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Blackstone is targeting a quicker than usual three day execution
Triple-As were priced at 170bp over Sofr, close to guidance
US market remains the model as template issuance takes shape
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Almost EUR60 billion ($75.7 million) worth of bonds from the German Residential Asset Note Distributor (GRAND) commercial mortgage-backed securitization formed part of a bid list due to hit market screens Friday, as a proposed restructuring continues to buoy prices in the jumbo CMBS.
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Obvion’s STORM 2012-IV Dutch residential mortgage securitization is set to launch and price Thursday, with initial guidance confirming strong demand from an investor pool starved of recent euro-denominated issuance and new Dutch paper in particular.
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A bids-wanted-in-competition list comprising U.K. commercial mortgage-backed paper and some rarer German small-to-medium enterprise collateralized debt obligations saw four of its five bonds trade late on Tuesday.
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Deutsche Bank is set to avoid putting its own regulatory capital to work by using an agency-style structure when it launches a new German multi-family CMBS. The preliminary prospectus for the Deutsche-arranged deal could hit the market by the end of this week.
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UBS and Barclays are preparing a roughly $1 billion conduit deal as investors brace themselves for a wave of new commercial mortgage-backed securities offerings.
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Several second tier U.K. lenders are said to have put on hold plans to roll out residential mortgage-backed issues as a result of the Bank of England’s Funding for Lending Scheme, again raising concerns about the impact the program will have on securitization volumes.
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Stateside, investors were seen clamoring for one lone ABS deal, a farm and construction equipment transaction from John Deere Capital, that priced tight amid the otherwise barren ABS primary landscape.
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Dutch lender Obvion has returned to market with the fourth securitization of prime residential mortgages from its STORM program this year.
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As European securitization continues to be an “issuers’ market,” conditions for more non-conforming, buy-to-let and commercial mortgage-backed deals to come to market look favourable, London-based officials say.