© 2025 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

Securitization People and Markets

More articles

More articles

  • ABS
    Bloomberg is trying to drag European ABS trading into the digital age, signing up several banks to start providing quotes on its ALLQ system for core, prime European ABS asset classes. Some dealers, though, struggle to see the benefit.
  • JP Morgan's European securitized products syndicate head has been placed at risk
  • SSA
    The world of green finance has intersected with that of synthetic securitization for what may be the first time, in a $3bn risk transfer deal that could show a way to free up banks’ balance sheets to expand green lending.
  • Bullish talk from the Federal Reserve on interest rate hikes points to a “live meeting” in March, raising concerns about the supply of mortgage-backed securitization (MBS).
  • Global standardization of securitization regulation? Don’t bother, just make it easier for investors to compare different regimes, said panellists at SFIG Vegas on Monday.
  • It never really went away, did it.
  • The implementation of US risk retention rules is proving contentious in the European market, with questions marks being raised over the fair value calculations used in UK RMBS deals, and a common approach to the “safe harbour” route still to emerge.
  • Day two of SFIG Vegas kicked off with a post-election roundup of the regulatory landscape, with market participants on a panel telling audience members that they were hopeful that the market can expect a more collaborative regulatory environment under president Donald Trump.
  • Fitch Ratings weighed in on the increasingly tense debate about the spread of weighted average coupon caps in European securitization, publishing a note on Friday that cautioned investors about the structures but acknowledged that they helped deals get higher ratings with less collateral.