Latest news
Latest news
As well as deals backed by new loans, it will call and refinance 2023 deals
Meanwhile, BNP Paribas hires in structured finance
Aspire's first deal is a $391.28m non-prime securitization
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Leads Barclays Capital, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley released guidance on Co-op Bank’s new UK RMBS Silk Road No. 2 on Wednesday at 150bp-155bp over Euribor for the euro tranche and 155bp-160bp over Libor for the sterling tranche. This is well outside secondary levels for UK prime deals from Lloyds or Santander UK, which are still quoted with a 130bp handle for comparable three year maturities.
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Bank of America will pay $8.5bn to end the putback dispute that it is involved in with a group of 22 institutional investors including BlackRock, Pimco, MetLife and the Federal Reserve of New York. But the bank has also set aside a further $5.5bn to deal with representations and warranties liabilities for other exposures, and another $6.4bn for further mortgage write-downs.
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The ‘A1’ tranche on Achmea’s DMPL IX RMBS showed just how insulated Dutch prime RMBS has been from Greek fears, as leads Deutsche Bank and Natixis priced an increased size of Eu253.9m 5bp inside the tight end of the 95bp-100bp guidance.
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Austin-based broker dealer Tejas Securities Group is expanding into high-grade securitization, appointing Samir Shah, former head of asset and mortgage-backed securities at MF Global, to its sales and trading desk.
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The Bank of England’s Special Liquidity Scheme, which allowed U.K. firms to swap mortgage-backed securities for more tradable assets during the height of the financial crisis, has seen repayments reach £148 billion ($237.2 billion), indicating a major boost for the securitization mart in the U.K., according to industry officials in London.
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The ‘A1’ tranche on Achmea’s DMPL IX RMBS showed just how insulated Dutch prime RMBS has been from Greek fears, as leads Deutsche Bank and Natixis priced an increased size of Eu253.9m 5bp inside the tight end of guidance.
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Investors in residential mortgage-backed securities affected by today’s Bank of America-Merrill Lynch settlement with investors are testing the market’s appetite for their positions, according to John Hierl, head of RMBS trading at StormHarbour Securities.
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Bank of America is close to paying an $8.5 billion settlement to bondholders in legacy residential mortgage-backed securities inherited from subprime lender Countrywide Financial.
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Bank of America may be close to paying $8.5bn to end the putback dispute that it is involved in with a group of 22 institutional investors including BlackRock, Pimco, MetLife and the Federal Reserve of New York.