Latest news
Latest news
Meanwhile, BNP Paribas hires in structured finance
Aspire's first deal is a $391.28m non-prime securitization
Two lenders entering administration should signal to others: simplify the industry
More articles
More articles
-
Defaults are rare among top-rated, global short-term corporate and structured finance issues, according to Fitch Ratings.
-
Banks that exited the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program in late 2009 were able to do so without meeting strict Federal Reserve repayment criteria, leaving them in a weaker capital position to withstand future crises, according to an audit by the special inspector general for TARP.
-
Bank of America faces another two lawsuits involving residential mortgage-backed securities it sold.
-
Primary issuance of European securitization reached EUR212 billion ($281.8 billion) as the market entered the fourth quarter, with London-based analysts anticipating further deals despite the tough market environment.
-
Buysiders in London are welcoming U.K. lender Nationwide Building Society’s new-issuance from its Silverstone residential mortgage-backed master trust.
-
A widening European debt crisis will likely stoke up the mammoth $5.5 trillion U.S. agency mortgage market, according to analysts at Wells Fargo.
-
Nationwide has mandated Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays Capital, JP Morgan and UBS for a new UK prime RMBS from the Silverstone master trust, offering 144A and Reg S notes in three and five years.
-
-
A zero-interest rate program inked last year to help struggling homeowners make mortgage payments has lent only half of the $1 billion Congress awarded it under the Dodd-Frank Act.