 
          6,060,555 
New Jersey - 5.7%           
New Jersey Economic Development           
Authority,           
Private Activity Revenue (The Goethals           
Bridge Replacement Project)  5.38  1/1/43  2,500,000   2,890,800 
New Jersey Economic Development           
Authority,           
School Facilities Construction Revenue  5.25  6/15/40  2,000,000   2,210,400 
New Jersey Economic Development           
Authority,           
Special Facility Revenue (Continental           
Airlines, Inc. Project)  5.13  9/15/23  2,500,000   2,800,375 
New Jersey Economic Development           
Authority,           
Special Facility Revenue (Continental           
Airlines, Inc. Project)  5.25  9/15/29  4,500,000   5,004,765 
Tobacco Settlement Financing Corporation           
of New Jersey,           
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed           
Bonds  5.00  6/1/41  2,330,000   2,269,024 
          15,175,364 
New York - 15.1%           
Deutsche Bank Spears/Lifers Trust (Series           
DBE-1177),           
(Metropolitan Transportation           
Authority, Transportation Revenue)           
Recourse  5.00   11/15/38  15,000,000 b,d  17,716,200 
New York City Industrial Development           
Agency,           
PILOT Revenue (Queens Baseball           
Stadium Project) (Insured; AMBAC)  5.00  1/1/36  8,000,000   8,147,120 
New York Liberty Development           
Corporation,           
Revenue (3 World Trade Center           
Project)  5.00   11/15/44  3,500,000 b  3,944,115 
New York State Dormitory Authority,           
Revenue (Saint John's University)  5.00  7/1/44  2,000,000   2,290,560 
Niagara Area Development Corporation,           
Solid Waste Disposal Facility Revenue           
(Covanta Energy Project)  5.25  11/1/42  7,870,000 b  7,991,434 
          40,089,429 

 


 

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal    
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Ohio - 6.7%           
Buckeye Tobacco Settlement Financing           
Authority,           
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed           
Bonds  6.25  6/1/37  7,000,000   7,038,500 
Muskingum County,           
Hospital Facilities Revenue (Genesis           
HealthCare System Obligated Group           
Project)  5.00  2/15/44  7,000,000   7,307,230 
Southeastern Ohio Port Authority,           
Hospital Facilities Improvement           
Revenue (Memorial Health System           
Obligated Group Project)  6.00  12/1/42  3,000,000   3,421,440 
          17,767,170 
Pennsylvania - 11.7%           
Clairton Municipal Authority,           
Sewer Revenue  5.00  12/1/37  4,000,000   4,522,200 
Clairton Municipal Authority,           
Sewer Revenue  5.00  12/1/42  1,500,000   1,690,125 
Deutsche Bank Spears/Lifers Trust (Series           
DBE-1179),           
(Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission,           
Motor License Fund-Enhanced           
Turnpike Subordinate Special Revenue)           
Recourse  5.00  12/1/42  13,000,000 b,d  14,963,882 
Pennsylvania Higher Educational Facilities           
Authority,           
Revenue (Thomas Jefferson University)  5.00  9/1/45  3,500,000   4,046,700 
Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission,           
Motor License Fund-Enhanced           
Turnpike Subordinate Special Revenue           
(Insured; Assured Guaranty Municipal           
Corp.)  5.00  12/1/42  5,000,000   5,855,200 
          31,078,107 
South Carolina - 2.9%           
South Carolina Jobs-Economic           
Development Authority,           
Health Facilities Revenue (The           
Lutheran Homes of South Carolina, Inc.)  5.13  5/1/48  1,750,000   1,823,413 
South Carolina Public Service Authority,           
Revenue Obligations (Santee Cooper)  5.13  12/1/43  5,000,000   5,822,800 
          7,646,213 
Texas - 17.3%           
Austin Convention Enterprises Inc.,           
Convention Center Hotel First Tier           
Revenue (Insured; XLCA)  5.00  1/1/34  5,000,000   5,070,000 
Clifton Higher Education Finance           
Corporation,           
Education Revenue (IDEA Public           
Schools)  6.00  8/15/43  1,500,000   1,815,345 
Clifton Higher Education Finance           
Corporation,           
Education Revenue (International           
Leadership of Texas)  5.75  8/15/45  2,500,000   2,665,275 
Clifton Higher Education Finance           
Corporation,           
Revenue (Uplift Education)  4.25  12/1/34  2,000,000   2,059,640 

