© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 370,628 results that match your search.370,628 results
  • Banco Nacional de Mexico, the country's second largest bank, completed a $250m future flow securitisation on December 19 that was wrapped by triple-A rated XL Capital Assurance Inc - the new monoline insurer's first financial guarantee transaction. XLCA is a subsidiary of Bermudan reinsurer XL Capital Ltd, which had $16.4bn of assets and equity of $5.6bn in September 2000.
  • Spanish savings bank Caixa d'Estalvis de Catalunya will on Monday launch its Eu150m securitisation of loans extended to small and medium sized businesses (PYMEs) to finance investment projects. Jointly lead managed by JP Morgan and Caixa Catalunya, PYMECAT-1 FTPYME is the first securitisation to combine loans originated under state funding agency Instituto de Crédito Oficial's line of credit for SMEs with normal loans.
  • Trans World Airlines' bankruptcy and acquisition by American Airlines could affect seven aircraft operating lease securitisations as well as a private ticket receivables deal launched by TWA in 1997. The beleaguered airline filed for a Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Wednesday and agreed to sell its assets to American for around $500m. American has committed $3bn to fulfil lease assumptions and will also provide $200m in debtor-in-possession financing - allowing TWA to keep operating until the sale is completed.
  • Fifteen Spanish savings banks are preparing to launch a Eu2.048bn bond that will securitise a pool of cédulas hipotecarias, the Spanish equivalent of mortgage Pfandbriefe. The transaction will be the first securitisation of cédulas hipotecarias (CHs), a covered bond product that dates back over 100 years but was revived in 1999 as a new, international asset class designed to mimic the funding benefits of Pfandbriefe.
  • National Australia Bank held roadshows in the US and Europe this week for its first securitisation of residential mortgages, expected to be priced towards the end of next week. Lead managers Deutsche Bank (books), JP Morgan and NAB will offer a single tranche of global bonds, estimated at $1.1bn and rated triple-A by all three agencies. With an average life of 2.6 years and seven year step-up and call, the bond will be priced over three month Libor.
  • Toronto Dominion Securities is preparing to launch the ¥5bn debut securitisation for Japanese consumer loan company KK Lettuce Finance later this month. The deal follows TD Securities' introduction of another new issuer from the sector, Alco Corp, with a ¥2bn transaction in late December.
  • DBS Bank, Singapore's largest local bank, is rapidly building its treasury and derivatives operations with over 10 new hires, many of whom are from Chase Manhattan Bank. The new professionals will join in the next two weeks, said an official at DBS in Singapore. The hires include derivatives professionals, the official said, noting that DBS is keen to catch up with more established derivatives providers and traders in Asia as quickly as possible. DBS has within the last year set up foreign exchange, interest-rate, equity and credit derivatives teams (DW, 11/29/99), in a bid to become a regional player. Regulatory changes by the Monetary Authority of Singapore last month allowing interbank trading of Singapore dollar/U.S. dollar options look set to considerably boost the market, making now a good time to hire, said Water Cheung, managing director and head of derivatives, treasury and markets in Singapore. He declined to comment on the professionals joining in the next several weeks. Interest-rate and foreign exchange products remain the bank's core derivatives business. DBS is also considering hiring derivatives marketers in Thailand, and has hired several professionals in Hong Kong over the past three months, he noted.
  • The post-holiday slumber is wearing off and market activity is starting to pick up. A $5 million piece of Voicestream's "A" tranche traded at 97 _, and Nextel's "B/C" tranche traded at par plus 1/4.
  • A task force for the derivatives implementation group of the Financial Accounting Standards Board is likely to offer relief to corporates concerned about the tax treatment for hedging floating interest-rate exposure on commercial paper programs under the FASB's statement 133. Statement 133 requires derivatives to be recognized on the balance sheet at fair value. A task force for the derivatives implementation group is leaning toward allowing hedge accounting treatment for hedges on the LIBOR component of commercial paper programs, according to several members of the derivatives implementation group. Issuers likely will be able to match swaps to the program as a whole, rather than being forced to match swaps to individual issues.
  • Prices for five-year protection on automobile names rose last week following an announcement by units of General Motors of planned multi-billion dollar bond issuances, which were expected to be priced after DW went to press Thursday. The announcement of the issuance on Tuesday caused five-year protection for General Motors Acceptance Corp. to trade early Wednesday at 98 basis points, up from 89 bps at the beginning of Tuesday, according to Marius Maldutis, v.p. and credit derivatives trader at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter in New York. GMAC is expected to issue USD2-3 billion in five-year notes, and GM is expected to issue USD1 billion in 10- year notes, according to a GM spokeswoman in New York. Ford Motor levels widened as well, with five-year protection with restructuring trading on Wednesday at 100 basis points, up from 90bps the day before. Ford is also expected to issue debt later this quarter.