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Securitization People and Markets

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  • Lloyds Banking Group may is 632 branches after its effort to sell them attracted only one bidder despite reported interest from several others.
  • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent decision to review the status of Real Estate Investment Trusts could signal a move to codify the exemptions and special privileges the REIT structure enjoyed—not the crackdown the industry fears—said Richard Ginn, managing director at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.
  • Investors at the ABS East conference said regulators are doing right by the industry in demanding increased transparency and reporting in the asset-backed securitization market, a move they say will put the market’s future on more solid footing.
  • Assured Guaranty has filed suit against DLJ Mortgage Capital, a unit of Credit Suisse, over losses it suffered because of alleged misrepresentations about the quality of loans underlying six residential mortgage back securities.
  • Bank of America has made a motion to disqualify the law firm of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan as counsel to American International Group in its lawsuit against the bank and other financial institutions over alleged misrepresentation of mortgage-backed securities.
  • JPMorgan Chase now tops Bank of America as the nation’s largest bank in assets based on third-quarter earnings reports.
  • Clayton Holdings has formed a new securitization group, which it says will “helping the private market prepare for the return of non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities.”
  • A new mortgage plan being kicked around between big banks and regulators left ABS East attendees with plenty of questions.
  • The Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority and the U.K. Financial Services Authority are launching a “comprehensive independent” investigation into the events surrounding $2.3 billion of losses at UBS as a result of unauthorized trades.