 


 

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) (continued)

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal    
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($) 
Texas - 17.3% (continued)           
Deutsche Bank Spears/Lifers Trust (Series           
DBE-1182),           
(Dallas and Fort Worth, Joint           
Improvement Revenue (Dallas/Fort           
Worth International Airport)) Recourse  5.00  11/1/45  15,000,000 b,d  16,856,100 
JPMorgan Chase Putters/Drivers Trust           
(Series 4314),           
(Tarrant County Cultural Education           
Facilities Finance Corporation, HR           
(Baylor Health Care System Project))           
Non-recourse  5.00 11/15/20    7,410,000 b,d  8,539,862 
New Hope Cultural Education Facilities           
Finance Corporation,           
Student Housing Revenue (National           
Campus and Community Development           
Corporation - College Station Properties           
LLC - Texas A&M University Project)  5.00  7/1/35  500,000   557,205 
North Texas Education Finance           
Corporation,           
Education Revenue (Uplift Education)  5.13  12/1/42  3,000,000   3,203,520 
North Texas Tollway Authority,           
Second Tier System Revenue  5.00  1/1/38  2,000,000   2,323,660 
Texas Transportation Commission,           
Central Texas Turnpike System First           
Tier Revenue  5.00  8/15/41  2,500,000   2,872,600 
          45,963,207 
Virginia - 7.4%           
Lexington Industrial Development           
Authority,           
Residential Care Facilities Mortgage           
Revenue (Kendal at Lexington)  5.50  1/1/37  5,400,000   5,475,438 
Virginia Small Business Financing           
Authority,           
Senior Lien Revenue (95 Express Lanes           
LLC Project)  5.00  1/1/40  7,640,000   8,391,088 
Virginia Small Business Financing           
Authority,           
Senior Lien Revenue (Elizabeth River           
Crossing Opco, LLC Project)  5.50  1/1/42  5,000,000   5,750,200 
          19,616,726 
Washington - 2.2%           
Washington Health Care Facilities           
Authority,           
Revenue (Providence Health and           
Services)  5.00  10/1/42  5,000,000   5,753,100 
Wisconsin - 8.5%           
Public Finance Agency of Wisconsin,           
Senior Airport Facilities Revenue           
(Transportation Infrastructure           
Properties, LLC Obligated Group)  5.00  7/1/42  5,000,000   5,339,800 
Wisconsin Health and Educational           
Facilities Authority,           
Revenue (Aurora Health Care, Inc.)  5.25  4/15/35  5,000,000   5,712,100 

 


 

Long-Term Municipal Investments - 140.1%  Coupon  Maturity  Principal      
(continued)  Rate (%)  Date  Amount ($)   Value ($)  
Wisconsin - 8.5% (continued)             
Wisconsin Health and Educational             
Facilities Authority,             
Revenue (Beaver Dam Community             
Hospitals, Inc.)  5.25  8/15/34  5,700,000   6,293,826  
Wisconsin Health and Educational             
Facilities Authority,             
Revenue (Sauk-Prairie Memorial             
Hospital, Inc. Project)  5.38  2/1/48  5,000,000   5,281,650  
          22,627,376  
U.S. Related - 2.0%             
Guam Waterworks Authority,             
Water and Wastewater System Revenue  5.50  7/1/43  3,000,000   3,517,080  
Puerto Rico Commonwealth,             
Public Improvement GO (Insured;             
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp.)  5.00  7/1/35  1,750,000   1,781,973  
          5,299,053  
 
