Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Whole business securitization called 'a coup' but doesn't reach $700m target
Fluvius, Kojamo and Affinity Water hold investor calls
Sandwich chain joins host of ABS issuers
There is no crock of equity gold at the end of the rainbow
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Australia’s Heritage Building Society is planning its return to the residential mortgage-backed securities market after an absence of almost five years, and could raise as much as A$500m ($533.0m), according to bankers.
-
Ford’s FCE Bank is marketing a German auto loan ABS from its Globaldrive programme this week.
-
It took Indonesian energy company Pertamina several years to make its debut in the international bond market, but it was only a matter of days before the state-owned borrower returned for its second deal. Pertamina raised $500m from a 30 year bond at the end of last week, bringing its total funding to $1.5bn within the space of a few days.
-
A raft of landmark transactions, debut issues and exotic assets is underscoring the strength of the European asset-backed market’s long delayed revival. The first post-crisis CMBS, the second non-conforming RMBS, a Dutch RMBS, a revived Spanish auto deal — Driver España — and a first from Yorkshire Building Society are all due to break new ground shortly following the largest public post-crisis UK RMBS and VW’s Driver Nine.
-
Volkswagen has relaunched its Spanish auto ABS, Driver España One, which was pulled last year as the sovereign debt crisis broke.
-
Damon Mahon will be joining Royal Bank of Scotland’s syndicate desk to work on securitisation, filling the spot left when Tim Michael went to Citi in September last year. Harman Dhami has been covering FIG and ABS simultaneously, while volumes in the ABS market have been growing (65% up year on year, according to research from Société Générale).