Latest news
Latest news
Timeline of collapse that rocked the UK bridging loan market
As well as deals backed by new loans, it will call and refinance 2023 deals
Meanwhile, BNP Paribas hires in structured finance
More articles
More articles
-
The U.K.-based Co-Operative Bank is planning a return to the primary issuance market with a U.K. prime residential mortgage-backed deal, Silk Road Finance Number Two.
-
American International Group is said to be looking to purchase residential mortgage-backed securities from European banks in an effort to increase its investment performance, according to Deutsche Bank.
-
The Australian residential mortgage-backed securities market, the world’s fourth largest, has improved to the point that it is significantly less dependent on the government to prop it up.
-
ING Australia has priced the biggest residential mortgage-backed securities by a foreign bank since its A$900 million ($950 million) RMBS last October.
-
BNP Paribas Personal Finance has launched a Dutch RMBS, Phedina 2011-1, the first public cash RMBS by the bank since 2006.
-
The Co-operative Bank has mandated Barclays Capital, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley for Silk Road No 2, a new UK prime RMBS.
-
Barclays Capital priced its final resecuritization of legacy National Credit Union Administration collateral at record tights.
-
Europe’s bids-wanted-in-competition shot up to €3 billion (4.35 billion) in asset-backed securities last month, more than double the amount on offer in previous months, according to analysts at the Royal Bank of Scotland.
-
The Co-operative Bank has mandated Barclays Capital, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley for Silk Road No 2, a new UK prime RMBS. Many market participants had assumed Co-op would be shut out of the RMBS market following its decision not to call its Leek 17, 18 and 19, UK non-conforming deals.