Total Investments (cost $333,000,424)      140.1 %  372,799,403  
Liabilities, Less Cash and Receivables      (11.9 %)  (31,770,890 ) 
 
VMTPS, at liquidation value      (28.2 %)  (75,000,000 ) 
Net Assets Applicable to Common             
Shareholders      100.0 %  266,028,513  

 

VMTPS—Variable Rate Muni Term Preferred Shares

a Zero coupon until a specified date at which time the stated coupon rate becomes effective until maturity. 
b Security exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in 
transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At May 31, 2016, these securities amounted to 
$77,965,618, or 29.31% of net assets applicable to Common Shareholders. 
c This security is prerefunded; the date shown represents the prerefunded date. Bonds which are prerefunded are collateralized by U.S. 
Government securities which are held in escrow and are used to pay principal and interest on the municipal issue and to retire the 
bonds in full at the earliest refunding date. 
d Collateral for floating rate borrowings. 

 


 

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS
Dreyfus Municipal Bond Infrastructure Fund, Inc.
May 31, 2016 (Unaudited)

The following is a summary of the inputs used as of May 31, 2016 in valuing the fund’s investments:

        Level 3 -     
  Level 1 -  Level 2 - Other   Significant     
  Unadjusted Quoted  Significant   Unobservable     
  Prices Observable Inputs    Inputs  Total  
Assets ($)             
Investments in Securities:             
Municipal Bonds  -  372,799,403   -  372,799,403  
Liabilities ($)             
Floating Rate Notes††  -  (36,805,000 )  -  (36,805,000 ) 

 

  See Statement of Investments for additional detailed categorizations. 
††  Certain of the fund’s liabilities are held at carrying amount, which approximates fair value for financial reporting purposes. 

 


 

NOTES

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) is the exclusive reference of authoritative U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority of federal laws are also sources of authoritative GAAP for SEC registrants. The fund’s financial statements are prepared in accordance with GAAP, which may require the use of management estimates and assumptions. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

The fair value of a financial instrument is the amount that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date (i.e., the exit price). GAAP establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs of valuation techniques used to measure fair value. This hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 measurements) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements).

Additionally, GAAP provides guidance on determining whether the volume and activity in a market has decreased significantly and whether such a decrease in activity results in transactions that are not orderly. GAAP requires enhanced disclosures around valuation inputs and techniques used during annual and interim periods.

Various inputs are used in determining the value of the fund’s investments relating to fair value measurements. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:

Level 1—unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical investments.

Level 2—other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar investments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).

Level 3—significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments).

The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. Valuation techniques used to value the fund’s investments are as follows: Investments in securities are valued each business day by an independent pricing service (the “Service”) approved by the fund's Board Members (the "Board") Investments for which quoted bid prices are readily available and are representative of the bid side of the market in the judgment of the Service are valued at the mean between the quoted bid prices (as obtained by the Service from dealers in such securities) and asked prices (as calculated by the Service based upon its evaluation of the market for such securities). Other investments (which constitute a majority of the portfolio securities) are carried at


 

NOTES

fair value as determined by the Service, based on methods which include consideration of the following: yields or prices of municipal securities of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type; indications as to values from dealers; and general market conditions. All of the preceding securities are generally categorized within Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

The Service’s procedures are reviewed by Dreyfus under the general supervision of the Board.

When market quotations or official closing prices are not readily available, or are determined not to reflect accurately fair value, such as when the value of a security has been significantly affected by events after the close of the exchange or market on which the security is principally traded, but before the fund calculates its net asset value, the fund may value these investments at fair value as determined in accordance with the procedures approved by the Board. Certain factors may be considered when fair valuing investments such as: fundamental analytical data, the nature and duration of restrictions on disposition, an evaluation of the forces that influence the market in which the securities are purchased and sold, and public trading in similar securities of the issuer or comparable issuers. These securities are either categorized within Level 2 or 3 of the fair value hierarchy depending on the relevant inputs used.

