© 2026 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 | Cookies

RMBS

More articles

More articles

  • OneSavings Bank, which conducts business in the UK mainly under the Kent Reliance Building Society name, has sold its first ever UK RMBS in a privately placed club deal that is backed mainly by non-conforming loans originated in 2007.
  • Mortgage bankers and a bipartisan group of lawmakers are pushing back hard against the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s proposition to reduce the conforming loan limit that would begin in January.
  • OneSavings Bank, which conducts business in the U.K. mainly under the Kent Reliance Building Society name, has sold its first ever U.K. residential mortgage-backed securities deal, a privately placed club transaction that is backed mainly by non-conforming loans originated in 2007.
  • Pepper Australia Pty Limited is set to issue $125m of hard bullet notes to refinance the US dollar tranche of its outstanding Pepper Prime 2012-1 Trust RMBS.
  • OneSavings Bank, which conducts business in the UK mainly under the Kent Reliance Building Society name, has sold its first ever UK RMBS in a privately placed club deal that is backed mainly by non-conforming loans originated in 2007.
  • Swedish mortgage provider Bluestep Finans has unveiled a new capital structure for its Swedish non-conforming mortgage securitization, which now has a senior euro denominated tranche to match investor interest.
  • Firstmac is looking to issue another Australian residential mortgage-backed securities deal only a few months after it sold a deal in June this year.
  • Swedish mortgage provider Bluestep Finans has unveiled a new capital structure for its Swedish non-conforming mortgage securitization, which now has a senior euro denominated tranche to match investor interest.
  • The recovery in the U.S. housing market will not take off until lenders can broaden the credit standards they are using to lend to home buyers, according to the Urban Institute’s Jim Parrott and Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi.