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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
Citi prepares consumer ABS from Abound forward flow
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Lewis Ranieri's Selene Investment Partners has begun marketing a new securitization of non-performing mortgages, the sixth such deal this year to whet investors' appetite for a flood of bad loans that could be unleashed in June.
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With EFG International’s guaranteed Chestnut deal already finding solid demand, bankers are expecting more UK RMBS supply to hit the market within a fortnight.
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Crédit Foncier de France offered plenty of encouragement to other French lenders considering selling full capital stack RMBS transactions this week, as it witnessed a scramble for the senior notes of CFHL-1 2014 that allowed pricing just a handful of basis points back of UK RMBS.
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Crédit Foncier de France has seen a scramble for the publicly offered tranches of its CFHL-1 2014 RMBS, enabling its lead managers to tighten guidance. The deal's success is encouraging for other French issuers looking to bring full capital stack sales.
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High concentrations of buy-to-let loans are weighing on the performance of Irish RMBS transactions, with the number of loans in arrears hitting a new high in the first quarter.
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David Singelyn, CEO of American Homes 4 Rent, has questioned the validity of rumours that Blackstone's Invitation Homes may issue a $1bn securitization tied to rental properties. His comments came in the same week American Homes 4 Rent launched its debut single-family rental securitization tighter than price guidance in every offered tranche.
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The chief housing regulator that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is not yet convinced it has nailed down the appropriate model to transfer risk to private investors, and it may further test the market with new types of deals to ensure the GSEs are charging enough to guarantee the bonds they are selling.
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Fannie Mae is immediately responding to a new mandate from chief US housing regulator Mel Watt by more than doubling the size of its next residential mortgage risk-sharing deal, which may be sold to investors as early as next week.
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Fannie Mae is immediately responding to a new mandate from chief US housing regulator Mel Watt by more than doubling the size of its next residential mortgage risk-sharing deal, which may be sold to investors as early as next week, GlobalCapital has learned.