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Investors able to cherry pick deals from wide variety
PRA and FCA go much further than EU in loosening rules
Liberated issuers will still have to follow European regulations if they want to sell in EU
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The US Department of Justice is locked in settlement negotiations with Deutsche Bank over crisis era RMBS activity, as US RMBS settlements continue to take their toll on Europe's cash strapped banks.
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Scarcity value helped Permanent TSB's first Irish RMBS deal since November 2013 price at tight levels on Wednesday, as Kensington Mortgage Company lines up its second Trinity Square deal.
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A high profile group of US housing finance experts has called for a merger of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with the aim of creating a single government owned mortgage finance entity.
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Activity is picking up in UK RMBS, with leads releasing price thoughts on Permanent TSB’s imminent Irish RMBS deal and Kensington Mortgage Company announcing a new deal from its specialist prime RMBS shelf, Trinity Square.
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Issuers are preparing a flurry of RMBS issuance to close out September, with a mix of credit risk transfer (CRT), jumbo, reperforming and nonperforming deals set to be priced by the end of the week.
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The RMBS market is set to see more non-qualified mortgage (non-QM) deals, potentially as early as the fourth quarter of this year, as issuers say they are fielding more calls from investors who are showing an increased appetite for higher yielding RMBS paper.
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The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is looking for congressional legislation to make the government sponsored enterprises’ (GSEs) credit risk transfer products easier to buy for real estate investment trusts (REITs), as part of its efforts to grow the credit risk transfer (CRT) investor base.
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Repeat investors in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s credit risk transfer (CRT) deals are looking to move down the capital stack as they get more comfortable with the product and the asset class becomes a regular staple of structured products issuance.
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The US non-prime and non-QM markets have come a long way in repairing the reputational damage caused by the 2008 sub-prime mortgage crisis.