Latest news
Latest news
French RMBS volumes expected to rise as lender plans on doing more than one transaction a year
Successful candidate worked at Barclays for 15 years
More articles
More articles
-
New sustainable DCM team at Citi — Deutsche picks Stergiou for new position — SMBC Nikko makes ABS trading hire
-
Private subprime auto issuer First Help Financial (FHF) is preparing a $143m securitization backed by retail automobile contracts with subprime borrowers.
-
Affirm became the first fintech point of sale lender to tap the ABS market on Wednesday, in what sources said was a crucial first step towards defining an optimal, scaleable funding structure for the emergent sector.
-
CDP, the leading platform through which companies report their carbon emissions, has become the latest organisation to launch a potentially influential system of temperature ratings, so investors can work out how much global warming each company’s plans will theoretically lead to — and hence the overall temperature of a portfolio.
-
Zam Khan is a managing director in Houlihan Lokey’s Financial Institutions Group, where he leads the portfolio and capital advisory practice. He told GlobalCapital how banks should use financial data to deal with new NPL formations, or risk being engulfed by losses over the next few months.
-
The US government extended the deadline for submitting applications for the Paycheck Protection Program by a month on Monday. However, only 19% of the government guaranteed small business loans are left, which may not be enough to support small businesses through to the end of the pandemic.
-
SMBC Nikko Capital Markets has hired Manish Peshawaria as head of ABS trading, with a mandate to build out the secondary business, as part of its expansion into the European securitization market.
-
Qander Consumer Finance, owned by hedge fund Chenavari, has announced a new transaction from its Aurorus consumer ABS shelf, with arrangers ABN Amro and Deutsche Bank helping to place the deal.
-
Environmental, social and governance investors have been patting themselves on the back this year because their funds have tended to outperform during the coronavirus crisis. But a San Francisco hedge fund believes they are doing a poor job of shielding investors from the general risk of the stockmarket and more quantitative methods would improve the outcome.