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RMBS

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  • In the space of a week the European securitization market will have seen the first post-crisis residential mortgage backed securities from Ireland and Spain since 2007.
  • Another round of regulatory enforcement and litigation risk could stop the RMBS market in its tracks unless one type of transaction party takes on greater risk, market participants say.
  • The European Central Bank was this week taking credit for the nascent revival of the periphery securitization market, with two debuts in residential mortgage-backed securities from countries that haven’t issued since the crisis in the past two weeks and rumblings that other lenders long absent are considering a return to the market, writes Graham Bippart.
  • JP Morgan has priced a $379.78m securitization of jumbo mortgage loans that the bank acquired from other originators, according to a banker familiar with the new issuance.
  • All tranches of Colony American Homes’ first single-family rental securitization of the year were priced at par on Wednesday, according to a banker familiar with the deal.
  • US securitization market participants have been left scratching their heads at a proposed rule defining the certifications that lenders have to make on government-insured mortgages.
  • Leads on the first public post-crisis Spanish RMBS have put out initial price thoughts placing the class A notes broadly in line with Dilosk’s recent Irish RMBS debut.
  • Freddie Mac is planning a riskier type of RMBS that it expects to launch sometime next quarter, a person familiar with the agency’s plans told GlobalCapital.
  • Spanish Union De Creditos Immobiliarios has extended the roadshow for its new RMBS transaction — the first publicly issued Spanish RMBS since the crisis.