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CMBS

Latest news

Latest news

Deutsche Bank predicts $155bn of private sector CMBS
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Single asset, single borrower deals drove the US CMBS market in 2025, particularly on New York City collateral as office attendance rose. With interest rates predicted to fall further in 2026, market participants are looking forward to a greater variety of deals on commercial real estate from other cities and sectors, writes Pooja Sarkar

More articles

  • Changes made on Wednesday to the U.K. Funding for Lending Scheme to boost small-to-medium enterprise lending should not materially impact the already low-level of U.K. SME asset-backed securities issuance, but London-based bankers remain angered by the squeeze the FLS has had on U.K. residential mortgage securitization, and fear a protracted RMBS issuance slump into 2014.
  • Class ‘A2’ noteholders in Cornerstone Titan 2007-1, one of Europe’s largest conduit CMBS transactions, could eventually face principal losses depending on how the 18 remaining loan workouts progress, according to Barclays CMBS analyst Christian Aufsatz.
  • Fitch Ratings is telling investors to beware declining underwriting standards in commercial mortgage-backed securities loans, echoing similar statements made by Moody’s Investors Service in recent weeks.
  • Redwood Trust has raised credit enhancement slightly in its most recent residential mortgage-backed securities offering, raising some eyebrows on the real estate investment trust’s sixth private-label RMBS of the year.
  • There are strong hints of new issuance from the U.K. prime residential mortgage securitization market—which has so far laid dormant this year—during the second quarter.
  • Natixis has successfully priced the year’s first new issue non-conforming residential mortgage securitization, Virgil Mortgage No. 1.
  • Deutsche Bank will meet with investors in London later this month to gauge interest in a new issue from Australian lender Suncorp’s APOLLO Australian Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities program.
  • Loans backing commercial mortgage-backed securities deals are averaging a 100% loan-to-value ratio according to Moody’s Investors Service’s credit standards.
  • Australian mortgage lender Pepper Home Loans returned to the securitization market at the end of last week, raising AUD350 million ($367.5 million) from a non-conforming deal—and managing to slash its pricing compared to where it closed a similar deal a year ago.