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CMBS

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  • The situation in Japan and the Middle East should have lead to a greater “flight-to-quality,” with investors moving their investments into the safe havens of the consumer credit market, according to traders.
  • US Bancop has been sued by Woodmen of the World, a Nebraska-based insurer, for $47 million in losses it claims from investments in mortgage-backed securities.
  • Jamie Dimon, ceo of JPMorgan Chase, says the largest lenders in the U.S. would unintentionally benefit the most from an exemption of rule under the Dodd-Frank Act requiring banks to retain 5% of the loans they securitize.
  • The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said it has paid $8.89 billion to banks that acquired failed financial institutions under loan-sharing agreements that protected buyers from losses associated with loans from those banks.
  • Mortgage debt outstanding for the commercial and multifamily sectors slipped to $2.4 trillion in the fourth quarter, a 0.5% decline from the preceding three-month period, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
  • Roughly 30% of U.S. banks have “less than satisfactory” supervisory ratings, according to Patrick Parkinson, the director of the Federal Reserve’s Division of Banking Supervision.
  • Trepp, the commercial mortgage-backed securities provider, has acquired Investcap Advisors, the manager of web platforms containing data on U.S. CMBS and property.
  • The market for B-pieces, or the first-loss classes of commercial mortgage-backed securities deals, is likely to remain thin as traditional players sit on the sidelines and wait for more attractive pricing and better quality collateral.
  • London is abuzz with talk of a new round of commercial mortgage-backed securitizations as the market awaits Deutsche Bank to roll out its roughly £360 million ($582 million) deal.