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CMBS

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  • Prices on the junior mezzanine tranches off the inaugural risk sharing deals from Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have soared in recent weeks, suggesting big demand for Freddie’s sophomore trade, STACR 2013-DN1, which is scheduled to launch next week.
  • Ginnie Mae bonds are trading incrementally higher than Fannie Mae securities, and they may continue to do so until banks fill a projected $200 billion shortfall in highly liquid assets.
  • The search for precedents to help manage expectations of OGX’s bankruptcy has been about as successful as the Brazilian oil and gas company’s search for productive oil fields, according to EM bond investors.
  • F Van Lanschot Bankiers priced the inaugural EUR1.07 billion ($1.72 billion) deal from its new Lunet Dutch residential mortgage-backed securities platform on Wednesday afternoon.
  • Deutsche Bank has announced a $479.14 million single-family rental securitization—the first of its kind—with aims to price the deal on or around November 4.
  • Tasmanian lender Mystate is out with a new securitization of prime Australian residential mortgages, known as ConQuest 2013-1.
  • Moody’s Investors Service tracked a divergence in collateral quality for conduit commercial mortgage-backed securities deals in the third quarter, with a high volume of lower-quality collateral on one end of the spectrum, large trophy assets on the other and few middle-of-the-road assets in between. “While the issuer subsequently drops most of these [lower-quality] assets, the fact they continue to be originated indicates that flaws remain within the CMBS business model,” Tad Philipp, director of commercial real estate research, told sister publication Real Estate Finance Intelligence.
  • Securitization still has a “big black eye” coming out of the financial crisis, but it still has the potential to benefit investors, lenders and borrowers, said Lewis Ranieri, chairman of Ranieri Partners in a white paper published today.
  • Leads on F Van Lanschot Bankiers’ first deal from its new residential mortgage-backed securities shelf, Lunet, opened books on Monday morning, after the borrower finished a European roadshow last week.