For restricted securities where observable inputs are limited, assumptions about market activity and risk are used and are generally categorized within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

Inverse Floater Securities: The fund participates in secondary inverse floater structures in which fixed-rate, tax-exempt municipal bonds are transferred to a trust (the “Inverse Floater Trust”). The Inverse Floater Trust typically issues two variable rate securities that are collateralized by the cash flows of the fixed-rate, tax-exempt municipal bonds. One of these variable rate securities pays interest based on a short-term floating rate set by a remarketing agent at predetermined intervals (“Trust Certificates”). A residual interest tax-exempt security is also created by the Inverse Floater Trust, which is transferred to the fund, and is paid interest based on the remaining cash flows of the Inverse Floater Trust, after payment of interest on the other securities and various expenses of the Inverse Floater Trust. An inverse floater security may be collapsed without the consent of the fund due to certain termination events such as bankruptcy, default or other credit event.

The fund accounts for the transfer of bonds to the Inverse Floater Trust as secured borrowings, with the securities transferred remaining in the fund’s investments, and the related floating rate certificate securities reflected as fund liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

The fund may invest in inverse floater securities on either a non-recourse or recourse basis. These securities are typically supported by a liquidity facility provided by a bank or other financial institution (the “Liquidity Provider”) that allows the holders of the Trust Certificates to tender their certificates in exchange for payment from the Liquidity


 

NOTES

Provider of par plus accrued interest on any business day prior to a termination event. When the fund invests in inverse floater securities on a non-recourse basis, the Liquidity Provider is required to make a payment under the liquidity facility due to a termination event to the holders of the Trust Certificates. When this occurs, the Liquidity Provider typically liquidates all or a portion of the municipal securities held in the Inverse Floater Trust. A liquidation shortfall occurs if the Trust Certificates exceed the proceeds of the sale of the bonds in the Inverse Floater Trust (“Liquidation Shortfall”). When a fund invests in inverse floater securities on a recourse basis, the fund typically enters into a reimbursement agreement with the Liquidity Provider where the fund is required to repay the Liquidity Provider the amount of any Liquidation Shortfall. As a result, a fund investing in a recourse inverse floater security bears the risk of loss with respect to any Liquidation Shortfall.

At May 31, 2016, accumulated net unrealized appreciation on investments was $39,798,979, consisting of $39,798,979 gross unrealized appreciation.

At May 31, 2016, the cost of investments for federal income tax purposes was substantially the same as the cost for financial reporting purposes (see the Statement of Investments).

Additional investment related disclosures are hereby incorporated by reference to the annual and semi-annual reports previously filed with the SEC on Form N-CSR.


 

 

Item 2.             Controls and Procedures.

(a)        The Registrant's principal executive and principal financial officers have concluded, based on their evaluation of the Registrant's disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report, that the Registrant's disclosure controls and procedures are reasonably designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Registrant on Form N-Q is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the required time periods and that information required to be disclosed by the Registrant in the reports that it files or submits on Form N-Q is accumulated and communicated to the Registrant's management, including its principal executive and principal financial officers, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

(b)        There were no changes to the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Registrant's most recently ended fiscal quarter that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting. 

Item 3.             Exhibits.

(a)        Certifications of principal executive and principal financial officers as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940.


 

FORM N-Q

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Dreyfus Municipal Bond Infrastructure Fund, Inc.

By:       /s/ Bradley J. Skapyak

            Bradley J. Skapyak

            President

 

Date:    July 21, 2016

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this Report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

By:       /s/ Bradley J. Skapyak

            Bradley J. Skapyak

            President

 

Date:    July 21, 2016

 

By:       /s/ James Windels

            James Windels

            Treasurer

 

Date:    July 21, 2016

 

EXHIBIT INDEX

(a)        Certifications of principal executive and principal financial officers as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940.  (EX-99.CERT)